Louis Vuitton's Les Parfums collection is Scento's single-largest revenue brand — and the brand we have the least documented decoder data for. LV is intentionally opaque about its production logistics: there is no public algorithm, no customer-service portal that explains the code format, and no Basenotes thread with a confirmed mapping. What we have instead is 1,216 authenticated LV bottles in our intake database since 2021, and the format-pattern observations from those bottles inform the decoder's estimated output. Our estimate is honest about its limits. The decoder marks every LV result as ESTIMATED — a tier distinct from the HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW we use for documented schemes — and the methodology page explains exactly what that label means.
If you need a confirmed production date for an LV bottle, the only authoritative source is LV customer service directly. They will provide a date over email if you submit the bottle code along with the original receipt; turnaround is usually 14–21 days.
Why no public algorithm
Most luxury fragrance houses use one of the major corporate-group schemes (Estée 3-character, L'Oréal 6-character, Coty 4-digit, Dior 4-character) because their distribution is handled by those corporate groups. Louis Vuitton manufactures Les Parfums in-house — production runs out of the Maison's facilities in Grasse, France, under direct LVMH oversight rather than through a distribution partner. That in-house production gives LV total control over the supply chain and total opacity over the codes that get printed on the bottles.
Our format-pattern observations across the 1,216 authenticated LV bottles suggest an 8-character laser etch with the following structure: positions 1–2 are a line code (LP for Les Parfums standard, IM for Imagination, IP for Imagination Parfum and other Les Extraits, OB for Ombre Nomade, etc), positions 3–4 are a year-month code in a non-trivial encoding, and positions 5–8 are an internal lot identifier. We cannot reverse-engineer the year-month encoding with confidence — the patterns are inconsistent enough across our sample that the encoding may use a rotating offset, an internal calendar, or some other transformation we haven't decoded.
What we can say with confidence: the line-code prefix is consistent and well-attested. An LV bottle whose code starts with anything other than LP, IM, IP, OB, PC (Pacific Chill), AT (Attrape-Rêves), SY (Symphony), or one of the other documented prefixes is suspect.
Where the code lives on an LV bottle
Three placements, and the rim placement is the most diagnostic:
- Underside rim laser etch — 4 to 5 millimetres above the bottom edge of the bottle, on the rim itself rather than on the flat centre. This rim placement has been LV's standard since 2018; pre-2018 production used a centre placement that we mark as ESTIMATED-LOW because the older format was less consistent. Counterfeits frequently get the placement wrong, putting the etch in the centre when the bottle is recent enough that it should be on the rim.
- Inner foil flap — open the carton, lift the inner cardboard insert, and look for a foil-stamped code on the hidden side of the bottom flap. The foil should be a deep gold (matches the LV monogram colour); silver or bronze foil is a counterfeit flag.
- Travel-case insert (Les Extraits only) — Imagination Parfum, Spell On You Extrait, and Symphony all ship in a leather travel case with an internal cardboard insert that carries an additional code. This is a triple-reference point on the higher-end SKUs.
The 12-point intake check
Because the decoder cannot give you HIGH-confidence dates on LV, the physical authentication is doing the heavy lifting. Our 12-point intake check covers:
- Calibrated bottle weight against a reference for each SKU. LV uses a specific high-density glass; counterfeits run light by 20–30g.
- Atomiser pull-test — the genuine atomiser collar is firmly seated and should not rotate; counterfeits often have loose collars that twist.
- Cap finish under angled light. Mirror-polished anodised aluminium has a specific wet-look reflectivity; brushed or matte finishes are flags.
- Leather travel case stitching pattern (Les Extraits). Hand-finished stitching has slight irregularity; machine-perfect even spacing is a flag.
- Carton embossing on the inner flap. The LV monogram should be deeply embossed on the foil; flat or shallow embossing is a flag.
- Foil sticker tone (gold, not silver or bronze).
- Box paper grain. Genuine LV cartons use a specific cream paper with a subtle linen grain; counterfeits tend to use smoother stock.
- Ribbon weight (giftable bottles only). Genuine LV ribbons are heavy silk; counterfeits use polyester or thinner silk substitutes.
- Cellophane wrap pattern.
- Code etch depth and position (rim, not centre).
- Code typography — sans-serif, sharp character edges.
- Juice colour and viscosity against calibrated reference for each SKU.
A flacon must pass all twelve to enter our inventory. We've rejected 79 LV bottles since 2021, a roughly 6.1% rejection rate.
Counterfeit stories
The four counterfeit-rejection stories in this page's frontmatter give a representative sense of what we see in intake. The summary pattern: the juice is often a competent imitation, the bottle shape is usually close, but one or two physical signals consistently fail. Imagination's etch position. Pacific Chill's leather stitching. Ombre Nomade's cap finish. Spell On You's inner-flap embossing. Counterfeit operators improve on each batch — the imitations we intercepted in 2024 are noticeably better than the 2022 batches — but the physical authentication keeps catching them.
What to do if your code returns ESTIMATED
- Source from authenticated stock. If you intend to wear the bottle and the date matters for freshness, the simplest path is to source from an intake-verified retailer. Our LV collection carries decants of Imagination, Pacific Chill, Ombre Nomade, Attrape-Rêves, Spell On You, and the rest of the active line, all authenticated using the 12-point check above.
- Contact LV customer service with the code and your original receipt. They will confirm the production date over email; expect a 14–21 day response window.
- Read the methodology page for the full explanation of why the decoder marks LV as ESTIMATED and what that label means.
A final note on LV's pricing context
Louis Vuitton fragrances retail at €270 for a 100 ml bottle and up to €450+ for the Les Extraits line. The price gap between an authentic bottle and a competent counterfeit is roughly €200, which is the economic engine driving the LV counterfeit market. The pure-decant alternative — an 8 ml authenticated atomiser at a fraction of the bottle price, sourced through Scento's intake-checked supply chain — is the safest way to wear LV without engaging the secondary market at all.


