May 24, 2026
Wedding Flower Packages in 2026: What's Included, What They Cost, and How to Pick One
Wedding flower packages bundle your bouquets, boutonnieres, and centerpieces into one set price. Here is what they include, real 2026 pricing, and when a bundle saves money over à la carte.

A wedding flower package is a pre-assembled set of the floral pieces a couple needs for their wedding day — typically a bridal bouquet, bridesmaid bouquets, boutonnieres, corsages, and sometimes centerpieces — sold together at one bundled price instead of being quoted item by item. In 2026, a basic bridal-party package starts around $400 from an online pre-assembled provider, a standard bridal-party package runs $550 to $900, and a full wedding package with reception centerpieces ranges from $1,500 to $3,500.
If you've spent any time pricing wedding flowers piece by piece, you already know how quickly the math gets unwieldy. Every florist quotes differently, the totals balloon as soon as you add bridesmaids or tables, and you usually can't see what you're actually spending until the final invoice. Packages solve that. This guide walks through exactly what's in a wedding flower package, what they should cost in 2026, where they beat à la carte ordering, and how to choose the right one for your wedding.
For a concrete reference as you read: a complete bridal-party package at Wedding Box Florals — bridal bouquet, four bridesmaid bouquets, six boutonnieres, and two corsages — runs about $589.94, every piece hand-assembled in studio and shipped to your door. That's roughly the cost of a single bridal bouquet from a mid-range local florist.
What Is a Wedding Flower Package?
A wedding flower package is a bundled set of pre-arranged floral pieces sold together for one fixed price. Instead of getting individual quotes for each bouquet, boutonniere, and centerpiece, you choose a package that includes the pieces a typical wedding needs, then customize the style, color palette, and flower selection within it.
Packages exist for one reason: most couples need the same combination of items. A bride, a few bridesmaids, a groom and his groomsmen, a couple of mothers, a few tables. Once a provider standardizes that combination, they can offer it at a lower per-piece cost than custom quoting — and you get clarity on what you're paying before you commit.
Packages go by several names depending on the provider: "wedding flower bundles," "pre-arranged wedding flower packages," "bridal party flower sets," "wedding flower kits." They all describe the same thing.
What's Included in a Wedding Flower Package?
The exact contents vary by provider, but most wedding flower packages fall into three tiers of coverage:
Bridal party packages — the most common type — include the personal flowers: a bridal bouquet, two to six bridesmaid bouquets, four to ten boutonnieres, and two to four corsages. These are the pieces that show up in every wedding photo, and almost every couple needs them.
Ceremony and personal packages add altar arrangements, aisle markers, or arch flowers on top of the bridal party set. These suit couples whose venue needs floral enhancement at the ceremony itself.
Full wedding packages include everything above plus reception centerpieces, sweetheart table arrangements, and sometimes cake flowers or bar décor. These are aimed at couples who want a one-and-done floral order.
The most flexible providers let you start with a base bridal-party package and add individual pieces — an extra bridesmaid bouquet, more boutonnieres, a flower-girl bouquet, additional centerpieces — without rebuilding the entire order from scratch.
How Much Do Wedding Flower Packages Cost in 2026?
Real 2026 pricing for the three most common package types, across the three places couples buy them:
| Package type | Online pre-assembled | Mid-range local florist | Luxury florist |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small bridal party (bride + 2 bridesmaids + 4 boutonnieres) | $400 – $600 | $900 – $1,500 | $1,800 – $3,000 |
| Standard bridal party (bride + 4 bridesmaids + 6 boutonnieres + 2 corsages) | $550 – $900 | $1,400 – $2,400 | $2,800 – $4,800 |
| Full wedding (bridal party + altar arrangements + 10 centerpieces) | $1,500 – $2,800 | $4,000 – $7,000 | $8,000 – $15,000+ |
A few things stand out. The gap between online pre-assembled and a local florist is consistently 50–70% — the same gap you see on individual pieces. Packages don't change that math, they just make it easier to see. The luxury bracket exists for couples who want a specific design vision executed by a named designer; for most couples, mid-range or pre-assembled hits the same visual mark in wedding photos.
