Ordering flowers in Singapore sounds simple until you actually try to pick a florist. There are hundreds of options, from heritage garden centres that have been around since the 1960s to Instagram-native startups that launched last year. Some promise same-day delivery for $25. Others charge $300 for a single arrangement. The gap between what you see on a website and what actually shows up at someone's door can be enormous.
I spent the past few weeks researching the best florists in Singapore for 2026: comparing catalogues, reading through thousands of Google and Facebook reviews, verifying current pricing, and checking which florists consistently deliver fresh blooms on time. Singapore's floriculture market is projected to reach US$32 million in 2025 and continues to grow at around 7% annually, so there is no shortage of competition. The challenge is working out which florists are worth your money.
This list covers 10 florists across different price points, specialities, and use cases. Each one is tagged with a "best for" label so you can jump straight to the one that fits. Whether you need a last-minute birthday delivery, a luxury bespoke wedding arrangement, or a reliable weekly subscription for your office reception, there is a florist here for you.
Key Takeaways
How I chose these florists
Every florist on this list was evaluated against five criteria: flower quality and freshness, delivery reliability and speed, pricing transparency, range of arrangements, and consistency of client reviews. I checked Google ratings, Facebook recommendations, Yelp listings, and independent review sites to get a balanced picture.
I deliberately included a mix of premium boutique florists, high-volume online platforms, and budget-friendly options because "best" depends entirely on what you need. A S$300 bespoke wedding centrepiece from Charlotte Puxley is a different product from a S$35 surprise bouquet from Farm Florist, and both can be excellent value for the right occasion.
A note on what this list is not: it is not a sponsored directory. No florist paid to be here, and I have no affiliate relationships with any of them. The ranking reflects my honest assessment based on publicly available information, current in 2026.
1. Windflower Florist, best for reliable same-day delivery with a premium feel
Since launching in 2016, Windflower Florist has delivered over 200,000 bouquets across Singapore and built one of the strongest reputations in the industry. Their 4.8-star Google rating across 1,500+ reviews is not just a number; scroll through the feedback and you will find consistently detailed praise for freshness, arrangement quality, and punctual delivery.
What sets Windflower apart is their Trusted Timely Guarantee: if your delivery arrives late, it is free. That is a bold promise in an industry where "same-day" often means "sometime before midnight." They offer six dedicated express slots from Monday to Saturday, with a 60-minute delivery option for genuinely urgent orders. The cut-off for free same-day delivery is generous compared to most competitors.
Arrangements start from S$160 for hand bouquets and S$185 for vase arrangements, which places Windflower firmly in the mid-to-premium tier. You are paying more than the budget platforms, but the presentation, packaging, and reliability justify the difference. If you are sending flowers to a client, a partner, or anyone where first impressions matter, Windflower is a safe bet.
Website: windflowerflorist.com
Best for: clients who want premium arrangements with guaranteed on-time delivery, including express 60-minute options.
Pricing: hand bouquets from S$160; vase arrangements from S$185; flower stands from S$120.
Standout strength: Trusted Timely Guarantee (late delivery = free), 4.8 stars across 1,500+ Google reviews, and 200,000+ bouquets delivered since 2016.
2. Floristique, best for affordable everyday bouquets
Founded by Wendy Han in 2017, Floristique has grown into one of Singapore's most reviewed online florists with a 4.9-star Google rating across over 2,000 verified reviews. That kind of volume with that rating is difficult to maintain unless the product and service are genuinely consistent. On Facebook, they hold a 94% recommendation rate across 573 reviews.
Floristique's catalogue is enormous: over 600 designs spanning hand bouquets, flower boxes, table arrangements, congratulatory stands, and condolence wreaths. Pricing starts from S$35 for a simple baby's breath bouquet and scales up to S$700 for elaborate flower stands. The sweet spot is the S$40 to S$80 range, where you get a genuinely attractive, well-wrapped bouquet that does not look like it came from a budget operation.
