Migliaccio & Rathod LLP is investigating whether Tom Ford Oud Wood and related Tom Ford fragrances are marketed in a way that may mislead consumers about the presence or nature of oud ingredients.
Tom Ford’s own product page describes the Tom Ford Oud Wood fragrances as using “rare oud notes,” with key notes including oud, sandalwood, amber, tonka bean, and other materials.
What Consumers Report
Consumers may report:
- Purchasing Tom Ford Oud Wood because of oud-related marketing.
- Believing the product contained natural oud or agarwood-derived material.
- Paying premium prices because oud is understood to be rare and expensive.
- Later questioning whether the fragrance contains natural oud or instead uses synthetic oud accords.
Why Consumers Should Be Concerned
Oud is commonly associated with agarwood, a rare and expensive fragrance material. If consumers reasonably understand “oud” marketing to mean natural oud, but the product uses synthetic aroma chemicals or accords instead, consumers may have paid a premium based on an allegedly misleading ingredient impression.
Potential claims may include:
- False advertising
- Ingredient misrepresentation
- Price-premium injury
- Consumer protection violations
Signs You May Be Affected
- You purchased Tom Ford Oud Wood or another Tom Ford oud fragrance.
- Oud-related marketing influenced your purchase.
- You believed the fragrance contained natural oud.
- You paid a premium because of rare-ingredient representations.
If you have encountered these issues, we would like to hear from you. Please complete the contact form on this page, send us an email at [email protected], or give us a call at (202) 470-3520.
[False Advertising Contact Form]
