Same Day Flowers Delivery - Canberra Wide
Most of the people ordering flowers to Canberra are not in Canberra. They moved to Sydney or Melbourne or Brisbane for work, and someone they love stayed. I'm Siobhan, and Andrew and I have been running Lily's Florist since 2009. Canberra was one of our first ten delivery areas, back when we were fielding 20 or 30 calls a month from a flower shop in Kingscliff and wondering why so many people wanted to send flowers to the ACT. Turns out a lot of people from our part of Northern NSW had family in Canberra, and they were ringing us because they found our number in the Yellow Pages. That was 2008. We have had partner florists across the territory ever since.
Nobody warns you about the cold. Minus seven, minus eight on a July morning. Andrew's engine blew up on the outskirts in 1993 and he was standing on the side of the road in a sleeping bag (more on that further down the page). Flower delivery here is not the same as Sydney or Brisbane. The florists covering Canberra know that already.
Order online before 2pm weekdays or 10am Saturdays for same day delivery to Canberra. A Florist's Choice Bunch starts at $74.50 plus $16.95 delivery. We subsidise the rest.
Prefer to talk? Call 1300 360 469, 7am to 6pm weekdays, 10am Saturdays.
Order Flowers to CanberraSame Day by 2pm
Order by 2pm weekdays
Flowers From $42.95
Single Wrapped Rose
$16.95
Delivery (subsidised)
1300 360 469
7am to 6pm weekdays
Chosen for Canberra
Anna, qualified florist, 15 years on the bench. Sending to Canberra Hospital or Calvary John James? Start with the first two. Sending to a home in Griffith or Red Hill? Any of the eight.
Anna: The mix gives the florist room to lean into whatever came fresh from Flemington that week. Tuesday and Wednesday deliveries tend to get the strongest stock after the three-hour truck run.
View ProductAnna: If there is one city where I would push natives over European stems, it is Canberra. Forty degrees one week, minus five the next. Proteas do not care. A protea will outlast a rose by two weeks here.
View ProductAnna: Three different vase life timelines in one bunch. Gerberas open fast, roses hold the middle, lilies crack open on day four when the gerberas are done. In Canberra winter, cool indoor temps slow everything down nicely.
View ProductAnna: Pastels bruise visibly, and Canberra is hard on them. The dry air dehydrates soft petals faster than the coast. In winter a frost-shocked petal goes brown at the edges overnight. Double wrapping is standard here.
View ProductAnna: Half the orders in Canberra go to government buildings where flowers sit on reception until someone collects them. Foam-based box arrangements hold water for hours without attention. No vase to find, nothing tipping over. The chocolates are what make this one stand out from the bunch that arrived for someone else that morning.
View ProductAnna: Our biggest seller nationally. January version of this bunch will be completely different from July. Summer gets bright gerberas and Asiatic lilies. Winter pulls in ranunculus and cool-climate stems at their peak from Epping.
View ProductAnna: The florist picks the stems. In Canberra that is an advantage because they know what came through in good condition that morning and what to leave in the bucket. You get the freshest of whatever survived the freight run.
View ProductAnna: Canberra Hospital at Garran is our biggest hospital delivery destination in the ACT. Compact enough for a bedside table, no strong-scented lilies that cause issues in shared wards. Our partner florists near Garran know the ward protocols.
View ProductStarting from $42.95 for a single wrapped rose. All products include same day delivery to Canberra when ordered before 2pm. See flowers under $60.
The product cards above tell you what to send. This is about what goes wrong when nobody thinks about the ACT's climate. Minus eight overnight in July, then 39 degrees in January. Forty-seven degrees of annual swing. I took calls for three years from people who had ordered flowers to Canberra and the stems arrived damaged. Almost every time it was the same story: the recipient was not home, the flowers sat outside, and no one had accounted for what twenty minutes on a doorstep in minus five does to soft petals. Or what thirty minutes in January does to anything without hydration.
The florists we work with in the ACT have a winter protocol. They call ahead. If nobody answers, they try a neighbour or bring the flowers back to the shop for a second run. In summer the opposite: morning deliveries only on heatwave days, hydration sachets as standard. I had a caller from Adelaide once who was furious that the roses she sent to her mother in Red Hill had browned at the edges overnight. It was minus three that morning. Roses and minus three do not mix. I walked her through it, explained why natives are the safer call here, and she ordered a banksia arrangement the next week. Her mother kept the dried pods on her mantlepiece for months. That is the difference between a florist who knows the territory and one filling an order from a photo.
Your order goes to one of our partner florists near Canberra. They source stems from Flower HQ on Canberra Avenue, which receives fresh deliveries from the Sydney wholesale markets three days a week. The florist builds your arrangement that morning and delivers it by hand the same day. No post. No airport box. No warehouse.
* How it works. You order, we connect with a florist covering the Canberra area, they deliver fresh. No post. No boxes.