Free same-day delivery is available across Singapore for orders placed before 2pm, which is slightly earlier than some competitors but still practical for most situations. If you are the type of person who orders flowers regularly for birthdays, anniversaries, or "just because" occasions, Floristique offers the best combination of quality, variety, and affordability on this list.
Website: floristique.sg
Best for: regular flower buyers who want attractive everyday bouquets at fair prices, with free same-day delivery.
Pricing: bouquets from S$35; premium arrangements from S$80; flower stands up to S$700.
Standout strength: 4.9-star rating across 2,000+ Google reviews, 600+ designs in the catalogue, and free same-day delivery for orders before 2pm.
3. Charlotte Puxley Flowers, best for luxury bespoke arrangements
If you have ever received a Charlotte Puxley arrangement, you know immediately it is different from everything else on the market. Founded in 2015 by London-trained florist Charlotte Puxley, the studio brings an English countryside aesthetic to Singapore's tropical context: wild, textured, and intentionally imperfect in the way that only highly skilled florists can achieve.
Charlotte Puxley is not a volume operation. Every arrangement is hand-crafted, and the team is known for their attention to detail on bespoke projects. Their wedding and events work has been featured in Harper's Bazaar Singapore, and clients who have used them for multiple occasions describe the communication as patient, responsive, and genuinely collaborative. One repeat customer noted receiving different flower varieties every week for over two years, with consistently excellent quality.
Arrangements start from S$120, with standard delivery at S$18 and express two-hour slots at S$35. This is firmly premium territory, but you are paying for artistry and sourcing quality that most online florists simply do not offer. For weddings, corporate events, or gifts where the arrangement itself is the statement, Charlotte Puxley is the name that Singapore's design-conscious clients trust.
Website: charlottepuxleyflowers.com
Best for: luxury bespoke arrangements, weddings, and clients who value artisan floral design over mass-produced bouquets.
Pricing: arrangements from S$120; standard delivery S$18; express 2-hour slots S$35.
Standout strength: British-trained founder with a signature English countryside style adapted for Singapore's tropics, featured in Harper's Bazaar.
4. Far East Flora, best for a one-stop garden centre experience
Far East Flora has been part of Singapore's landscape since 1965. That is nearly 60 years in the flower business, and the longevity shows in their infrastructure: a full-service online shop, a sprawling physical garden centre at Thomson Road, retail outlets at Clementi Road and City Square Mall, and even their own floristry school (CreativeWorkz Floristry Academy). No other florist on this list offers that breadth of operation.
Their online catalogue carries approximately 70 designs per category, with hand bouquets starting from S$52 and arrangements scaling up to S$700. Delivery is not free: standard delivery costs S$7, express is S$10.70, and super express is S$21.40. That delivery charge can feel like a sting when competitors offer free shipping, but Far East Flora's physical presence means you can also walk in, browse real displays, and walk out with exactly what you want. For condolence flowers, congratulatory stands, and hampers, their range is one of the widest in Singapore.
The trade-off is that Far East Flora's online experience feels less polished than newer competitors. The website can be harder to navigate, and some of the photography does not do their arrangements justice. But if you value heritage, the ability to physically inspect flowers before buying, and a florist with genuine depth of expertise, Far East Flora remains a Singapore institution for a reason.
Website: fareastflora.com
Best for: customers who want a physical garden centre experience, plus the widest range of flower stands, hampers, and condolence arrangements online.
Pricing: hand bouquets from S$52; delivery from S$7 (standard) to S$21.40 (super express).
Standout strength: nearly 60 years in business with physical garden centres, an in-house floristry academy, and the widest product range on this list.
5. Farm Florist, best for budget-friendly bouquets with free delivery
Farm Florist has built a loyal following by doing one thing well: delivering attractive bouquets at prices that undercut most of the market, with free delivery on every single order. No minimum spend. No fine print. Their puffy premium bouquets start from just S$25, and the popular "Surprised Bouquet" (where the florist picks the arrangement) is S$34 with zero delivery charges.
