Cheap flowers delivery in Singapore now starts around S$19.90 for a same-day bouquet, and the cheapest of the boutique florists throw delivery in for free with no minimum spend. The catch most listicles skip is that the headline price is rarely the price you pay. Add a card, a vase, a same-day express slot or a Valentine's date and a S$20 bouquet quietly becomes S$45. This guide treats flowers the way you would treat any other discretionary line in your budget: it shows the genuinely cheapest delivery options in mid-2026 with verified prices, where the supermarket beats every florist on price per stem, what the free-delivery promise actually covers, and the three moves that cut a flower order by 30 to 40 percent without it looking cheap.
The floor for a delivered bouquet has dropped. Floristique lists same-day bouquets from S$19.90 with free islandwide delivery and no minimum spend, and Floral Garage starts at S$22.90 with free same-day delivery too. At the supermarket the floor is lower still: a ready-made bunch at FairPrice Finest or Cold Storage runs roughly S$6 to S$20, though you carry it home yourself. So the honest answer to what a cheap delivered bouquet costs is under S$25 if you shop the right florist, and under S$20 if you are willing to pick it up.
The number people quote, S$40 to S$100 for an average bouquet, is the middle of the market, not the bottom. Once you decide a delivered bouquet is the gift, the spend splits into three parts: the flowers, the delivery, and the add-ons. The flowers are the only part you are actually choosing; the other two are where overspending hides. Treat a flower order like any small discretionary buy in your monthly budget and decide the all-in number before you reach checkout, not after the upsells have done their work.
Below is what the cheapest same-day florists charge in mid-2026, taken from each provider's own site. Prices move with stock and season, so read these as the entry tier to aim at rather than a fixed sticker, and check the live price before you buy.
| Provider | From price | Delivery | Same-day cutoff |
|---|---|---|---|
| Floristique | S$19.90 | Free, no min spend | 2pm weekdays, 11am weekends |
| Floral Garage | S$22.90 | Free islandwide | 5pm (12pm Sun/PH) |
| The Bud Box | S$35 (free-style box) | Free, no min spend | Before each timeslot |
| FARM Florist | S$39.90 | Free on every order | Check site per slot |
| Flower Chimp | From ~S$20 on sale | Charged at checkout | 5pm daily |
| Supermarket bunch | ~S$6 to S$20 | Self-collect | In-store stock |
Most of the budget florists genuinely deliver for free, which is the single biggest reason a delivered bouquet can now cost the same as one you collect yourself. Floristique goes furthest: its promise is on-time free same-day delivery or your order is free, with no minimum spend, so the S$19.90 bouquet ships at S$19.90. Floral Garage and The Bud Box also bundle free same-day delivery with no minimum. FARM Florist states free delivery on every order.
The line to watch is the difference between free standard delivery and a paid express slot. Free usually means you accept a delivery window across part of the day. If you want a fixed one-hour or urgent slot, that is where a surcharge appears: at Floral Garage an urgent 1.5-hour delivery is offered, and across the market a guaranteed one-hour or two-hour window typically adds S$20 to S$30. Flower Chimp is the exception among the cheap names: its shipping is calculated at checkout rather than always free, so the below-S$50 sticker is not always the door price.
The money lesson is the same one that applies to any free-delivery offer in Singapore: free is free only if you take the slow slot. Paying S$25 to skip the queue on a S$20 bouquet more than doubles the order. If timing is flexible, the free window is the whole point of the low price.
If price per stem is all that matters, no delivery florist beats the supermarket. FairPrice Finest and Cold Storage carry ready-made bunches and single-stem bundles, with rose bundles around S$20 for ten stalks and casual bouquets from roughly S$6 to S$20. IKEA's flower section sits in the same band. The trade-offs are real: the range is narrow, the flowers have usually been pre-packed for a few days so the vase life is shorter, and you carry it home yourself.
