Same Day Flowers Delivery - Badgerys Creek Wide
The Badgerys Creek page you're reading exists because of a florist shop in Kingscliff that Andrew and I bought in 2006. We had no idea what we were doing with flowers. Zero experience. Our accountant told us not to buy it and we ignored him, which still makes us laugh.

* Where it all started. Our accountant told us not to buy this shop; 20 years later, it’s the heart of our national network.
The plan was to scale back the flowers and push into organic gifts, skincare, baby products. I was pregnant with Asha at the time and we thought that market made sense. What we didn't know was the previous owner had just paid for a Yellow Pages advertisement. The book. Remember those? About three months after we bought the shop, that book landed on doorsteps across Australia and our phone started ringing constantly.
Calls for flowers to Kingscliff, sure. But also Murwillumbah. Tweed Heads. Coolangatta. Then random places we'd never been. Taree. Townsville. Canberra. People calling their local florist to send flowers interstate, that's how it worked before everyone went online. Wire flowers, they called it.
For months we said sorry, we can't help with that. Then one freezing June day, with maybe $25 in the till and another call for flowers to somewhere we couldn't service, we looked at each other and asked the obvious question. What if we found florists in those towns and asked them to help us?
Our first partnership was a florist in Murwillumbah called The Flower Shed. Andrew drove out there with baby Asha in the car seat, nervous as anything, and asked the owner if she'd take our orders. No fees, we said. Just add a few extra stems to cover our commission. She said yes. Then the next florist said yes. Then the next.
By 2009 we'd built enough relationships to launch Lily's Florist as a national brand. One website instead of dozens. Landing pages for every town we could service. The network grew from 20 florists to 150 by 2013. Today it's over 800 partner florists across Australia, including the ones who deliver to Badgerys Creek.
> Read our about us page for more details
My name is Siobhan, and my partner Andrew grew up in Sydney. Drummoyne, specifically, before we both escaped the rat race for a seachange to Kingscliff in 2006. But Sydney has always stayed with him, and by extension, with our family and this business.
Last year, Andrew and our eldest daughter Asha decided they wanted to see what all the fuss was about with the new Western Sydney International Airport out at Badgerys Creek. Asha was curious, Andrew was nostalgic about his old stomping grounds, and neither of them had any idea what they were getting into.
The drive out there took hours. And I mean hours. The tolls alone could have bought a decent bunch of roses. They came back slightly shell shocked, talking about the scale of it all, the dirt, the cranes, the sheer ambition of carving an international airport out of paddocks. Andrew kept saying he remembered when this was all farmland and the occasional servo, back when he was a kid and his family would drive out west for day trips. Now it's becoming something else entirely.
That trip stuck with both of them. Asha still brings it up sometimes, usually when complaining about Sydney traffic. But it gave us a real sense of what's happening out there in Western Sydney. New homes going up everywhere, families moving in, communities forming from scratch. Places like Badgerys Creek, Luddenham, Kemps Creek, they're not sleepy anymore. They're growing fast and the people moving there need services, including someone who can get flowers to their door on the same day they order them.
I asked Anna about this. Anna's been with us for over 15 years now, she's a qualified florist who could talk about stems and varieties all day if you let her. When I mentioned Badgerys Creek and the growth happening out there, she had some thoughts on which occasions tend to spike in developing areas.
Anna put it simply. "When you've got new estates going up and families moving into their first homes, housewarming becomes huge. People want to mark the moment. A new home is a big deal, especially for young families who've saved for years to get there."
She's right. We see it in the orders. Someone's mate finally settles in Badgerys Creek after years of renting in Parramatta, and the group chat decides flowers are the go. Not just any flowers either. Anna reckons natives do well for housewarmings because they last longer and don't need fussing over when someone's still unpacking boxes. Banksias, waratahs, eucalyptus stems. Hardy, striking, and they say congratulations without requiring a vase hunt on moving day.
> View our housewarming flower range
This one surprised me a bit until Anna explained it. "People move to new areas and they leave their networks behind. Their mum's still in Blacktown, their best friend's in Penrith, but they're out in Badgerys Creek now. Distance creates the urge to reach out."
It makes sense when you think about it. You can't just pop over for a cuppa anymore when you've moved 40 minutes away. So flowers fill that gap. A thinking of you bunch says I haven't forgotten you, even though we're not down the road anymore. Anna says these orders often come with longer card messages than other occasions. People have things they want to say.
> View our thinking of you bouquets
Anna laughed when I asked about this one. "Just because is the sleeper hit. No occasion, no pressure, no expectations. Someone sees flowers on the website, thinks of their partner at home with the kids in their new place, and orders. Done."
She reckons just because flowers tend to be brighter and more cheerful than occasion specific ones. Less formal. More spontaneous. And in areas where people are building new lives, that spontaneity matters. You're not waiting for a birthday or anniversary. You're just sending flowers because Tuesday felt like a good day to do something nice.
> Take a peek at our just because arrangements
We don't have a boardroom. Our business decisions get made at the dinner table in Kingscliff, or in the car driving Ivy to basketball at Carrara on Friday nights, or while watching Asha's netball. Asha's about to graduate year 12 and turn 19 in May. Ivy turns 15 in February. They've grown up with this business as background noise, phone calls about flower orders while they're doing homework, conversations about partner florists over dinner.