The operation backs this up with a service guarantee that very few florists match: a full refund on late deliveries and unfresh flowers. That guarantee, combined with a 4.9-star Google rating across over 1,400 reviews, suggests they are not cutting corners to hit those price points. They also offer one-hour express delivery for urgent situations and weekly or monthly floral subscriptions from S$69.90 for offices and homes.
The caveat with any budget florist is managing expectations on arrangement complexity. Farm Florist's bouquets are beautiful for their price range, but you will not get the hand-tied artistry of Charlotte Puxley or the premium wrapping of Windflower. For everyday gifting, office brightening, or anyone who sends flowers frequently enough that cost adds up, Farm Florist delivers genuine value.
Website: farmflorist.com
Best for: budget-conscious buyers who want fresh, attractive flowers with free delivery and no minimum spend.
Pricing: bouquets from S$25; Surprised Bouquet from S$34; subscriptions from S$69.90/month.
Standout strength: full refund guarantee on late or unfresh deliveries, 4.9 stars across 1,400+ Google reviews, and free delivery on all orders.
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6. Flower Chimp, best for last-minute express delivery
Originally founded in Malaysia, Flower Chimp expanded into Singapore and has since become one of the region's largest online florists. Their standout feature is the delivery window: same-day delivery until 10pm daily, with a 60-minute express option for covered areas during weekday hours. If you have ever needed flowers at 7pm on a Wednesday and been told "order before 2pm for same-day delivery," Flower Chimp solves that problem.
The platform carries a wide range spanning bouquets, boxed arrangements, gift baskets, and wedding flowers, with options under S$50 for buyers watching their budget. Their pricing is transparent, with all costs displayed upfront on the product page. The catch is that delivery is charged on every order, with no free-shipping threshold, so factor that into your total when comparing against florists offering free delivery.
Customer feedback sits at 4.6 stars across over 5,600 reviews, which is solid for the volume they handle. The most common positive feedback highlights speed and convenience. The most common criticism flags occasional flower substitutions during peak periods (Valentine's Day, Mother's Day) without prior notice. For any day that is not a major flower holiday, the service is consistently reliable.
Website: flowerchimp.sg
Best for: last-minute orders with same-day delivery until 10pm and 60-minute express options.
Pricing: bouquets from under S$50; delivery charged per order (varies by speed and location).
Standout strength: same-day delivery until 10pm, 60-minute express option, and 4.6 stars across 5,600+ reviews.
7. This Humid House, best for luxury weddings and high-end events
This Humid House operates in a completely different category from the delivery florists on this list. Founded in 2017 by John Lim and co-directed alongside Francoise Ozawa, this is a botanical design studio that creates large-scale installations for weddings, corporate events, luxury residences, and hospitality spaces. If you have attended a high-end Singapore wedding with breathtaking floral installations in the past few years, there is a decent chance This Humid House was behind it.
Their work has been featured in The New York Times Style Magazine, Vogue, and Monocle. They won first prize at the prestigious Flora International Flower Festival, and their client list includes some of Singapore's most recognisable venues, hotels, and private residences. The aesthetic leans towards bold, sculptural, and nature-forward, using tropical foliage and seasonal blooms in ways that feel more like art installation than traditional floristry.
You will not find a catalogue with prices on their website. This Humid House works on a bespoke consultation basis, and their projects are priced accordingly: this is not the florist for a S$50 birthday bouquet. But if you are planning a wedding, a brand launch, or any event where the floral design needs to be extraordinary, this studio is operating at the highest level in Singapore.
Website: humidhouse.com
Best for: luxury weddings, corporate events, and large-scale floral installations where design is the centrepiece.
Pricing: bespoke consultation only; project-based pricing (premium tier).
Standout strength: featured in Vogue and The New York Times, Flora International first prize winner, and the go-to for Singapore's most high-profile events.
