

1 Million Lucky Decant
Not sure which size? Start with 10ml — enough for 10–15 full wears to know if you love it before buying the bottle.
Top: Plum · Grapefruit · Bergamot · Ozonic Notes
Heart: Hazelnut · Honey · Cedar · Cashmere Wood · Jasmine
Base: Amberwood · Patchouli · Oakmoss · Vetiver
Plum, hazelnut, honey, and amber — sweet and nutty in a way that feels warmer and more mature than the original 1 Million. This is the one in the lineup that collectors keep buying backup bottles of, and there are ongoing rumors of discontinuation. Paco Rabanne retails it at $185.
If you like the 1 Million DNA but find the original too loud or too youthful, this is likely the one for you. The decant confirms it before the bottle.
Year-round. Fall and winter peak. Masculine-leaning. Six to eight hours. Two to three sprays.
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Longevity, skin chemistry, the collector's take, and how we authenticate.
1 Million Lucky arrived in spring 2018 as the "lucky charm" flanker — Natalie Gracia-Cetto's commission to take the 1 Million DNA and add the hazelnut-honey-plum sweetness that the original's blood mandarin-cinnamon-leather architecture never approached. The result is the flanker that the community most consistently places at the top of the 1 Million hierarchy: "the best 1 Million ever released," "backup bottle worthy," and "probably my favorite winter scent" from reviewers across Fragrantica, Basenotes, and Parfumo who find in Lucky the specific combination that earns the word "addictive" more consistently than any other entry in the line.
The hazelnut note is Lucky's most distinctive and most divisive ingredient. The specific character: not the raw bitterness of actual hazelnut but the warm, slightly roasted, slightly creamy quality of hazelnut in coffee or chocolate — "smells just like when you inhale the aroma from a bag of hazelnut coffee (minus any real coffee smell)" from the Basenotes reviewer who found the most accurate analogy. Combined with the fresh plum's tart, slightly fruity brightness and the honey's warm, golden, slightly animalic sweetness, the result is "a dessert-like composition — almost like tiramisu but with different ingredients" that never fully crosses into literal gourmand territory because the cedar-amberwood-oakmoss base keeps pulling it toward woody sophistication.
The discontinuation concern is real and worth addressing directly. As of 2024–2025, multiple community sources document reduced availability of 1 Million Lucky at major retailers, with bestmenscolognes.com explicitly noting "it looks like this one is being discontinued now, just as Privé was a few years ago." The composition has not been officially discontinued as of the time of this writing, but the pattern — reduced promotional support, stock thinning at department stores — mirrors what preceded Privé's discontinuation. Collectors who have worn Lucky and found it their preferred 1 Million expression should treat current availability as finite.
Lucky occupies the specific position in the 1 Million lineup that the community describes as "the one you actually recommend to people who don't like the original." The original EDT's aggressive blood mandarin-cinnamon opener polarizes; Elixir's tooth-aching vanilla sweetness is a harder sell; Parfum's tuberose-sea salt departure requires explanation. Lucky requires no explanation — the hazelnut-honey-plum opening is immediately appealing to the vast majority of wearers, the performance is above average without being overwhelming, and the versatility earns "it can do somewhat well in the heat of summer and won't completely melt" from the reviewer who tested seasonal range.
🔺 The Scent Pyramid
Top Notes (0–30 min)
Plum · Grapefruit · Bergamot · Ozonic Notes
The opening is the composition's most immediately appealing and most distinctive chapter within the 1 Million lineup. Plum here is not the deep, dark plum of orientals — it is bright, slightly tart, fresh plum with a juicy quality that earns "energetic, slightly tart burst" as first impression. Grapefruit provides brightness and slight bitterness; bergamot adds citrus clarity; ozonic notes contribute a clean freshness that keeps the opening from reading as purely sweet. Together: "inviting and modern, immediately setting it apart from the spicy-citrus blast of the original."
Heart Notes (30 min–2 hrs)
Hazelnut · Honey · Cedar · Cashmere Wood · Jasmine
The composition's defining chapter and its most celebrated. Hazelnut is warm, slightly roasted, nutty without bitterness — "a creamy, gourmand heart that feels both edible and sophisticated." Honey arrives as "a glaze over the composition" — golden, warm, slightly animalic, diffusing quietly through the surrounding notes. Cedar provides dry woody structure; cashmere wood adds soft, slightly powdery warmth; jasmine contributes a subtle floral softness. The combination earns "an elaborate dessert — hazelnut tiramisu with honey and plum" as the community's most vivid and most accurate collective description.
Base Notes (2 hrs through 6–8 hrs)
Amberwood · Patchouli · Oakmoss · Vetiver
The base provides the earthy, slightly woody, slightly mossy depth that earns Lucky its masculine grounding and prevents it from reading as purely sweet. Amberwood provides warm resonance; patchouli adds earthy depth; oakmoss contributes the classic chypre note that gives the drydown its most distinguished quality; vetiver adds earthy, cool complexity. "Cedar and vetiver come through the most in the latter stages — feels much drier; the tart aspects are gone and what remains is warm hazelnut-honey on an earthy woody base."
What it smells like on skin:
The plum-grapefruit opening is immediately fresh and tart — the most approachable 1 Million opening across the entire lineup. After 30 minutes the hazelnut heart asserts itself and the composition reaches its defining character: warm, nutty, slightly sweet, with the honey glaze that earns the "addictive" descriptor from the community's most consistent advocates. The amberwood-vetiver-oakmoss base provides the earthy grounding that makes Lucky more sophisticated than its gourmand DNA might suggest. For the collector who wants something warm, approachable, and reliably complimented without the original's aggressive spice-citrus delivery, Lucky earns its top ranking in the lineup.
Performance & Wear Guide
- Longevity: 6–8 hours on skin. Not the 12-hour beast of the original EDT. Fabric longevity is moderate — noticeable on clothing but not the multi-day persistence of the original.
- Projection: Moderate to above-average. "Hangs much closer to the skin and projects out to maybe a 3–4 foot radius — a nice change of pace from the original." The opening 20 minutes can project more loudly before settling.
- Sillage: Above average designer tier. Not room-filling. Creates a pleasant scent bubble rather than a public announcement.
- Season: Year-round versatile. Fall and autumn peak. "Can do somewhat well in the heat of summer and won't completely melt" — the hazelnut-honey character is more heat-stable than the original's spiced-citrus architecture.
- Occasion: Day through evening. Office at restrained application. Casual through smart-casual. Date nights. More broadly occasion-appropriate than the original EDT.
- Application: 2–3 sprays on pulse points. More restrained than the original but still capable of over-application. The hazelnut-honey sweetness compounds at higher application volumes.
- Age appeal: Skews young but genuinely versatile — "nice for a younger guy but the woody notes make it masculine enough to wear at any age" from the community consensus that earns its accuracy.
Performance varies with skin chemistry and ambient temperature. Apply to pulse points. Start with fewer sprays than you think you need.
All Paco Rabanne inventory at Aromatick is authenticated before entering the catalog. Bottle construction, fill level, and juice character are verified before entering the catalog.
These are authentic Paco Rabanne compositions at below-boutique pricing under the first sale doctrine — the same legal framework that governs all Aromatick inventory.
Decants are hand-filled into sterile atomizers from authenticated source bottles. Every decant is sealed and labeled before shipping. Questions: contact us.
— Rodney Gallagher, founder, Aromatick.com









