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expiredBojjihuntindeals | Staff posted Apr 28, 2026 11:53 PM
expiredBojjihuntindeals | Staff posted Apr 28, 2026 11:53 PM

3.4-oz Men's Lattafa Hayaati Al Maleky Eau de Parfum Spray

$13

$26

50% off
Amazon
44 Comments 25,811 Views
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Amazon has 3.4-oz Men's Lattafa Hayaati Al Maleky Eau de Parfum Spray for $13.19. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

FragranceNet also has 3.4-oz Men's Lattafa Hayaati Al Maleky Eau de Parfum Spray for $13.19. Shipping is free on $59+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter Bojjihuntindeals for finding this deal.

About this item:
  • Top Notes: Nutmeg, Pink Pepper, Bergamot and Ginger
  • Middle Notes: Cedar, Woody Notes, Labdanum and Incense
  • Base Notes: Musk, Ambergris and Amber

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff
  • Our research indicates this offer is $5.80 lower (30.5% savings) than the next best price from a reputable merchant at the time of this post.
  • Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars based on over 1.2k Amazon customer reviews.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 3.4-oz Men's Lattafa Hayaati Al Maleky Eau de Parfum Spray for $13.19. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.

FragranceNet also has 3.4-oz Men's Lattafa Hayaati Al Maleky Eau de Parfum Spray for $13.19. Shipping is free on $59+ orders.

Thanks to Deal Hunter Bojjihuntindeals for finding this deal.

About this item:
  • Top Notes: Nutmeg, Pink Pepper, Bergamot and Ginger
  • Middle Notes: Cedar, Woody Notes, Labdanum and Incense
  • Base Notes: Musk, Ambergris and Amber

Editor's Notes

Written by johnny_miller | Staff
  • Our research indicates this offer is $5.80 lower (30.5% savings) than the next best price from a reputable merchant at the time of this post.
  • Rated 4.6 out of 5 stars based on over 1.2k Amazon customer reviews.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

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Deal Score
+54
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Price Intelligence

Model: LATTAFA LAB-HMLES33 3.3 OZ HAYAATI AL MALEKY/LATTA

Deal History 

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Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 5/7/2026, 12:11 AM
Sold By Sale Price
FragranceNet$15.39
Amazon$20
NewEgg$28.14

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Top Comments

janus3
413 Posts
94 Reputation
Only smart person here. This is a Paco Rabanne Phatom dupe. Easy blind buy.
SmilingHamster9847
315 Posts
46 Reputation
Hate to break it to you but those high end fragrances also use synthetic ingredients.
signalsoldier
1370 Posts
146 Reputation
Lattafa hasn't let me down yet. $13 blind buy, here I come.
Thanks OP