8. Petite Fleur, best for personalised gifts with same-day weekend delivery
Petite Fleur positions itself as a florist that takes personalisation seriously. Every bouquet is hand-crafted, and their team is known for accommodating specific requests around colour palettes, flower types, and wrapping styles. That level of flexibility is rare among online florists, where most platforms offer a fixed catalogue with minimal customisation.
Their catalogue ranges from S$38 for a cotton dreams bouquet to S$399 for premium arrangements, with tulips, roses, and seasonal blooms as recurring strengths. Same-day delivery is available every day, including weekends and public holidays, for orders placed before 4pm. That weekend and public holiday coverage is a genuine differentiator; plenty of florists offer same-day on weekdays but charge extra or restrict slots on Saturdays and Sundays.
Wedding florals are a growing part of their business, with services spanning bridal bouquets, ceremony decor, car decorations, and corsages. Reviews on Bridely and Google consistently highlight the team's patience during customisation and their willingness to work with clients who are not entirely sure what they want. If you value a collaborative, personal approach over a quick click-and-deliver transaction, Petite Fleur is worth a look.
Website: petitefleursg.com
Best for: personalised, custom-crafted bouquets with same-day delivery available every day including weekends and public holidays.
Pricing: bouquets from S$38; premium arrangements up to S$399; same-day delivery including weekends.
Standout strength: high level of personalisation and customisation, with same-day delivery on weekends and public holidays (before 4pm).
9. 24Hrs City Florist, best for late-night and early-morning orders
When you need flowers at 11pm or 6am, most florists are closed. 24Hrs City Florist operates daily from 9am to 6am the following morning, which is effectively a 21-hour window that covers scenarios no other florist on this list can match. Their Lavender Street location is a physical shop you can walk into, not just a website with extended hours.
Same-day delivery is available for orders placed before 8pm, and phone orders can be fulfilled with delivery within two to three hours at a S$45 shipping charge. During standard office hours, delivery is free. The pricing is nett (no GST added), which makes the sticker price the actual price. For condolence flowers, their range is particularly strong, with arrangements crafted across multiple budget tiers.
The trade-off is that their online catalogue and website design are not as polished as the newer online-first florists. If you are browsing on a phone looking for Instagram-worthy arrangements, the experience may feel dated. But 24Hrs City Florist is not competing on aesthetics; they are competing on availability. For hospital visits, funerals, late-night surprises, or any situation where timing matters more than browsing experience, they fill a gap that nobody else does.
Website: 24hrscityflorist.com
Best for: late-night and early-morning flower orders, emergency situations, and walk-in purchases outside standard hours.
Pricing: nett prices (no GST); free delivery during office hours; S$45 for 2-to-3-hour phone order delivery.
Standout strength: open from 9am to 6am daily, with a physical shop on Lavender Street for walk-in orders at hours when every other florist is closed.
10. Floral Garage, best for the cheapest bouquets in Singapore
Floral Garage has made affordability their entire identity, and they deliver on that promise. Bouquets start from S$29.90, with their popular Freestyle Bouquet at S$34.90 and a Premium Freestyle at S$64.90. There is no hard same-day cut-off, and the service runs 24 hours. How do they keep prices this low? Low overheads, automated processes, and a streamlined catalogue that avoids the bloated selection that drives up costs at larger operations.
The service is trusted by over 1,180 customers with a 4.6-star rating. Positive reviews highlight responsive customer service, same-day reliability, and professionalism. The most common criticism flags occasional delivery timing issues, particularly when paid time slots are not honoured exactly as expected. If you are ordering for a specific event with a hard deadline, build in a buffer or consider a florist with a timing guarantee.
For the price point, the arrangements are genuinely attractive. Floral Garage is not trying to compete with luxury florists; they are offering clean, fresh bouquets at prices that make sending flowers a low-commitment decision rather than a considered purchase. Students, young professionals, and anyone who wants to send flowers without spending S$100 should start here.
Website: floralgaragesg.com
Best for: budget buyers who want the lowest prices in Singapore without sacrificing freshness.