The products above handle the what. This section handles the how: when to send, who to address it to, what to write on the card, and how the delivery actually works once it leaves the florist. A sympathy arrangement for the home is a completely different delivery than a birthday bunch to a Braddon apartment. Eighteen years of ACT deliveries taught us that.
Flowers will not fix this. You know that already. They say what you cannot say from here, and that is enough. It is a strange thing to order something beautiful for the worst week of someone's life, but that contradiction is the whole point.
Canberra has a higher cremation rate than most Australian cities, around 75 percent. Standing sprays for chapel services at Norwood Park or Gungahlin Cemetery need to arrive at least an hour before the service starts. If you are sending to the family at home, order within three days of the death. After that the first wave of flowers has arrived and yours risks blending into the background. Address it to the family surname, not the deceased. If you are stuck on what to write: "Thinking of you and your family" is enough. For a workplace collection: "From the team at [department]. With deepest sympathy."
Canberra's Gungahlin Cemetery has faith-specific sections: Aboriginal, Islamic, Jewish, Orthodox. The crematorium there was purpose-built with a viewing room for Hindu, Jain, Sikh and Buddhist communities who previously had to travel interstate. I used to get calls from families who had no idea what was appropriate. For Hindu cremation ceremonies it is marigold garlands, bright and traditional. Greek Orthodox and many Asian families want all-white, usually chrysanthemums and lilies. Islamic funerals are simple, modest, and the foam cannot contain pork gelatin. Our partner florists near Gungahlin and Norwood Park have been doing this for years. They do not need to be told.
Sending flowers to a hospital when you cannot visit yourself is a strange kind of helpless. The gesture works even if you do not know the diagnosis or the prognosis. Something simple and gentle is always appropriate when you are not sure.
Canberra Hospital at Garran is the ACT's largest, 672 beds. Flowers go to the main reception desk and the volunteers run them up to the ward. Include the recipient's full name and ward number on the order. Centenary Hospital for Women and Children is on the same campus, so maternity and new baby deliveries go there too, but address them to the mother's name, not the baby's. North Canberra Hospital (the old Calvary Bruce) is mid-redevelopment, so access points change. Calvary John James in Deakin does not permit flowers in ICU at all. If someone orders for a patient there, we would suggest something for the family at home instead.
Discharge is the biggest risk with hospital flowers. If the patient goes home before the flowers arrive, the arrangement ends up at the nurses' station and nobody tells the sender. Order for the morning of the day you know they will be there, not the day before discharge. Card message: "Thinking of you. Hope you're on the mend" covers most situations. For maternity: "Congratulations! Wishing you all the sleep you can get."
You cannot be at the table, so the flowers go on your behalf. A lot of the birthday orders to Canberra are exactly that: adult children in Sydney or Melbourne sending to a parent who stayed. If you are ordering to a government office, include the department name and floor number. Reception desks in those buildings handle dozens of deliveries a week and a first name alone is not enough to route it.
The public service calendar affects timing. From mid-December to late January, half the city empties out. Birthday deliveries to government offices over that period are a gamble because the recipient might not be at their desk until February. Parliamentary sitting weeks are the opposite. Orders triple. Question Time generates apology bouquets. Budget Week, the staff who have been working 14-hour days start getting stress-relief arrangements from colleagues who feel guilty. Embassy orders come with their own rules: Japanese arrangements tend toward minimalist, American orders for July 4th tend bigger and bolder, and the security protocols at Parliament House mean specific delivery windows that our florists have learned through years of showing up and being turned away until they got it right.
Gerberas are the public servants' flower, if I am being blunt about it. Bright, long-lasting in those climate-controlled government offices where the humidity barely moves, and they photograph well on a desk. I used to get calls from people wanting roses for an office birthday and I would steer them toward gerberas or a mixed bright bunch instead. Roses need attention. Gerberas just sit there looking good for a week without anyone touching the water.
Bright Mixed Bunch from $79.95. Delivery $16.95.
Order Before 2pm for Same DayIt has been a while. You know it has. The flowers say what calling after six months cannot. Thinking of you flowers are one of our most common orders to aged care facilities, and Canberra has them everywhere. Goodwin runs homes in Monash and Ainslie, Southern Cross Care is across the south side in Garran and Campbell. Belconnen has IRT Kangara Waters. BaptistCare opened in Griffith. Address it to the resident's full name and room number if you have it. Reception will route it, but a room number saves them chasing.
Keep the card message short and specific. "Thinking of you, love [name]" lands better than a long paragraph the resident has to read through glasses. One family I spoke to on the phones used to order weekly. Not anniversaries, not birthdays. Just Thursday. The resident knew it was coming. That kind of regularity meant more than a big arrangement once a year.
Canberra calls itself the bush capital for a reason. Kangaroos on the front lawn in outer suburbs is completely normal. Native flower arrangements suit this city. They look right here, and they outlast European stems in both extremes of the Canberra climate. The Australian Natives Bunch at $126.20 is our most popular natives option, and Cathy Dixon's review further down confirms why.