44 Comments

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Apr 30, 2026 09:16 PM
2,569 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
CreditGuyApr 30, 2026 09:16 PM
2,569 Posts
Quote from SmilingHamster9847 :
Designer houses have massive overhead. Celebrity deals and contracts cost millions. R&D. Paying retailers like Nordstrom or Sephora around 60% just to put in on their shelves. They allow more time for it to sit and macerate. The fragrance itself often costs $1-2 a bottle for ingredients. Designers don't use large amounts of natural ingredients. It's not practical at all. Natural doesnt last long. They spoil and go bad much faster and don't smell as strong. It's PR speak if a designer says they use natural ingredients. They might use a tiny drop, .5% of jasmine oil and use synthetic for the 99.5% of that jasmine scent. People also tend to favor synthetic vs the real thing- vanilla for example. The lab version is picked far more than natural. In the air many clones are hard to differentiate between the original. Some smell a bit different, not because they're bad or cheaper but because the clone house made a spin on the original or the ingredients are have slightly different ratios. Lavender might be dialed up higher and patchouli is slightly less etc. I know a lot of people are mad and try to justify spending $400 on a bottle of Initio or something, the reality is clones get you very, very close to the original or seem to equal them. And often they last longer and people even prefer the clones scent vs the original. Not all clones are close. Some are way off and smell different. Still doesn't make them a bad product though.
I have lots of designer and niche bottles and have never spent more than $100 on a bottle. Not a single one is a fake either because most of mine have come directly from the outlets of the manufacturers themselves. Others have been just inexpensive bottles that designers haven't priced outrageously high (such as Facconable). But I guess if I were young like most of you and trying to make my allowance go as far as possible I would buy these knockoffs too. I actually have a couple of knockoffs and they are synthetic messes. They smell terrible compared to designer and niche bottles. That's why I only have a couple.
May 01, 2026 12:21 AM
315 Posts
Joined Dec 2022
SmilingHamster9847May 01, 2026 12:21 AM
315 Posts
Quote from leeterbike :
I hear the same thing when people talk about clone rolexes. There is a huge difference when its in the hand and used. Looking or smelling loud at a distance is different than smelling good and refined. Same as a Rolex, at first glance, sure same, but the difference is in the detail.
Mixing ingredients isn't the same thing as making a watch. Rolex is a poor example anyways since you're paying for the luxury name, the watches don't cost thousands to make. Someone makes a cake. The recipe has been copied and modified and reinterpreted. Some people make them better some worse and the prices are all over the price. A surprising number of high end professionals also use premade mix on their luxury cakes too.
May 01, 2026 04:06 PM
199 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
sbrsuperstarMay 01, 2026 04:06 PM
199 Posts
Quote from sam_ay :
Lately the Lattafa perfumes I have ordered don't last very long at all. The ones that I got a year back will last the full day on the body and multiple days on clothes. I think either they have changed their formula and strength as now they have a huge foothold in the market or other companies have started selling Lattafa dupes considering the popularity of Lattafa.
Any lattafa that doesn't last is fake
May 01, 2026 09:30 PM
2 Posts
Joined May 2022
HouraniMay 01, 2026 09:30 PM
2 Posts
not anymore
May 02, 2026 02:43 PM
1,751 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
leeterbikeMay 02, 2026 02:43 PM
1,751 Posts
Quote from SmilingHamster9847 :
Mixing ingredients isn't the same thing as making a watch. Rolex is a poor example anyways since you're paying for the luxury name, the watches don't cost thousands to make. Someone makes a cake. The recipe has been copied and modified and reinterpreted. Some people make them better some worse and the prices are all over the price. A surprising number of high end professionals also use premade mix on their luxury cakes too.
Corvette vs Pagani
Walmart steak vs A5 Kobe
Diamond vs CZ

It's about the totality of what goes into it for the final experience.
Little to no research and testing, poor ingredients, and an overall lesser quality experience.
You're right when comparing a cake, but they'd be using shit ingredients. No sugar, no butter, and flour from 10 years ago.

Same cake you say. Sure. It's a cake.
May 02, 2026 02:44 PM
1,751 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
leeterbikeMay 02, 2026 02:44 PM
1,751 Posts
Quote from sbrsuperstar :
Any lattafa that doesn't last is fake
No one make a fake of a 25 dollar bottle of perfume.
May 02, 2026 02:53 PM
1,751 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
leeterbikeMay 02, 2026 02:53 PM
1,751 Posts
Quote from CreditGuy :
I have lots of designer and niche bottles and have never spent more than $100 on a bottle. Not a single one is a fake either because most of mine have come directly from the outlets of the manufacturers themselves. Others have been just inexpensive bottles that designers haven't priced outrageously high (such as Facconable). But I guess if I were young like most of you and trying to make my allowance go as far as possible I would buy these knockoffs too. I actually have a couple of knockoffs and they are synthetic messes. They smell terrible compared to designer and niche bottles. That's why I only have a couple.
It's interesting seeing these people say they smell the same, they do not. I tried to find something similar to Reflection Man, bought at least 10 "exact" copies. Nothing even close. Even the ones that use chromatography, got the closest for a bit, but 5 minutes into it there is a clear difference.

Naxos, Althir, Reflection Man, Elysium, and my favorite summer scent, Uden, have not been replicated with any acceptable accuracy for value.

I tell people just go to the store and smell for yourself. Spray it on skin, see how it changes over time, and see how there are very few similarities.

