Elie Saab

Elie Saab is a brand focused on delivering well-considered products that balance quality, usability, and everyday relevance. Its approach centers on meeting real customer needs through thoughtful development, clear positioning, and dependable performance across its range.

Founded in 1982 - Contry of Origin: Lebanon

Elie Saab Bestsellers

Loading products… Couldn’t load products right now.

About Elie Saab

Elie Saab founded his eponymous label in Beirut in 1982, at just 18 years old, building a couture house in a place and time that demanded resilience as much as talent. From the beginning, the brand’s identity was shaped by an instinct for detail: embroidery that catches light, silhouettes that honour the body without feeling heavy, and a sense of elegance that reads as both romantic and disciplined. Elie Saab became internationally recognised for creating gowns that feel made for moments. The work is deeply tied to ceremony, to celebration, and to the quiet drama of a perfectly constructed dress. That couture foundation is the heart of the house, and it’s also what makes the brand’s presence in fragrance feel coherent.

Couture is, at its best, a form of storytelling through craft. Elie Saab’s storytelling is luminous. It leans on light, texture, and the idea of beauty as something that can be both soft and powerful. Over time, the house expanded beyond Beirut into an international couture position, with ateliers and a presence that reached Paris and other fashion capitals. That growth carried cultural significance, too. Elie Saab became one of the most visible Middle Eastern designers on the global red carpet, and his work helped broaden what “global glamour” looked like. When a brand carries that kind of cultural visibility, fragrance becomes more than a commercial extension. It becomes another way people can access the feeling the house represents.

Elie Saab fragrances sit in the luxury designer segment, designed to translate couture codes into scent: refinement, femininity, and a polished kind of radiance. The challenge for any fashion house in fragrance is translation. Fabric and embroidery are tactile and visual; perfume is invisible. The most successful interpretations don’t try to replicate couture literally. They aim for emotional equivalence. In Elie Saab’s case, that means perfumes that feel elegant and luminous, the kind of scents that can accompany formal moments but also bring a little ceremony into everyday life. A fragrance can become a daily version of a gown: not as a costume, but as a feeling of being more put together, more composed, more yourself.

The brand’s evolution also reflects how modern luxury has diversified. Elie Saab is associated with couture glamour, but glamour today is not only about grand events. It’s also about personal rituals and the feeling of care. Many consumers buy fragrance as a form of mood-setting, a way to frame their day with a particular tone. Elie Saab fits this behaviour because the house is naturally tied to emotional milestones. Weddings, galas, awards nights: these are events where fragrance is often chosen deliberately. But you don’t need a red carpet to want that feeling. A perfume that carries a sense of elegance can be worn to work, to dinner, to a family celebration. It becomes a form of personal styling, an invisible accessory that matches the brand’s visual world.

In today’s market, Elie Saab occupies a luxury position that feels romantic without being naïve. There is craft behind the softness. The house’s fashion work is known for its intricate finish, and the brand’s beauty presence benefits from that association. Consumers looking at an Elie Saab bottle often expect a certain level of refinement: something that feels considered, not trendy. This is especially appealing in a fragrance landscape that can feel noisy, with constant launches chasing attention. Elie Saab’s strength is the opposite of noise. It is the promise of timeless elegance, with enough warmth to feel inviting rather than distant.

Culturally, Elie Saab also represents the power of a brand rooted outside the traditional Western fashion capitals, proving that global luxury is not defined by one geography. That matters to many consumers, even when they are not consciously thinking about it. Brands carry identity. Wearing an Elie Saab fragrance can feel like aligning with a particular kind of glamour: luminous, detailed, and quietly confident. It is not the sharp minimalism of some houses, nor the provocation of others. It is an elegance built on light and craft, the kind that photographs beautifully and also feels good in real life.

People choose Elie Saab because the brand offers a clear, refined idea of femininity and presence. Whether through couture or fragrance, it communicates celebration, elegance, and a sense of specialness that doesn’t have to be loud. In a major beauty retailer’s catalogue, Elie Saab sits as a luxury signature for those who want their scent to feel polished and radiant, with the emotional pull of a house that has made “the occasion” its natural language.