10 Best Men's Fragrances Under $100 (Australia 2026)
You Don't Need to Spend $200 for a Great Fragrance
Some of the most complimented men's fragrances in Australia cost well under $100. The trick is knowing which ones earn the price and then comparing across retailers, since the same bottle can be $65 at one store and $110 at another. The picks below are the proven people-pleasers in this band, ranked by how widely they're stocked, with live lowest and average prices pulled from our data so you can see the real spread before you buy.
These ten are the safe blind buys, the bottles you can recommend to anyone and not be wrong. They span the whole band, from the soapy fresh fougère of Montblanc Legend to the creamy coconut-tonka of Le Beau, the sweet evening compliment-getters and the genuine designer landmark, so there is a sensible first pick whatever you are after. A few more honourable mentions sit just below them.

Legend Eau De Parfum
Montblanc Legend, the German pen house's 2011 best-seller, here in the 2020 eau de parfum that deepened the original eau de toilette without losing the shape. Olivier Pescheux of Givaudan built the formula as a modern take on the classic fresh fougère, with bergamot, lavender and a green pineapple-leaf top over a geranium and oakmoss heart that settles onto tonka, sandalwood and a clean musk. It reads soapy and aromatic rather than sweet, the kind of barbershop-adjacent scent that works at the office, on a date or anywhere you want to be remembered without trying. The eau de parfum runs richer and longer than the original, fixing the one common complaint about the lighter version, with solid projection through a working day and a soft, woody drydown. Made under licence by Inter Parfums, who handle the Montblanc fragrance line, it sits in the affordable designer tier and turns up on sale here regularly, the hundred-millilitre often dipping under ninety dollars. It is one of the lowest-risk pickups going, the bottle you hand someone who wants a single scent that never misreads a room. Not distinctive, but genuinely hard to dislike, and a proper fresh fougère reference at the money.

Explorer
Montblanc has made fountain pens in Germany since 1906 and fragrance only on the side, but Explorer, from 2019, is the one that landed. A Givaudan trio, Jordi Fernandez, Antoine Maisondieu and Olivier Pescheux, worked it around traceable naturals, with Italian bergamot, vetiver from Haiti and patchouli from Indonesia rounded out by leather, cocoa and a slug of ambroxan. The fresh-bright opening over a smoky-creamy base put it squarely in Creed Aventus territory at roughly a fifth of the price, and that comparison did it no harm at all on the value forums. It is woody, modern and easy to wear for work or a date, with strong projection and longevity that genuinely embarrass plenty of pricier designers. Produced by Inter Parfums, who hold the Montblanc fragrance licence, it arrived just as the cheap-but-smells-pricey conversation took over fragrance social media, and it became the standard answer when someone wanted the Aventus idea without the Aventus outlay. The flanker line keeps growing off the back of it, Platinum and Ultra Blue among them. None of it is groundbreaking, but as a sub-hundred-dollar buy it is one of the easiest recommendations in men's fragrance, and it still holds its value even as the price has crept up since launch.

Invictus Eau De Toilette
The second Paco Rabanne blockbuster, released in 2013 as the fresh, sporty counterweight to 1 Million, with Australian rugby-league player Nick Youngquest fronting the launch and a silver trophy-shaped bottle to match. An IFF team led by Véronique Nyberg, with Anne Flipo, Olivier Polge and Dominique Ropion, built a clean grapefruit-and-marine top over a salty ambergris accord, guaiac wood, patchouli and oakmoss. The result is a gym-and-summer crowd-pleaser, easy and inoffensive, with good longevity for an aquatic. Invictus is Latin for unconquered, and the whole campaign leans on a winning-team idea that plays well here. It is one of the most-worn young men's scents in the country, which is either a recommendation or a warning depending on your taste, and the ubiquity has made it a favourite punching bag on the fragrance forums even as it keeps selling. Built by Puig, who run the Rabanne fragrance line, it moves in roughly the same numbers as 1 Million and carries its own wall of flankers, Aqua, Victory and the rest. Not clever, and not for anyone chasing something distinctive, but very effective at what it sets out to do, and always easy to find on sale. As a first sporty fragrance under a hundred dollars it is hard to argue with the price.