" The team behind the screen. Andrew, Siobhan, and our girls, Asha and Ivy. We’ve been running Lily's from our dinner table since 2006
Our call centre is in Armidale, NSW. Everyone who answers the phone is Australian. We don't send calls offshore and we never have. If you ring 1300 360 469, you'll talk to someone who knows flowers and knows Australia. Anna's still with us after 15 years, now handling bookkeeping but still the person we turn to when we need proper florist expertise.
Andrew and I started this thing in a garage we converted into an office in Pottsville. Six desks, carpet, aircon, a coffee machine, the works. Valentine's Day 2011, I was 8.5 months pregnant with Ivy, phones ringing constantly, friends we'd drafted in to help looking absolutely staggered by the chaos. That week nearly broke us but we got through it. The business has changed a lot since then but the core hasn't. We work with real florists who have real shops, employ local staff, and take pride in what they make.
In 2013 we partnered with Feefo, which is one of those review platforms where only actual customers can leave feedback. Google endorses them, which says something about their credibility. We can't fake reviews, can't delete bad ones, can't get mates to write nice things. Every review comes from someone who genuinely ordered flowers from us.
Putting ourselves out there like that was terrifying. Flowers are subjective. Three people can look at the same bouquet and see three different things. But we wanted honest feedback because honest feedback helps us improve. Since partnering with Feefo we've collected over 23,000 reviews. Some ordinary, some okay, most completely awesome.

* Verified trust. Our 4.3-star rating is the real deal from 23,000+ customers (who actually left reviews). We’re proud to be two-time Feefo Trusted Service Award winners.
In both 2024 and 2025, Lily's Florist received a Feefo Trusted Service Award for customer service. To qualify, you need at least 50 reviews with an average of 4 stars or above. We exceeded that by a lot. The award reflects something we're genuinely proud of, which is that when things go wrong (and sometimes they do, flowers are perishable and logistics are unpredictable), we fix them. Our team in Armidale is trained to resolve issues, not avoid them. We're contactable six days a week by phone, email, or live chat. Our contact details are easy to find because we designed the website that way on purpose.
You can order online or call us on 1300 360 469. The website doesn't require an account, we built a one page checkout because we know people ordering flowers are usually doing it quickly, often from work, often on their phone. Pick your flowers, enter the recipient's address in Badgerys Creek, choose your delivery date, add a card message if you want one (or skip it, some people prefer anonymous), and pay. That's it.

* We still run things with a partner florist mindset. No warehouses, no boxes, just real flowers and a fair deal for our local partners.
For same day delivery, get your order in before 2pm Monday to Friday, or before 10am on Saturdays. Orders after those cutoffs go out the next available day. We deliver to businesses until around 5pm and private addresses until around 7pm, though we can't guarantee exact times because traffic and weather don't care about schedules.
Delivery to Badgerys Creek is $16.95. We actually subsidise delivery costs in most cases because the real cost is often higher, but we absorb the difference. If your order is going somewhere unusually remote and extra charges apply, we'll call you first to discuss it. You won't get surprised by fees at checkout.
When your flowers arrive, Feefo sends you an email a few days later asking how it went. Fill it in if you have time. We read every single review, good and bad, because that's how we keep getting better.
The area's changing fast. Andrew saw it firsthand on that drive with Asha, the cranes and the construction and the sense that something big is happening. Families are putting down roots out there, building lives in brand new houses on brand new streets. And sometimes those families need flowers. For a housewarming, for a thinking of you, for a just because.
We can get them there. Same day if you order in time. Made by a real florist, delivered by a real courier, supported by a real team in Armidale who actually answer the phone. That's what we do. That's what we've been doing since a Yellow Pages ad in 2007 changed everything.
If you've got questions, call us. 1300 360 469. We're here Monday to Friday 7am to 6pm, Saturdays 7am to 12pm. Or use the live chat on the website if you prefer typing to talking. Most common question we get on live chat? "Do you deliver here?" The answer for Badgerys Creek is yes. Yes we do.