How to Save Money on Flowers for a Wedding

How to Save Money on Flowers for a Wedding

The cost of flowers are probably one of the more shocking expenses that comes up during wedding planning. They’re kind of a one time use thing, right? If you’re hesitant to fork over hundreds, or even thousands of dollars for floral you’re not alone; here’s how I managed to save money on flowers for a wedding without sacrificing style!

Every tip I’m about to share are things that I’ve personally done while wedding planning. Not just my own marriage, but weddings for other people too. Most recently, we planned a large backyard wedding where the total cost for floral was less than $500… But you’d never know it!

Budget-Friendly Ideas for Wedding Flowers

According to Wedding Wire, the average couple spends between $700 and $2,500 USD on wedding flowers, with the average cost sitting around $1500. Even if you’re not on a tight budget, wouldn’t it be more fun to spend hundreds of dollars on other wedding fun, or even the honeymoon?

Here’s some real ideas we’ve used to save money on flowers for a wedding:

Opt for Planters Over Flower Arrangements

Floral arrangements in pots to save money on flowers for a wedding

If you’re having a spring, summer, or fall wedding skip the large, expensive flower arrangements and use a few planters as wedding decor instead. They look great at the altar and around the ceremony and reception areas. Even if you have to buy them, nice arranged planters or hanging baskets are a fraction of the cost compared to cut arrangements.

To get a planter that matches your wedding colours, take a DIY approach and create a custom arrangement in the spring to match your style. A florist can also create these; more expensive, but still cheaper than a cut arrangement.

The best part is you’ll be able to enjoy your flowers all summer long. Or choose perennials and enjoy your wedding flowers year after year.

We have used potted flowers multiple times while planning weddings and they’ve always looked stunning. If your wedding ceremony and reception are in two different places, save money on decorating by bringing your pots over to the venue.

Tip: Ask someone with a green thumb if you can borrow their blooms for the wedding day.

Use Greenery Instead of Flowers

Wedding tables setting using rosemary

Greener is easier to grow and maintain so it’s always less expensive than flowers. When possible, use greenery in place of flowers in your decorating to bring in natural elements without breaking the bank.

Think outside the box for you greenery: Rosemary, thyme, and other herbs make fantastic additions to table settings. You can grow these herbs easily yourself, or buy them from a local greenhouse.

You can also incorporate more greenery into your flower arrangements and bouquets to keep them looking full on a budget.

Tip: Plant ornamental grasses in your garden or grow your own herbs.

Keep Centerpieces Simple

Wedding centerpiece flower arrangement - baby's breath was used to save money on flowers for a wedding

The wedding we worked on this summer used a combination of greenery and baby’s breath on the tables. By sticking to short, small vases we were able to stretch out the flowers to save money. To keep the tables from looking empty we added some other decorative accents, including the table numbers, on top of cut wood slices.

Another technique is dropping the floral centerpieces altogether. Either do minimal decorating on the tables or opt for something that you can rent or purchase cheaply. Floating candles in vases can add ambiance and can be very inexpensive to buy or rent. In fact, candles in general are a great wedding table addition; no vases necessary.

Tip: If you’re having a smaller wedding, borrow vases and jars to help decorate your tables.

Choose Large, Cheap Flowers For Bouquets

Simple inexpensive bride's bouquet with sunflowers and greenery

Sunflowers are probably my favourite example of this, but dahlias and peonies (if in season) also work. Instead of using a bunch of small, expensive cut flowers pick a large bloom to use as a focal point and then add inexpensive greenery and complementary floral around it.

This won’t just save money, it also looks great in pictures!

Tip: If you’re giving bouquets to kids, have them hold a single bloom of your main flower. Cute and simple!

Pick Cheap Wedding Flowers

Flower prices vary, mostly depending on how hard they are to grow and whether or not they’ll be blooming naturally on your wedding day. But there are a few varieties that are super trendy, and also inexpensive, that are perfect for weddings.