For a deeper breakdown of where the cost differences come from, see our complete wedding flower cost guide and the bridal bouquet box vs. local florist comparison.
What Does a Wedding Flower Package Actually Save You?
A bundled package saves money in two distinct ways, and it's worth separating them.
Per-piece price reduction. Most package providers price the individual items slightly below their à la carte rate, because the package is a higher-margin sale and an easier order to fulfill. The savings here are typically 10–20% off the equivalent itemized total.
Service-model savings. This is the bigger one. When you order a package from an online pre-assembled provider, you skip the consultation hours, design revision rounds, delivery setup, and on-site service that a full-service florist bundles into their quote — work that often accounts for 30–50% of the price. You aren't getting less product. You're getting less overhead.
Put together, a couple who switches from a local florist itemized quote to an online package commonly cuts their total floral spend by 55–70%. That isn't a marketing claim — it's what shows up when you put two real quotes side by side. For the full line-item breakdown, our budget wedding bouquet guide walks through every category.
Wedding Flower Package vs. À La Carte: Which Is Better?
A package wins when your wedding fits a standard shape: one bride, a few bridesmaids, a groom and groomsmen, a small number of mothers and grandmothers. If you can predict your floral list in advance — and most couples can — a package gets you a lower total at a fixed price with no surprise add-ons.
À la carte wins when your needs are unusual: a non-traditional bridal party, a very large or very small wedding, an unusual venue that needs specific installations, or a couple who only wants one or two pieces (say, just a bridal bouquet and nothing else). In those cases, paying piece by piece avoids paying for items you don't actually need.
A hybrid approach works for many couples: order the standard bridal-party package, then add the few extras (an extra bridesmaid bouquet, an aisle marker set) as individual items. This captures the bundle savings on the core order while keeping you flexible on the edges. For per-item reference pricing, see our average cost of a bridal bouquet guide and the average cost of a bridesmaid bouquet guide.
Wedding Flower Package vs. Full-Service Florist: When Each Makes Sense
A full-service florist makes sense when you want a designed-from-scratch floral story for your wedding — custom color matching to a specific paint chip, a one-of-one bouquet shape built around an heirloom ribbon, large-scale installations like flower walls or 12-foot arches, or design direction from a specific creative whose judgment you want.
A wedding flower package makes sense when you want florist-quality pieces in a defined style without the consultation process, custom design fees, or the timeline that comes with a fully bespoke order. Most couples — particularly couples paying for their own wedding — fall in this category. They want bouquets that look beautiful in photos, arrive on time, and don't consume a quarter of the wedding budget.
The honest version: fewer than 20% of couples actually need a full-service florist. The other 80% are paying for a service model that's heavier than their wedding requires. For more on this tradeoff, read our DIY vs. pre-assembled comparison.
Who Is a Wedding Flower Package Right For?
Packages are the strongest fit for:
- Couples paying for their own wedding. Predictable pricing matters when you're managing your own budget.
- Destination weddings. Shipping a pre-assembled package to your venue avoids paying destination-market rates to a local florist who knows you have no leverage.
- Smaller weddings (under 75 guests). Most small weddings don't need the structure of a full-service florist relationship.
- Couples on a tight timeline. Packages can be ordered and shipped in under three weeks; full-service florists typically need 4–6 months of lead time. See our wedding flower timeline guide for the full schedule.
- Couples who already know what they want. If you have a saved Pinterest board and a clear palette, you don't need a consultation. You need delivery.
Packages are usually not the right fit for couples doing large installations (flower walls, hanging florals, full ceremony arches), couples needing on-site setup at a complex venue, or couples whose entire wedding aesthetic is built around a single signature floral piece that requires custom design.
How Do You Choose the Right Wedding Flower Package?
Five questions to answer, in order:
- Count your people. How many bridesmaids? How many groomsmen, fathers, and ushers? How many mothers and grandmothers? This determines which size package you need.
- Decide your style. Are you Modern (clean, minimalist), Garden (lush, romantic), or Whimsical (textured, organic)? Most packages let you pick a style, and that choice drives the visual direction more than any other single decision. Our Modern vs. Garden vs. Whimsical bouquet guide walks through which suits which kind of wedding.