Le Beau
Jean Paul Gaultier Le Beau, the 2019 reboot of the brand's earlier Le Beau Male, recast as a coconut-and-tonka modern crowd-pleaser. Quentin Bisch of Givaudan composed it, building the whole thing around a creamy coconut-wood accord with bergamot up top and a warm tonka-and-cedar base, landing it somewhere between a woody amber and a light gourmand. It reads sweet and milky rather than fresh or spicy, easy to wear and quietly compliment-fishing, the sort of close-projecting scent that pulls people in rather than filling a room. Performance is good for the type, a few hours of decent throw before it settles into a soft skin scent, which suits day-into-evening more than a heavy night out. The clear, muscular torso bottle keeps the playful Gaultier identity that the original Le Male made famous. A Puig-made licence like the rest of the Gaultier line, it sits in the affordable designer band and shows up on sale here often, the hundred-millilitre frequently under seventy dollars. It covers the same warm coconut ground as a lot of pricier compliment-getters, so for a shopper chasing that creamy effect without spending big it is an easy call. Not for anyone after something sharp or serious, but very effective at being liked.

Boss Bottled Night Eau De Toilette
The night-time flanker of Boss Bottled, Hugo Boss's 1998 office staple, released in 2010 as a darker, woodier evening version. The German house has never officially credited a perfumer for it, despite plenty of retailer and AI-written copy confidently naming one, so treat any attribution you see with caution. What is on record is the scent, a cool aromatic opening of lavender and birch leaf over an African violet heart and a dry woods-and-musk base, smoother and less fruity than the original Bottled. It is the definition of safe and versatile, an office-to-bar workhorse that asks little of the wearer and offends no one, with moderate projection and a soft, close drydown within a few hours. Ryan Reynolds fronted the 2010 launch, his first turn as a Boss face, years before the brand made him a fixture. Produced at the time by Procter & Gamble under licence, before Coty took the Boss fragrance business, it sits in the affordable designer tier and turns up on sale constantly, which is much of its appeal at this price. Nobody will call it exciting, but as a cheap, reliable evening default it earns its place. Just do not expect it to turn any heads.

Polo Red Eau De Toilette
Ralph Lauren Polo Red, the 2013 red-bottle sibling to the green 1978 original, composed by Olivier Gillotin of Givaudan as a loud fresh-spicy take on the Polo name. He opens it on tart cranberry, grapefruit and Italian lemon, then warms it through saffron and sage into a base of amber, coffee and dry woods, which lands it firmly in woody-spicy territory rather than anything green or aquatic. It reads bold and a little brash, a casual daytime and going-out scent that suits cooler weather more than high summer, with decent projection in the first couple of hours before it wears close past lunch. Produced by L'Oréal, who have held the Ralph Lauren fragrance licence since the 1980s, it sits in the affordable designer band and shows up on sale here constantly, the hundred-millilitre routinely well under a hundred dollars and often nearer sixty. The faceted red-glass flacon and the loud, saturated campaign pitch it at a younger buyer who wants to be noticed, which is fair enough at the price. Not subtle, and a touch dated against the newer fresh-sweet crowd, but a recognisable designer that delivers far more presence than its sticker suggests, and an easy pickup unsniffed.

Wanted By Night
The dark, gourmand-leaning flanker of Azzaro Wanted, released in 2018 to push the original's bright spice into evening territory. A Firmenich team built it around a warm, sweet-spicy idea, with cinnamon and a boozy hit up top over tonka, vanilla and a tobacco-and-woods base that gives it most of its character. It reads cosy and a little decadent rather than fresh, firmly a cold-weather and night-out scent, with strong projection and longevity that outperform its price and make it smell dearer than it is. Held under licence by Clarins, who owned the Azzaro fragrance house before the recent L'Oréal acquisition, it sits in the affordable designer band and shows up on sale here regularly. The faceted gold-bar bottle nods to the loud, brash masculine wave it belongs to, all sweet spice and visible swagger, which is either its appeal or its limit depending on taste. It covers the same warm vanilla-and-tobacco ground as a lot of pricier evening scents, so for a shopper who wants that effect without spending big, it is an easy recommendation. Not subtle, and not for the office, but as a cheap autumn-and-winter crowd-pleaser it does exactly what it sets out to do.

