The Art of Giving5 min read3 May 2026

How to Choose a Florist

The difference between a good florist and a great one is enormous, and it is not always obvious from a website. Here is what to look for.

Inside a well-stocked independent florist with buckets of fresh seasonal flowers

The UK flower industry is large and varied: supermarket concessions, high-street chains, independent florists, online-only services, and farmers who sell direct from the field all compete for the same customer. They are not equivalent. Knowing what separates them helps you make a choice you will not regret.

Signs of a good independent florist

What to look for

  • Stock that changes with the seasons: a florist selling the same flowers in January and July is sourcing primarily from imports
  • British-grown flowers clearly labelled or prominently promoted in season
  • A willingness to advise rather than just sell: a good florist asks about the occasion and the recipient
  • Arrangements in the shop that show genuine design skill, not just assembled bunches
  • Knowledge of vase life and flower care: they should be able to tell you how long each flower will last
  • Transparency about provenance: where their flowers come from and how they are sourced

Questions worth asking

A good florist welcomes questions. Ask what is in season right now and what they would recommend. Ask whether they stock any British-grown flowers. Ask how long the arrangement you are considering will last. Ask whether they can do something bespoke for your occasion, or whether they work from a fixed menu. The answers will tell you a great deal about the florist's knowledge, values, and willingness to engage.

Online florists: what the quality signals are

Online florists compete primarily on price and convenience. The quality signals are different from a high-street shop: look for customer reviews that mention freshness and vase life specifically (not just 'beautiful flowers'), look for whether the company mentions sourcing or sustainability, and look for whether the product photography shows flowers in bud rather than at peak bloom. Flowers photographed at full open bloom are staged: you will not receive them looking like that.

The subscription question

Several florists now offer subscription services: regular deliveries on a weekly or fortnightly basis, often at a discounted price per delivery. These are good value when the florist rotates stock seasonally and the quality is consistent. Be cautious of subscriptions that lock you into a long contract before you have tested the quality. Order once or twice first.

A florist who talks to you about the occasion is worth ten who just hand you the nearest bunch. Knowledge and care are what you are paying for.

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