Pricing: bouquets from S$29.90; Freestyle Bouquet S$34.90; Premium Freestyle S$64.90; free delivery available.
Standout strength: consistently the cheapest fresh bouquets in Singapore, with a 24-hour ordering window and no hard same-day cut-off.
Other florists in Singapore worth considering
The 10 florists above are my top picks for 2026, but Singapore has a deep bench of quality options. Here are a few more worth looking at depending on your specific needs:
- Poppy Flora Studio (Seletar / Tanjong Pagar): founded in 2000 by former advertising executive Sarah Lim, Poppy specialises in vintage-style and wild garden arrangements that feel artistic rather than commercial. They also run floristry workshops through their "Psychic Workshop" programme. Best for clients who want a creative, personality-driven arrangement and are willing to pay for the artisan touch.
- Fav Florist: trusted by over 50,000 customers with a 4.8-star rating, Fav Florist offers bouquets, flower boxes, preserved domes, and envelope arrangements from S$21.90 with free islandwide delivery. Their one-hour express option is a strong alternative for urgent orders. Best for budget-to-mid-range gifting with a wide variety of formats.
- Little Flower Hut: one of Singapore's largest online florists with over 1,000 designs and 5,400+ Google reviews. They claim a 99% satisfaction rate and offer a price match guarantee with free delivery. Their 60-minute express option and 24-hour service make them a solid all-rounder at the budget end. Best for buyers who want the widest possible catalogue at competitive prices.
How much does flower delivery cost in Singapore in 2026?
A fresh flower bouquet in Singapore costs between S$25 and S$300+ depending on the florist, arrangement style, and occasion. Here is what the market looks like across different tiers:
- Budget (S$25 to S$50): simple hand bouquets, single-variety arrangements, and surprise bundles from florists like Farm Florist, Floral Garage, and Fav Florist. These are fresh, attractive, and well-suited for casual gifting
- Mid-range (S$50 to S$150): premium hand bouquets with mixed flowers, bloom boxes, and table arrangements from Floristique, Flower Chimp, and Windflower. Expect better wrapping, more variety, and a presentation that feels considered
- Premium (S$150 to S$300+): bespoke arrangements, luxury bloom boxes, and designer bouquets from Charlotte Puxley, Windflower, and boutique studios. You are paying for artistry, sourcing quality, and a presentation that makes a statement
- Events and weddings (S$500+): custom floral installations, ceremony decor, and tablescapes from studios like This Humid House and Charlotte Puxley. Pricing is project-based and varies dramatically with scale
Delivery charges vary significantly. Some florists (Farm Florist, Floristique, Fav Florist) include free delivery on all orders. Others charge S$7 to S$21 for standard delivery (Far East Flora), or apply per-order delivery fees (Flower Chimp). Express delivery, typically within 60 minutes, usually costs S$25 to S$45 extra. Always check the total cost including delivery before comparing prices across florists.
How to choose the right florist in Singapore
The right florist depends on the occasion, your budget, and how important timing is. Here is a practical checklist I would use before ordering:
- Start with the occasion. A funeral wreath requires a different florist from a birthday surprise. Some florists specialise in condolence arrangements (Far East Flora, 24Hrs City Florist), while others focus on celebratory gifting (Floristique, Farm Florist). Match the florist to the occasion rather than defaulting to whoever appears first on Google
- Check the delivery cut-off time. "Same-day delivery" means different things to different florists. Some require orders by 12pm, others by 4pm, and Flower Chimp accepts orders until 10pm. If you are a last-minute orderer, check the cut-off before you browse the catalogue
- Compare total cost, not sticker price. A S$35 bouquet with S$15 delivery is not cheaper than a S$45 bouquet with free delivery. Always factor in delivery fees, express surcharges, and any location-specific charges (airports, hospitals, Sentosa, Jurong Island)
- Read reviews for delivery, not just flowers. Beautiful photos on the website mean nothing if the bouquet arrives wilted or four hours late. Filter reviews specifically for comments about delivery timing and flower freshness on arrival
- For weddings and events, book a consultation first. Do not choose a wedding florist based on their everyday bouquet catalogue. Schedule a face-to-face consultation, ask to see portfolios of past events at similar venues, and get a detailed written quote before committing
If you are ordering regularly, whether for an office, a restaurant, or personal enjoyment, ask about subscription packages. Several florists on this list (Farm Florist, Floristique, Far East Flora) offer weekly or monthly plans that significantly reduce the per-bouquet cost.
