
Carolina Herrera
Good Girl Supreme EDP
Bold raspberry tuberose for confident nights
“Good Girl's sweetest, loudest sister that turns raspberry and tuberose into a compliment-generating night out weapon.”
Last updated: March 27, 2026
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Score Breakdown
Season Fit
Occasion Fit
Character
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Exceptional longevity and projection
- Unique raspberry-tuberose combination
- Major compliment getter for evening wear
- Well-crafted tuberose note that's creamy not harsh
Cons
- Very sweet, limited versatility
- Overpriced for a flanker
- Can be cloying in warm weather
Best For
- Evening dates and dinner parties
- Fall and winter nights out
- Women who love gourmand florals
Avoid If
- You prefer subtle fragrances
- You dislike very sweet scents
Full Review
Good Girl Supreme is for women who think the original Good Girl was too subtle. This flanker takes everything that made the original popular and amplifies it with a raspberry overdose that borders on candy-like territory. The opening hits you with jammy raspberry that's so intense it practically stains the air purple, backed by jasmine and tuberose that create a heady, almost narcotic floral bouquet. This isn't morning coffee shop territory — Supreme is built for dinner dates, cocktail parties, and nights when you want to be remembered.
Performance is where Supreme justifies its existence. You're looking at 8-10 hours of solid longevity with projection that reaches moderate-to-strong territory for the first 4 hours. The sillage creates a noticeable bubble around you without crossing into offensive territory, though it comes close. The drydown sees the raspberry calm down slightly while vanilla and tonka bean create a warm, sweet base that hugs closer to skin.
The tuberose here is the real star once you get past the berry opening. It's creamy, slightly indolic, and gives the fragrance a sophisticated floral backbone that prevents it from being pure sugar rush. The jasmine adds brightness and prevents the composition from becoming too heavy, though this is still decidedly rich territory.
At around $100-130 for 80ml, Supreme sits in typical designer pricing but feels slightly overpriced for what amounts to a sweeter, louder version of an already sweet fragrance. The performance justifies some of the cost, but you're essentially paying premium prices for a flanker that plays things safe. Sample first unless you're already obsessed with gourmand florals — this is definitely love-it-or-hate-it territory.
Details
Note Pyramid
Concentration
EDP
Gender Lean
Feminine
Longevity
9+ hours
Projection
Strong
Reviews (2)
Raspberry Tuberose That Actually Works
Good Girl Supreme works. Here's why: it takes two notes that could easily go wrong together and makes them into a legitimate night out weapon. The raspberry opening is bright without being juvenile, and when the tuberose kicks in around hour two, it's creamy and rich instead of that harsh white floral bite you get from cheaper versions. I wore this to a gallery opening in SoHo last month and had three separate people ask what I was wearing.
Let me be clear: this is sweet. Really sweet. But it's strategic sweetness, not accidental. The vanilla and tonka in the base keep everything grounded so you don't smell like a teenager's body spray. Longevity hits a solid 9 hours on my skin, projecting about 4 feet for the first three hours before settling closer. I tested it during that brutal heat wave in August and it held up without going cloying, though I wouldn't recommend it above 80 degrees.
The price point makes me wince a little. $130 for a flanker feels aggressive, especially when the original Good Girl does 80% of what this does for less money. But if you need a fragrance that guarantees compliments and you're not afraid of making an entrance, this delivers. My yia-yia would call it 'too much for church, perfect for catching a husband.' She's not wrong.
Pros
- + 9-hour longevity with 4-foot projection
- + Creamy tuberose that doesn't go harsh
- + Guaranteed compliment generator for evening
Cons
- - $130 price tag for a flanker
- - Too sweet and loud for daytime versatility
When Subtlety Left The Building
Look, I need to tell you about the woman who sat two rows ahead of me on the 8:47 to London Bridge last Tuesday. She was wearing Good Girl Supreme and I genuinely knew this because I could smell her from my seat. Not in a bad way — in a 'bloody hell, what is that and why do I suddenly want to follow her to whatever fabulous evening she's clearly planning' way. This is raspberry and tuberose turned up to eleven, and I cannot stress this enough... it works.
The brief here was obviously 'make Good Girl but more.' More sweetness, more projection, more 'notice me from across the room.' Carolina Herrera's done exactly that with a raspberry note that smells like actual fruit (not Haribo, thank God) and tuberose that's creamy rather than that harsh, funeral-flowers vibe you sometimes get. It's the fragrance equivalent of someone who knows they look good in red and wears it anyway.
Nine hours later, she was probably still leaving a trail. The longevity on this is genuinely impressive — it's the fragrance that keeps on giving whether you asked it to or not. But here's the thing: this only works after dark. Wear this to a Tuesday morning meeting and you're not 'mysterious and alluring,' you're 'the person who makes the lift awkward.' It's a night out weapon, pure and simple, and at £80-odd for what's essentially Good Girl with the volume cranked up... well, sometimes you pay for the confidence, don't you?
Pros
- + Raspberry note that's fruit, not sweets
- + Tuberose that's creamy instead of harsh
- + Nine-hour staying power that actually delivers
Cons
- - Sweet enough to cause actual dental issues
- - Priced like a masterpiece when it's basically Good Girl Plus