HONG KONG — Sending flowers in the city can cost as little as HK$300 for a simple carnation bunch or soar past HK$4,000 for an imported luxury statement piece, depending on flower type, arrangement style, and florist choice. A new market breakdown reveals what buyers can expect across four price tiers — and which florists deliver the best value at each level.
Whether you’re ordering a last-minute get-well bouquet or planning an extravagant corporate gift, understanding Hong Kong’s flower pricing landscape helps avoid surprises. Florists range from DIY-friendly stalls at Mong Kok Flower Market to high-end boutiques in Times Square and LANDMARK, with delivery fees and seasonal surcharges adding further variables.
Budget-Friendly: HK$300–600
Best for everyday gifting, casual occasions, or buyers willing to wrap their own.
Bouquets in this bracket typically feature single-flower varieties such as carnations, chrysanthemums, or gerberas in minimalist designs. A basic carnation bunch runs about HK$300, while mixed seasonal bouquets cost HK$400–500. The cheapest route is visiting Mong Kok Flower Market, where vendors sell per stem and larger bunches — especially past five stems — offer better value.
Recommended florist: Flowerbee, an online-only shop whose 30cm bouquets start around HK$875 (slightly above this bracket but still affordable). Online brands skip high-rent mall storefronts, keeping prices competitive. Sunny Florist is another longtime value option.
Mid-Range: HK$600–1,500
Best for classic rose bouquets, tulips, peonies, or trendy pastel-toned arrangements.
A dozen red roses typically costs HK$569–699; 24 roses with greenery runs HK$799–1,000. Peony-focused bouquets land around HK$1,000–1,500. This tier covers most standard gifting needs with better quality blooms and some design flourish.
Recommended florist: Andrsn Flowers — an online florist offering same-day delivery across Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, and the New Territories, with a 120-minute express option. They collaborate with expert florists to ensure consistent quality.
Premium: HK$1,500–2,500
Best for exotic or imported blooms, larger arrangements, and special occasions.
Expect orchids, hydrangeas, and premium imported roses in elaborate designs. A large orchid-and-rose bouquet costs approximately HK$1,800–2,500. Established brand-name florists cluster here: Fleurology by H (~HK$1,988), Petal & Poem (~HK$1,980), and M Florist (~HK$1,880) all offer comparable 30cm arrangements.
Recommended florist: Bloom & Song — a high-end shop in Causeway Bay’s Times Square that provides seasonal arrangements for some of Hong Kong’s most exclusive addresses.
Luxury: HK$2,000–4,000+
Best for statement gifting, corporate clients, weddings, and premium occasions.
Grand luxury bouquets feature rare or heavily imported flowers — often oversized and intricately designed. Prices range from HK$3,000 to more than HK$4,000.
Recommended florist: Ellermann Flower Boutique — a premium florist with locations at LANDMARK Hong Kong and Pacific Place Admiralty, offering same-day delivery for orders placed before noon and free in-store pickup.
Key Considerations for Buyers
Free delivery is common for orders above roughly HK$500, but same-day or remote deliveries add HK$50–100. Bespoke designs and premium gift-box packaging push costs higher.
Seasonal spikes are significant: prices for roses, tulips, and orchids can jump 20% or more during Chinese New Year and Valentine’s Day. Budget extra around those dates.
Value vs. brand: If budget matters more than label, Mong Kok Flower Market or online-only aggregators like Flowersby.com — an app that pools the city’s top florists — consistently beat brick-and-mortar boutiques for similarly sized bouquets. The difference largely reflects rent and brand positioning, not flower quality.
Understanding these brackets empowers buyers to choose wisely — whether you’re spending HK$300 or HK$3,000, Hong Kong’s floral market offers something for every budget and occasion.