The Story
Why it exists.
Taj Sunset arrived in February 2011 as Escada's limited edition for the year, a fragrance built on the premise that a sunset over the Taj Mahal might smell like tropical fruit, still water, and warm skin. The name did the cultural legwork already. The box confirmed it, designed in what the brand called a trendy Indian style. What Escada's perfumers were building toward was something more specific than geography: a composition that could capture the feeling of tropical warmth, with mango and lotus as its anchors. Coconut cream and water lily complete the picture. It's a fragrance built for a specific kind of warmth, and it commits to that vision without hesitation.
If this were a song
Community picks
Banana Pancakes
Jack Johnson
The Beginning
Taj Sunset arrived in February 2011 as Escada's limited edition for the year, a fragrance built on the premise that a sunset over the Taj Mahal might smell like tropical fruit, still water, and warm skin. The name did the cultural legwork already. The box confirmed it, designed in what the brand called a trendy Indian style. What Escada's perfumers were building toward was something more specific than geography: a composition that could capture the feeling of tropical warmth, with mango and lotus as its anchors. Coconut cream and water lily complete the picture. It's a fragrance built for a specific kind of warmth, and it commits to that vision without hesitation.
The Alphonso mango is the real signal here. This isn't a generic mango note, it's a variety known for its intensely sweet, caramel-resin aroma that gives the opening something durable rather than just bright. Choosing it as a lead note means the top of the fragrance has real substance, a depth that prevents the initial impression from fading too quickly. The sweetness carries through in a way that feels natural and layered, not synthetic or flat. The mango doesn't just announce itself and disappear.
The Evolution
The opening lands with real weight. Mango so ripe it borders on overripe, dense with that Alphonso caramel-resin sweetness, blood orange brightening the whole thing with a quick citrus cut before it settles. The top notes aren't delicate, they push, and if you're not expecting sweetness this is where the divide opens. Water lily and lotus arrive quietly, cooling the air without making it chill. The raspberry threads through somewhere in the middle, adding a small tartness that prevents the heart from going fully opaque. What follows is a base where coconut builds slowly, creamy and warm, settling the fruitiness down into something that reads like beach-warmed skin rather than a fruit salad. Sandalwood holds the whole thing open at the end. Not loud. Not projecting across a room. Just warm and close, and there when you move your wrist in front of your face.
Cultural Impact
Taj Sunset was reissued in 2017 by popular demand. The fragrance has attracted regular comparison to Escada's own Rockin' Rio and Miami Blossom, as well as Beyoncé Heat Rush, suggesting it found a place in the fruity-coconut category that extends beyond what the brand usually offers. The reissue speaks to something in the scent that people wanted to return to, a quality that made it worth bringing back after the initial limited run. Comparisons to those other fragrances indicate it holds its own among some of the more memorable tropical fragrances in the category.
The House
Germany · Est. 1976
Escada translates its runway energy into a line of fragrances that balance bright optimism with refined structure. The German house launches scents that echo the brand’s reputation for vivid colour, kinetic style and a touch of sport‑inspired elegance. From the early 1990s to the present, Escada offers a portfolio that includes both classic flanker releases and seasonal experiments, each designed to sit comfortably on the skin while inviting a moment of playful confidence.
If this were a song
Community picks
Light-drenched, Caribbean afternoon warmth. The kind of afternoon where the light goes golden and sticky-sweet and you don't want to be anywhere else. Acoustic texture, unhurried rhythm, no drama, tropical ease without trying.
Banana Pancakes
Jack Johnson


