Versace Pour Homme Dylan Blue Eau De Toilette
Versace Dylan Blue, the house's 2016 fresh-aquatic pillar, composed by Alberto Morillas of Firmenich, the same nose behind the original Versace Pour Homme. He built it around a synthetic ambrox-and-fig-leaf accord that gives it a slightly salty, mineral edge, with bergamot, grapefruit and a touch of black pepper up top over patchouli, incense and musk in the base. The result is a modern blue scent that smells crisper and more characterful than the wall of generic ozonic clones around it, leaning woody-aromatic rather than purely clean. It is a spring and summer daily that works at the office and stretches to a casual dinner, with good longevity for the type and moderate projection that settles close after the first hour. A EuroItalia licence, like most of the Versace fragrance line, it sits in the affordable designer tier and turns up on sale here often, the hundred-millilitre frequently dipping under ninety dollars. The deep-blue gradient bottle and the Bruce Weber campaign with Gigi and Bella Hadid gave it a big push at launch, and it has held a steady spot in the young-men's rotation since. A safer, slightly more grown-up pick than the gym-aquatic crowd, and one of the better fresh designers to buy unsniffed at the money.

Armani Code 2004 Eau De Toilette
Giorgio Armani Code, the 2004 masculine that pushed designer scent toward sweet and dark just as the fresh-aquatic wave was peaking. Antoine Lie and Antoine Maisondieu of Givaudan composed it, an oriental built on a tobacco and tonka base with olive blossom, bergamot and a guaiac-and-leather warmth that reads smooth rather than sharp. It lands as a night-out and cold-weather scent, close-wearing and a little gourmand without tipping into the loud sweet bombs that came later, with moderate projection and solid longevity on skin. Originally Armani Black Code before the rename, it became one of the more cloned designer formulas of its era, a reference point for the warm spicy-sweet masculine that a lot of cheaper bottles chased. Produced by L'Oréal, who handle the Armani fragrance house, it sits in the affordable designer band and shows up discounted here regularly, the smaller bottles often well under ninety dollars. There is a deeper Code Parfum and a brighter Code Sport in the line if this one runs too sweet or too soft for you. As a date-night default that does not smell like everyone else's blue daily, it has aged better than most mid-2000s designers and remains an easy recommendation under a hundred.

Le Male Eau De Toilette
Jean Paul Gaultier Le Male, the 1995 designer that made the powdery oriental-fougère a mainstream men's idea and has barely left the best-seller lists since. Francis Kurkdjian composed it early in his career, years before his own house, around a soft, almost edible signature of lavender, mint and orange blossom over vanilla, tonka and a clean shaving-soap warmth. It reads sweet and powdery rather than fresh or spicy, instantly recognisable and a little nostalgic, with strong longevity and projection that carries across a room and makes it firmly an evening and cold-weather pick. The torso-shaped bottle in its tin can is one of the most copied flacons in the business, part of the brand's playful, sailor-stripe identity. Now part of the Puig stable that holds the Gaultier line, it is the cheapest entry to a genuine designer landmark on this list, the hundred-millilitre frequently under seventy dollars on sale here. The formula has been tweaked over three decades and longtime wearers argue the older batches ran richer, the usual reformulation gripe, but it is still unmistakably Le Male. Divisive for its sweetness and its sheer ubiquity, yet impossible to leave off a sub-hundred list, and a proper piece of fragrance history at the price.
A Few More Worth a Look
The cards above are the most-stocked and most-recommended in the band, but the under-$100 shelf runs deeper than ten. A handful more are worth knowing if you want something slightly off the beaten path:
- Dolce & Gabbana The One EDP — warm, sweet and spicy, a tobacco-and-amber evening scent that smells dearer than it sells for. The eau de parfum dips below $90 for 100ml often enough to be worth watching.
- Issey Miyake L'Eau d'Issey Pour Homme — a citrus-aquatic-woody composition that's been a staple since 1994 and still sits apart from the blue-fresh crowd. Usually under $80.
- Jimmy Choo Man Intense — a sweet-spicy melon-and-patchouli scent that flies under the radar, which means you won't smell like everyone else at the bar.
All three turn up across Australian retailers at sub-$100 prices, and you can price-check each in a single search.
How to Get the Best Price
Prices for every fragrance here vary by $20-50 across Australian retailers. Before you buy:
- Compare prices on Aurexum — check 100+ retailers in one search and see the live lowest and average for each
- Buy 100ml over 50ml where you can — the per-millilitre cost is usually 30-40% lower
- Check whether the retailer stacks with cashback services or loyalty rewards