That makes supermarket flowers the right call for a specific job: a casual bouquet to brighten a kitchen counter, a host gift, or a weekly bunch for yourself. It is the wrong call for a formal occasion where presentation and freshness carry the gift. The honest framing is that you are paying a boutique florist for arrangement, packaging, a guaranteed delivery slot and longer-lasting stems, none of which a supermarket bunch includes.
Self-collection is the hidden middle option. Several florists, including The Bud Box, let you collect in person at no delivery cost, which suits anyone who works near the studio or is heading to the recipient anyway. You get florist-grade flowers without paying for the van. For a recurring spend, this is the kind of small habit that compounds the same way skipping any avoidable fee does, the logic behind lifestyle inflation working in reverse.
The bouquet is the cheap part. The margin is in the add-ons, and they are presented at checkout precisely when you have stopped comparing prices. A vase can add S$15 to S$40, a soft toy S$15 to S$30, a box of chocolates S$15 to S$25, a balloon or music-box add-on another S$10 to S$20, and a premium gift box on top of the flowers themselves. Stack two or three and a S$20 bouquet becomes a S$60 order without the flowers getting any better.
None of these are bad value in isolation; they are bad value when bought on impulse at the last screen. A vase the recipient already owns is dead money. Chocolates from the florist cost more than the same box at the supermarket. If you want the extras, the cheaper move is to buy the bouquet alone and add a S$5 supermarket chocolate or a card yourself. The flowers are the gift; the rest is markup.
There is one free add-on worth taking: almost every florist includes a message card at no charge. A handwritten card does more for how a gift lands than a S$25 teddy bear ever will. Take the free thing and skip the paid ones, and the difference goes straight back into your everyday spending budget.
Peak dates work differently from how people assume. Florists in Singapore mostly do not slap an obvious surcharge on the same bouquet for Valentine's Day; some even run small discounts of 15 to 25 percent to win the order early. What actually changes is the cutoff. Same-day delivery vanishes, lead times stretch to one or two days, and the cheapest designs sell out first, which pushes you up to a pricier tier by default.
So the cost of waiting on a peak date is not a line-item surcharge, it is scarcity. Order three or four days ahead for Valentine's Day or Mother's Day and you pay the normal price for your first-choice bouquet on the slot you want. Order on the day and you pay more because only the expensive arrangements and the paid express slots are left, if anything is left at all.
The two real cost traps on peak dates are the express slot, S$20 to S$30 to guarantee a same-day window when free slots are gone, and the upgrade tax, where the cheap design is sold out and you settle for a S$60 one. Both are avoidable with a calendar reminder. The flowers are not more expensive on 14 February; procrastination is.
Buying the wrong flower is its own kind of waste, because the gift misses even when the price is right. A quick occasion map covers most needs. For romance, red roses are the default, but tulips, lilies and a single-variety bunch read just as well for less than a dozen premium roses. For graduations, sunflowers, carnations and tulips are bright and cheap. For get-well visits, bright yellow or red blooms lift a room. For sympathy and funerals, white chrysanthemums and white lilies are the convention.
Cost follows demand. Roses spike hardest around Valentine's Day, so if it is a non-occasion gift, a seasonal mixed bunch or a single-variety bouquet of carnations or tulips gives you more volume and colour per dollar than a small bunch of premium roses. Florists like Happy Bunch and The Bud Box lean into this with a rotating designer's-choice bouquet, which is cheaper precisely because you let them use whatever is freshest that day.
One cultural note that saves an awkward gift: in Chinese custom, white and yellow chrysanthemums are funeral flowers, so they are the wrong choice for a romantic or celebratory bouquet no matter how cheap they look. Match the colour and variety to the occasion first, then optimise for price within that, not the other way round.
If you buy flowers regularly, for the home, an office reception or a standing gift, a subscription can cut the per-delivery cost. Windflower Florist, for example, states subscriptions from S$56 per delivery with savings up to 20 percent versus one-off orders and free delivery included. The model rewards commitment: you lock in a frequency, the florist plans stock around it, and that efficiency comes back to you as a lower unit price.
