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Jo Malone ‘surprised and sad’ after being sued for £200,000 for using her name on fragrances

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April 9, 2026, 5:11 PM 5 min read 6 views

Summary

The perfumer sold her fragrance brand in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name. Photograph: Richard Pohle/RICHARD POHLE Jo Malone ‘surprised and sad’ after being sued for £200,000 for using her name on fragrances Estée Lauder Companies claims Zara collaboration with perfumer breaches long-standing naming agreement The British perfumer Jo Malone has said she is “surprised and very sad” after being sued for more than £200,000 in damages for using her name on fragrances she created for the fashion chain Zara. Malone sold her perfume brand to the US cosmetics group in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name for particular commercial reasons, including the marketing of fragrance. I am the person, the fragrance creator, the entrepreneur, the cancer survivor, the person,” she said. “I never expected to receive a high court claim with my name on it.” She said when Zara approached her seven years ago about working together, “they approached me, they didn’t approach a company, they didn’t approach a brand, they didn’t approach a logo.

## Summary
The perfumer sold her fragrance brand in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name. Photograph: Richard Pohle/RICHARD POHLE Jo Malone ‘surprised and sad’ after being sued for £200,000 for using her name on fragrances Estée Lauder Companies claims Zara collaboration with perfumer breaches long-standing naming agreement The British perfumer Jo Malone has said she is “surprised and very sad” after being sued for more than £200,000 in damages for using her name on fragrances she created for the fashion chain Zara. Malone sold her perfume brand to the US cosmetics group in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name for particular commercial reasons, including the marketing of fragrance. I am the person, the fragrance creator, the entrepreneur, the cancer survivor, the person,” she said. “I never expected to receive a high court claim with my name on it.” She said when Zara approached her seven years ago about working together, “they approached me, they didn’t approach a company, they didn’t approach a brand, they didn’t approach a logo.

## Article Content
Jo Malone in 2016. The perfumer sold her fragrance brand in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name.
Photograph: Richard Pohle/RICHARD POHLE
View image in fullscreen
Jo Malone in 2016. The perfumer sold her fragrance brand in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name.
Photograph: Richard Pohle/RICHARD POHLE
Jo Malone ‘surprised and sad’ after being sued for £200,000 for using her name on fragrances
Estée Lauder Companies claims Zara collaboration with perfumer breaches long-standing naming agreement
The British perfumer Jo Malone has said she is “surprised and very sad” after being sued for more than £200,000 in damages for using her name on fragrances she created for the fashion chain Zara.
It emerged last month that New York-based multinational Estée Lauder Companies, which owns brands M.A.C, Bobbi Brown, Estée Lauder and Jo Malone London, was
taking legal action
, claiming the fragrance entrepreneur infringed trademarks.
Malone sold her perfume brand to the US cosmetics group in 1999 in a deal under which she was blocked from using her name for particular commercial reasons, including the marketing of fragrance.
She stepped down as creative director of the Jo Malone brand in 2006 and has since said she regretted selling the rights to her name, calling it the “biggest mistake of my life”.
View image in fullscreen
Jo Loves collaboration perfume with Zara.
Photograph: Zara
After a non-compete clause ended in 2011, Malone set up the Jo Loves brand. In 2019, the perfume brand launched a collaboration with Zara that included eight scents, which sell for £35.99. The packaging made clear the products were created by Malone and the latest version includes the words: “A creation by Jo Malone CBE, founder of Jo Loves.”
Estée Lauder took issue with this wording, and high court documents show the company and Jo Malone Ltd expect to recover more than £200,000 in damages.
Speaking for the first time since then, Malone posted a
video on Instagram
defending the use of her name.
“My name is Jo Malone. I am the person, the fragrance creator, the entrepreneur, the cancer survivor, the person,” she said. “I never expected to receive a high court claim with my name on it.”
She said when Zara approached her seven years ago about working together, “they approached me, they didn’t approach a company, they didn’t approach a brand, they didn’t approach a logo. They approached me, Jo Malone, the person, and asked whether I would start working with them and create beautiful fragrances that everyone could wear in the world.”
She added: “I sold a company, I did not sell myself.
“We have gone above and beyond and above and beyond again to make sure everyone understands this has nothing to do with Jo Malone London, the company. This is very much Jo Malone. By using Ms Jo Malone CBE, Jo Malone creative director of Jo Loves, we’ve literally done as much as we possibly can

We’ve trained the staff, everything.
“Where do I go from here? Who can I be? I can’t stop being a person. Nobody can stop being the character and the person that you are.”
Estée Lauder was approached for comment.
The company previously said: “Ms Malone’s use of the name ‘Jo Malone’ in connection with recent commercial ventures goes beyond that legal agreement and undermines Jo Malone London’s unique brand equity.
“We respect Ms Malone’s right to pursue new opportunities. But legally binding contractual obligations cannot be disregarded, and when those terms are breached, we will protect the brand that we have invested in and built over decades.”
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## Expert Analysis

### Merits
N/A

### Areas for Consideration
- The packaging made clear the products were created by Malone and the latest version includes the words: “A creation by Jo Malone CBE, founder of Jo Loves.” Estée Lauder took issue with this wording, and high court documents show the company and Jo Malone Ltd expect to recover more than £200,000 in damages.

### Implications
- The packaging made clear the products were created by Malone and the latest version includes the words: “A creation by Jo Malone CBE, founder of Jo Loves.” Estée Lauder took issue with this wording, and high court documents show the company and Jo Malone Ltd expect to recover more than £200,000 in damages.
- They approached me, Jo Malone, the person, and asked whether I would start working with them and create beautiful fragrances that everyone could wear in the world.” She added: “I sold a company, I did not sell myself. “We have gone above and beyond and above and beyond again to make sure everyone understands this has nothing to do with Jo Malone London, the company.
- But legally binding contractual obligations cannot be disregarded, and when those terms are breached, we will protect the brand that we have invested in and built over decades.” Explore more on these topics Fragrance news Share Reuse this content

### Expert Commentary
This article covers malone, name, brand topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 616.
malone name brand fragrance using zara lauder company

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