- Pick your palette. Two to four colors that match your wedding tones. Tighter palettes cost less and photograph better. Our color selection guide helps you build one that works.
- Check the season. Choosing in-season flowers cuts cost and improves quality. Our seasonal wedding flower guide shows what's at peak for your date and which substitutions work if your favorite bloom is out of season.
- Confirm the timeline and delivery. When does the provider need your order, when does it ship, and when does it arrive? Read what to expect when wedding flowers ship in a box so the delivery day isn't a surprise.
For online packages specifically, our step-by-step guide to ordering wedding flowers online covers what to expect from order to delivery.
What's the Catch With Wedding Flower Packages?
Packages aren't perfect. Three things to know before you commit:
Customization has limits. A package gives you style and color flexibility, but you generally can't request a specific rare flower or a one-of-one design. If you have a non-negotiable signature bloom, ask before you order whether the provider can guarantee it. If you don't, our wholesale flower buying guide covers the DIY route.
On-site service isn't included. A package ships you the pieces — it doesn't send a designer to your venue to set them up. For personal flowers, this isn't an issue. For ceremony installations, it can be. If you need on-site setup, either choose a provider that offers it or plan to have a coordinator handle placement.
Delivery timing is the critical variable. A package that arrives the day before your wedding is perfect. One that arrives three days early or, worse, the morning of, is a problem. Confirm the delivery window before you order, and read how flower boxes stay fresh in transit so you know what to do when the box hits your doorstep.
The Bottom Line on Wedding Flower Packages
A wedding flower package is the right answer for most couples planning a 2026 wedding: predictable pricing, designer-quality pieces, no consultation overhead, and a total floral spend that typically lands 50–70% below an equivalent full-service florist quote. The tradeoff is less custom design flexibility, no on-site setup, and a delivery-day workflow you'll need to manage yourself.
If your wedding fits a standard shape and you know roughly what you want, a package is almost always the smarter financial choice. If your wedding is built around a singular floral vision that requires bespoke design, a full-service florist is worth the premium.
The fastest way to see what your wedding flower package would actually cost is to build it. Design your package in our customizer and you'll see the exact total in under five minutes — no consultation, no quote, no surprises. For more on the flowers themselves, see how we source every bloom and our flower care guide for exactly what to do when the box arrives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a wedding flower package cost?
A basic bridal-party package starts around $400 from an online pre-assembled provider, runs $900–$1,500 from a mid-range local florist, and starts at $1,800+ from a luxury florist. A full wedding package (bridal party plus centerpieces) ranges from $1,500 online to $15,000+ at luxury studios.
What's the difference between a wedding flower package and a wedding flower bundle?
Nothing — the terms are used interchangeably. Some providers call them "kits" or "sets." All describe a fixed-price collection of pieces sold together.
Are wedding flower packages cheaper than ordering individually?
Yes — typically 10–20% cheaper per piece than the same items ordered à la carte, and 50–70% cheaper than equivalent quotes from a full-service florist. The bigger savings come from the service model, not the bundle discount itself.
Can you customize a wedding flower package?
Most reputable packages let you choose style (Modern, Garden, Whimsical), color palette, and the count of each piece. You generally cannot custom-design a specific bouquet shape or guarantee a single rare flower — for that, you need a full-service florist.
How far in advance should you order a wedding flower package?
Online pre-assembled packages can be ordered as little as 3–4 weeks before the wedding, though 8–12 weeks is more comfortable. Full-service florists typically require 4–6 months.
Do wedding flower packages include delivery?
Almost always for online pre-assembled providers — the package ships to your address, usually 1–2 days before the wedding. Local florist packages usually include delivery within a defined service area, with a delivery fee added beyond that.
What if my bridal party size doesn't fit a standard package?
Most providers let you add or remove pieces from the standard package. If you have eight bridesmaids instead of four, you add four extra bouquets at the per-piece rate. If you have one bridesmaid, you scale down. The package is a starting point, not a fixed kit.
Can I order just a bridal bouquet without a full package?
Yes — every reputable provider sells individual pieces. The package only makes sense if you need three or more items; for a single bouquet, à la carte is fine.