The maths only works if you use every delivery. A weekly subscription you forget about, or blooms that wilt on a desk no one sits at, is worse value than buying a S$20 bouquet when you genuinely want one. This is the same trap as any auto-renewing plan: the discount is real, but only if consumption is real. Audit it the way you would any recurring charge against your savings target before committing.
For a one-off gift, a subscription is never the cheap option, a single S$19.90 to S$25 bouquet is. Subscriptions earn their keep for steady, repeated use where the per-delivery saving stacks up over months. Decide which you are, a one-off buyer or a regular, before you let a subscription's lower unit price tempt you into a higher total spend.
The cheapest order is not the one from the cheapest florist; it is the one where you remove the costs that add nothing to the gift. First, take the free standard delivery slot and never pay for express unless the timing is non-negotiable, that is S$20 to S$30 saved in one click. Second, buy the bouquet alone and add your own card or a supermarket chocolate, which strips S$20 to S$50 of florist-priced add-ons. Third, order three to four days ahead so you get your first-choice cheap design at the normal price instead of the leftover expensive one.
Stack those three on a S$60 impulse order, paid express, a vase, chocolates, last-minute, and you are back to a S$25 to S$30 all-in spend for a bouquet that looks identical on arrival. The flowers do not change; only the fees and the timing do. That is a 30 to 40 percent cut for a few minutes of planning.
If you buy flowers often, point those savings somewhere. A regular flower habit at S$25 a pop is a real line in a budget, and trimming it is the same discipline that powers any sinking fund. Treat each order as a small, deliberate spend rather than a checkout impulse and the category stops leaking money, the same way watching your recurring household bills does.
As of June 2026, Floristique lists same-day bouquets from S$19.90 with free islandwide delivery and no minimum spend, and Floral Garage starts at S$22.90 with free same-day delivery. If you self-collect, a supermarket bunch at FairPrice Finest or Cold Storage runs roughly S$6 to S$20, the cheapest option overall.
Yes, for standard slots. Floristique, Floral Garage, The Bud Box and FARM Florist deliver standard orders free with no minimum spend, so a S$19.90 bouquet ships at S$19.90. The fee appears only when you choose a guaranteed one-hour or same-day express window, which usually adds S$20 to S$30. Flower Chimp calculates shipping at checkout rather than always free.
A supermarket is cheaper per stem. FairPrice Finest and Cold Storage carry casual bunches from about S$6 to S$20, well below florist prices. The trade-off is a narrow range, shorter vase life because the flowers are pre-packed, and no delivery. Supermarket flowers suit casual or self-use bouquets; a florist is worth it for arrangement, freshness and a delivery slot on formal occasions.
Mostly not by surcharge. Singapore florists rarely raise the price of the same bouquet for Valentine's Day, and some run small discounts to win early orders. What changes is the cutoff: same-day delivery disappears, lead times stretch to one or two days, and cheap designs sell out, pushing you to pricier ones. Ordering three to four days ahead keeps you on the normal price.
Order before the florist's same-day cutoff and take the free standard delivery window instead of a paid express slot. Floristique's cutoff is 2pm on weekdays and 11am on weekends, Floral Garage's is 5pm (12pm on Sunday and public holidays), and Flower Chimp's is 5pm daily. Paying S$20 to S$30 for a guaranteed one-hour slot on a S$20 bouquet more than doubles the order.
Only if you use every delivery. Subscriptions like Windflower's from S$56 per delivery save up to 20 percent versus one-off orders and include free delivery, so they cut the per-stem cost for regular buyers who want flowers at home or in an office weekly. For a one-off gift, a single S$19.90 to S$25 bouquet is always cheaper than committing to a recurring plan.
This is general financial information for Singapore, not personal financial advice. Figures change — verify current rates against the official sources above before acting. See our full disclaimer.