The dried pods stay on a mantlepiece in Manuka or Griffith for months after the fresh flowers are done. People throw roses out after a week. Natives just keep going in a different form. They are also the safest call for Floriade season in September and October, when everyone in Canberra has just seen a million tulips and has strong opinions about what fresh flowers should look like.
None of the categories above matched exactly. That is fine. You do not need a reason or a label to send flowers. The Florist's Choice Bunch at $74.50 takes the decision off your hands. The florist working that morning knows which stems came through from Flower HQ in good condition. Picking a specific arrangement from a photo locks them into matching an image. Florist's Choice lets them build something fresh from whatever arrived strong. In a city with Canberra's temperature range, that flexibility is worth more than it sounds.
In 2015 we drove down to Perisher, first proper snow trip with the kids. Stopped in Canberra for the night. Ivy was four, never been anywhere properly cold, 21-degree winters in Northern NSW do not prepare you for that. Within two hours of getting to the Airbnb she was sick. Just completely knocked her out. We had planned this whole Canberra experience, Parliament House, the museums, you know. Ended up spending basically the entire time in the apartment with her wrapped in every blanket we could find. Could see Parliament House from the window though, so that was something, I suppose.
* Four Canberra trips. Top left: Ivy outside the ski shop at 72 Northbourne Avenue, 2015, the Perisher trip where she was sick within two hours. Top right: Andrew with Asha and Ivy at Urban Pantry. Bottom left: Parliament House from the road. Bottom right: Summernats 2022. We keep coming back.
1300 360 469
7am to 6pm weekdays
10am Saturdays
Or order online any time.
2pm weekdays, 10am Saturdays. No Sunday delivery. Canberra's distances are deceptive. Gungahlin to Tuggeranong is 35 to 45 minutes in traffic. The 2pm cutoff gives the florist time to build and deliver before end of business, even to the furthest suburbs. Sunday orders queue for Monday morning.
Flat rate, subsidised. Covering the entire ACT from one shop in Civic would be impractical. We have partner florists positioned across the territory so the actual delivery runs are shorter than the territory footprint suggests. We absorb the difference.
Lake Burley Griffin splits the city. Only a handful of bridge crossings connect north and south, and peak hour jams at Commonwealth Avenue Bridge or Adelaide Avenue can add twenty minutes. Our florists plan runs around that. In winter, from May through September, frost mornings mean no unattended doorstep drops. The florist will call ahead. If nobody answers, they try a neighbour or bring the flowers back to the shop for a second run. A bunch sitting outside at minus five, even for twenty minutes, is a bunch you are replacing. Order before 2pm today and your flowers are there this afternoon.
"I searched many online florist sites in Canberra and I'm very glad I chose Lily's. The site was easy to use and the best value." Sally Dario, verified customer
Verified on Feefo
"The native floral arrangement you delivered to my daughter in Canberra was stunning and has lasted so long. You delivered within the time frame that I asked."
Cathy Dixon · verified customer · delivered to Canberra
Order Flowers to CanberraCathy ordered the Australian Natives Bunch for her daughter. "Stunning" tells me the florist built the arrangement properly, banksias and proteas taking the structural lead, smaller leucadendrons and gum filling the gaps. But it is "lasted so long" that tells the real story. Natives are built for dry inland air. Where a European rose drops petals in four or five days in a Canberra living room, a protea holds its shape for two weeks. Then the dried pods sit on the shelf for months. Cathy's daughter got a bunch that kept going well past the point where most flowers would be in the bin. I keep pushing natives for Canberra orders and reviews like this one are the reason.
Your order enters our system and goes straight to a partner florist covering the part of Canberra where the delivery is heading. We have florists positioned across the territory because one shop in Civic trying to reach Tuggeranong, Gungahlin, Weston Creek, and Belconnen on the same day does not work. The territory is 814 square kilometres and Lake Burley Griffin cuts it in half. Shorter runs mean someone is more likely to be home when the florist gets there in the morning than at 4:30 in the afternoon.
If something goes wrong, email [email protected] or call 1300 360 469. We are here 7am to 6pm weekdays. All the details are on our contact page.
Complaints are rare but they happen, and when they do I want to know about it personally. Wrong flowers, missed window, arrangement that did not match what you expected. Tell us. We will replace them or refund you, and I mean that. We have been sending flowers to Canberra since 2008, which makes it one of our longest-running delivery areas anywhere in the country, and I take it seriously when something goes wrong in a city we have that much history with. Our phone team is based in Armidale, by the way. Not offshore. You will talk to someone who knows the system.
The confirmation email you receive after ordering includes your order number, the delivery date, and the florist's expected delivery window. Keep that email. If you need to update the delivery address or add a message, reply to it before the cutoff and we will pass it through. If the recipient does not call or text you straight away, that is normal. Most people do not respond to flowers the way they respond to a phone call. It does not mean anything went wrong.
ABN: 17 830 858 659