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May 02, 2026 04:45 PM
2 Posts
Joined Nov 2025
dfsretro123May 02, 2026 04:45 PM
2 Posts
Bought it, smells like burned incense... Friend told me its not even gift suitable...returning it
1
May 02, 2026 07:38 PM
199 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
sbrsuperstarMay 02, 2026 07:38 PM
199 Posts
Quote from leeterbike :
No one make a fake of a 25 dollar bottle of perfume.
China is making fake dupes and they are being sold on Tik Tok Shop daily
May 02, 2026 07:39 PM
199 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
sbrsuperstarMay 02, 2026 07:39 PM
199 Posts
Quote from dfsretro123 :
Bought it, smells like burned incense... Friend told me its not even gift suitable...returning it
Who is your friend? A hater
May 03, 2026 02:07 PM
413 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
janus3May 03, 2026 02:07 PM
413 Posts
Quote from leeterbike :
As someone who has nearly 100 bottles of cologne, unless you have a source to gift these to, don't randomly blind buy fragrances you don't understand the likely smell of. If you're genuinely looking for a great fragrance to wear long term, buy something niche/high end that has longevity that will macerate and age well with natural ingredients.

A 200 dollar niche/high end bottle will last you years. You will get bored of the smell before you run empty. With countless fragrances and random blind buys, you will end up either throwing them away or giving them away as they will not age well at all.

I did the math. If I use 3 sprays a day, everyday, I have 92 years of fragrances.
In 3-5 years the smell will change quite a bit, and synthetics do not age anything close to naturals.
I have over 200 and this is poor advice. Anyone looking to get into colognes and can spend $13 can easily blind buy this. All the middle eastern fragrances I own have been far better investments and they make my niche fragrances simply redundant. 99% of the world won't know the difference between a $200 niche fragrance and it's under $30 middle eastern dupe and the dupe will last just as long. This is flat out horrible advice and sounds like it's coming from a fragrance snob. Either everyone here is wrong or just you.

https://www.fragrantica.com/perfu...84306.html
May 03, 2026 02:08 PM
413 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
janus3May 03, 2026 02:08 PM
413 Posts
Quote from SmartTank306 :
I don't know what this one smells like, but I have 3 others of this brand and they're all really good and I get lots of compliments on them. The "synthetic" comments are really strange, not sure what you expect from a cologne. Synthetic doesn't mean harmful, 100% natural doesn't mean safe.
Those comments are coming from fragrance snobs upset their $200 niche fragrances aren't worth what they paid for when they could have gotten a dupe for 20% of the price and get the same performance.
Last edited by janus3 May 3, 2026 at 07:12 AM.
May 04, 2026 12:46 PM
1,751 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
leeterbikeMay 04, 2026 12:46 PM
1,751 Posts
Quote from janus3 :
I have over 200 and this is poor advice. Anyone looking to get into colognes and can spend $13 can easily blind buy this. All the middle eastern fragrances I own have been far better investments and they make my niche fragrances simply redundant. 99% of the world won't know the difference between a $200 niche fragrance and it's under $30 middle eastern dupe and the dupe will last just as long. This is flat out horrible advice and sounds like it's coming from a fragrance snob. Either everyone here is wrong or just you.

https://www.fragrantica.com/perfu...84306.html
Drop a photo of your collection. I don't believe you have smelled dupes side by side that or you're nose blind. These cheap fragrances are like car air fresheners. Smell good, yes, smell quality, absolutely not. Unless you don't know what quality smells like and you associate it with "good" there is clearly a difference.

ATH can tell a difference in half a second as can I. Walking near the hundreds of people wearing BR540 dupes, I can easily pick out which is quality and the actual juice.

Read the comments in your link, it further proves my point. Smells like soap, smells horrible, smells like citrus, smells like amber, balsamic, very sweet, very musky, smells like sunscreen.
Last edited by leeterbike May 4, 2026 at 05:49 AM.
1
May 04, 2026 12:55 PM
413 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
janus3May 04, 2026 12:55 PM
413 Posts
Sorry man you're just flat out wrong.

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