Frequently asked questions about florists in Singapore
Can I get same-day flower delivery in Singapore?
Yes, most online florists in Singapore offer same-day delivery for orders placed before a specific cut-off time, typically between 12pm and 4pm. Flower Chimp accepts same-day orders until 10pm, and 24Hrs City Florist handles orders through the evening. For truly urgent situations, several florists offer 60-minute express delivery, usually for an additional S$25 to S$45.
Which florist in Singapore has the cheapest flowers?
Floral Garage and Farm Florist consistently offer the lowest prices, with bouquets starting from S$25 to S$35 including free delivery. Little Flower Hut and Fav Florist are also competitive at the budget end, with arrangements from S$20 to S$30. At these price points, flower variety and arrangement complexity will be simpler than premium options, but freshness and presentation are still solid.
Do florists in Singapore deliver on Sundays and public holidays?
Most online florists deliver seven days a week, including Sundays. Public holiday delivery varies by florist. Petite Fleur specifically offers same-day delivery on public holidays for orders before 4pm. 24Hrs City Florist operates daily without exception. Check individual florist websites for holiday schedules, as some restrict delivery slots or charge surcharges on major holidays like Chinese New Year and Christmas.
How far in advance should I order wedding flowers in Singapore?
For wedding florals, book your florist three to six months in advance. Premium studios like This Humid House and Charlotte Puxley fill up quickly during peak wedding season (October to March in Singapore). A consultation meeting should happen at least two months before the event to finalise designs, confirm venue logistics, and arrange a trial arrangement if needed.
Singapore's florist scene spans everything from heritage garden centres with 60 years of history to nimble online startups delivering bouquets within the hour. Whether you choose the guaranteed reliability of Windflower, the artisan luxury of Charlotte Puxley, or the no-frills value of Farm Florist, every florist on this list has earned their place through consistent quality, transparent pricing, and genuine customer satisfaction.
My advice? Match the florist to the occasion. Do not order a budget surprise bouquet from a luxury wedding studio, and do not hire a delivery-focused platform for a bespoke event installation. Check the "best for" labels, verify current pricing on their websites, and if timing is critical, always confirm the delivery cut-off before you order.
If you run a florist in Singapore and your website is not converting the customers who find you on Google, your online presence might be holding you back. A well-designed florist website with proper web design, local SEO, and seamless online ordering can transform enquiry rates. Our redesign of Perfect Style Salon delivered a 180% increase in online enquiries within three months, and the same principles apply to any business where first impressions and visual quality drive purchasing decisions.
Sources & References (15)
- https://windflowerflorist.com/
- https://www.floristique.sg/
- https://charlottepuxleyflowers.com/
- https://www.fareastflora.com/
- https://floralgaragesg.com/
- https://www.flowerchimp.sg/
- https://humidhouse.com/
- https://farmflorist.com/
- https://www.petitefleursg.com/
- https://www.24hrscityflorist.com/
- https://www.poppy.com.sg/
- https://favflorist.com.sg/
- https://littleflowerhut.com.sg/
- https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/singapore-floriculture-market
- https://www.timeout.com/singapore/shopping/the-best-flower-delivery-services-in-singapore
Written by
Terris
Founder & Lead Strategist
Terris has over 8 years of experience in web design, development, and digital marketing. He has helped more than 100 Singapore businesses build powerful online presences that drive measurable results.
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