Baby’s Breath

These pretty, tiny white flowers are very trendy right now. Pair them with some greenery for super cute flower arrangements.

Freesia

Freesia blooms indoors so it’s easy to grow yourself and relatively inexpensive to purchase. They come in an array of wedding approved colors including white, yellow, red, pink, orange, and purple. The greenery is pretty too!

Roses

You’d think they’d be more expensive, but certain varieties of roses are quite affordable. The best part is they’re romantic on their own so you won’t need a lot for a beautiful wedding arrangement.

Daisies

Daisies are especially lovely for a spring wedding, but you can use them any time. Usually white with yellow centers, daisies can add a pop of colour to your wedding arrangements when paired with greenery. They also symbolize purity; a perfect flower for a bride.

More Tips to Save Money on Wedding Flowers

  • Choose flowers that are in season when you get married
  • Decide who does (and doesn’t) need a corsage, boutonniere, or bouquet carefully; these add up
  • If you want a specific look, weigh the cost and quality of renting fake flowers or greenery vs the real thing
  • Consider discount options like Costco over a florist for bulk wedding flowers
  • To make a small budget work, splurge on the most important items
  • Pick a venue that has natural beauty instead of trying to bring the outdoors in
The Most Beautiful Flowers in the World

The Most Beautiful Flowers in the World

I love flowers, I think they’re absolutely wonderful. But I was planning my flower beds for spring and that got me wondering: what are the most beautiful flowers in the world?

Of course, as Margaret Wolfe Hungerford said, “Beauty is the eye of the beholder.” My favorite flower isn’t going to be your pick. For example, I’m quite partial to snap dragons – and I’d sooner a bouquet of those than a dozen roses. That doesn’t stop over 200 million of the romantic blossoms being cultivated and sold for Valentine’s Day each year.

But some flowers are objectively beautiful. Whether they become your top pick or you just think they’re lovely, these flowers are something else.

The best part about these flowers? Most of them can be grown in your garden right at home!

Rose

Rose flower

I just had to start with the safe bet. Whether you’re like me a prefer colourful bouquets or you’re absolutely blown away by a dozen roses, we can both agree these flowers are absolutely beautiful. There’s nothing I love more than seeing blooming rose bushes.

Especially if they’re in unique colours.

Personally I have a large rose shrub just on the outside of my fence that I’m trying to figure out how to move into the garden so I can better enjoy it. If you haven’t enjoyed roses in nature, you’re seriously missing out.

Since there’s so much selection when it comes to roses they’re actually pretty easy to maintain and grow in most climates as long as you pick the right one.

Bird of Paradise

Bird of paradise flower

I love this flower so much I picked up the Lego set! Bird of paradise is a flower that’s native to South America. It gets the name because the flower looks like a the bird of the same name taking off. Now more people are familiar with the flower than the bird.

Unfortunately for most of us cold-climate folks, bird of paradise flowers only grow in warm climates – which means almost all of Canada, the US (except a few southern states and Hawaii), and northern Europe is out.

If you’d really like to grow one yourself over the hot summer months, you can try planting one in a pot that you can move inside during cooler temperatures. Bird of paradise can also be a houseplant, although getting it to flower indoors is a bit tricky.

Cherry Blossom

Cherry blossom tree in bloom

On their own they’re pretty, but the true beauty from cherry blossoms comes from seeing the trees in bloom. Especially en masse. It’s not surprise that Japan has so many festivals surrounding cherry blossom season that have survived into modern day.

They’re also a huge part of Japanese culture.

Cherry blossom is used to describe the Japanese cherry trees that bloom exquisitely in the spring months. Other cherry trees also flower, though, and there’s plenty of options for growing flowering cherry trees throughout the northern hemisphere.

Tulips

Field of tulips

Spring is my absolutely favorite season. And tulips are pretty much the quintessential spring flower. They come in so many different colours for a rainbow of vibrant hues like pink, yellow, and orange.

