Vendor Directory

Wedding Florists Australia

Trusted wedding florists across Australia — bouquets, ceremony arches, reception centrepieces, and full installations. Save favourites and shortlist by region.

3 results

Bridal Bloom Collective

Bridal Bloom Collective

Gold Coast & Tweed Heads, QLD

Flowers With Tika

Flowers With Tika

Gold Coast & Tweed Heads, QLD

Flower Lane

Flower Lane

Gold Coast & Tweed Heads, QLD

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Wedding florists by region

Sydney wedding florists

NSW

Hunter Valley wedding florists

NSW

Central Coast wedding florists

NSW

Blue Mountains wedding florists

NSW

South Coast wedding florists

NSW

Melbourne wedding florists

VIC

Yarra Valley wedding florists

VIC

Brisbane wedding florists

QLD

Gold Coast wedding florists

QLD

Plan with confidence

How to choose a wedding florist in Australia

Brief the florist on the day, not just the look

Pinterest boards help, but the day shape matters more — what time is the ceremony, who carries what down the aisle, do bouquets repurpose as reception centrepieces, who packs them down at the end of the night. A good Australian wedding florist asks about these in the first conversation. If they ask only about flowers, not flow, you'll feel the gap on the day.

Decide on real, faux, or a mix early

Australian couples now split roughly four ways across this question — about 4 in 10 stay all-fresh, around 1 in 5 go fully artificial, and a third blend the two. Fresh feels and smells like fresh — non-negotiable for bouquets and buttonholes. High-quality faux works brilliantly on ceremony arches and large installations and is often available as a hire rather than a one-off purchase. Many florists now design fresh-and-faux hybrids that read beautifully in photos either way.

Pick what's in season — your wallet will thank you

Imported and out-of-season florals can double the cost. Spring weddings in Australia (September–November) are easy season for ranunculus, peony, sweet pea, and stock. Autumn (March–May) brings dahlia, David Austin roses, and hardy native stems. Summer leans toward bold dahlia, sunflower, and tropical natives. Winter weddings work brilliantly with anemone, hellebore, eucalyptus, and dried elements as accents.

Choose a colour palette that holds together

Australian wedding florals are leaning quiet and considered — soft whites, creams, and gentle greens lead the field, with around 6 in 10 couples building the palette around them. Greenery-forward arrangements (eucalyptus, ferns, foliage with a few feature blooms) are the next most popular look. Pinks, brights, and native tones each pull a smaller but loyal following. We always recommend picking one primary palette with a single accent rather than three competing colours — the whole day photographs cohesively that way.

Know which arrangements scale and which don't

Bridal-party bouquets and buttonholes are fixed-cost regardless of guest count — typically the first floral spend you commit to. Reception centrepieces scale with table count, so guest list growth pushes that line up linearly. Installations (flower walls, ceremony arches, suspended pieces) are one big spend that photographs huge. Decide where you want the visual hit and let the rest support it.

Confirm delivery, set-up, and pack-down

Australian wedding florists usually offer three tiers: drop-off (cheapest, you place everything yourself), delivery plus on-site set-up (the florist styles your ceremony and reception spaces), and full styling that includes lighting and props. For installations and ceremony arches, on-site styling is essentially non-negotiable. Pack-down at the end of the night is a separate line item — agree in writing who collects vases, who strikes the arch, and what happens to the flowers afterward, before the contract is signed.

Plan what happens to the flowers after the day

Reception centrepieces look most generous when guests can take them home. Brief your venue and coordinator that this is the plan and they'll pack them up at the end of the night. Bridal bouquets pressed or preserved take a few weeks via a specialist. Donating to hospitals, aged care, or a local women's shelter is another option many florists can arrange the day after.

Questions

Common questions about wedding florists in Australia

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