I don’t have too much to say about tulips other than their unique shape is what makes them so pretty. So instead I’ll share with you one of my bucket list travel spots: Holland’s Keukenhof spring garden, which boats 7 million spring flowering bulbs.

Bleeding Hearts

Bleeding hearts flower

Bleeding hearts get their name because the flowers are shaped like little hearts with a piece at the bottom. Since they’re often found in reddish hues, it looks like a heart that’s bleeding.

They’re actually good size shrubs so this is more something that you’d plant in a yard/garden rather than a flower bed. Bleeding hearts come back each year so they’re a worthwhile investment if you like the flower.

Bleeding hearts are often regarded as one of the most beautiful flowers in the world because of their uniqueness.

Lilly

Orange lily flower

I was surprised to learn I had some lilies growing when I bought my house. The previous owners (an elderly couple) had not been able to keep up the flower beds they had filled with perennial flowers. In them we found quite a few lilies popped up in the spring!

Often associated with purity and beauty, lilies are popular flowers for most growing climates. They come in a bunch of colour varieties with the Easter lily being the one you’re probably most familiar with. Orange lilies, like the ones that grow in my garden, are pictured.

Personally, I’m also a huge fan of lily of the valley, which looks nothing like your typical lily flower. Either way, lilies are beautiful!

Orchids

Pink orchid

Orchids represent a huge variety of flowers, most of which look very different from one another. So we’re mostly talking about the typical flower you’d expect to see when you think ‘orchid’ – the moth orchid.

Moth orchids are made up of a bunch of small buds on the stem. The cluster of flat petals make these flowers look uniquely beautiful. They’re mood-lifting and go with absolutely any environment when brought indoors.

Despite their tropical look, orchids grow in a lot of different climates. Lady slippers, for example, grow throughout North America in different varieties. Many are threatening endangerment or endangered, though, and should be left alone if you find one.

Star Magnolia

White blooming magnolia tree

In my opinion, magnolias are underrated. They grow on trees or shrubs that can add some privacy to your yard, along with being very pretty when in bloom. The star magnolia is actually native to Japan (why do they get so many pretty trees?) but it grows well in North America too.

Star magnolias are very hardy, mostly only affected by spring frost. They bloom in the spring before growing leaves that stay on for the rest of the season. Even without the flowers, magnolia trees are handsome additions to your landscaping.

One thing that makes magnolias stand out is they’re pretty fast growing.

Dahlia

Hybrid dahlia flower

Dahlias come in so many colours that it’s hard not to find at least one variety pretty. The single flower ones are pretty, but if you want to see something unique definitely check out ball dahlias.

These flowers have large blooms on them so they’re pretty in the yard and clipped for a flower arrangement. They’re also very symmetrical, which helps make them so satisfying to look at.

Gerbera Daisy

Colorful daisies in vases

I like all kinds of daisy, but these large and colourful flowers are definitely worth mentioning. A mainstay of grocery store bouquets, they almost look like someone dyed a white flower rather than accepting these vivid colours actually occurred naturally.

Some people call these gerber daisies, but they’re the same thing.

Bonus: Lotus Flower

Lotus flower

These beautiful water flowers are commonly referenced in Buddhism and other beliefs/traditions in the region they historically grew in.

What you may not know is that several Asian countries traditionally consume parts of the Lotus flower. In fact, 1% of all vegetables eaten in Japan each year are renkon, aka lotus rhizomes (stems)! All parts of the lotus can be used – most uniquely in lotus leaf tea, which involves steeping the lotus leaf in hot water.

Frequently Asked Questions About Beautiful Flowers

This is hardly an extensive list on the most beautiful flowers in the world. There are some unique ones out there, including beautiful flowers that most people rarely see in their lifetime (if at all.) But, these are some of the prettiest flowers out there that are beloved by the mainstream.

And let’s face it: things get popular for a reason.