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Best flowers for spring wedding bouquet with peonies, tulips, and ranunculus

Spring Wedding Flowers: 10 Best Picks

Compare 10 spring wedding flowers with timing, styling ideas, and practical budget tips.

Spring weddings have a natural kind of romance. The light is softer, the gardens are waking up, and the flowers themselves do a lot of the design work for you. If you are choosing spring wedding flowers for 2025, the best place to start is with blooms that are in season and fit the way you want the day to feel.

That matters for more than looks. In-season flowers are often easier to source, more expressive in photos, and simpler to build into a plan that feels clear from bouquet to centerpiece. If you want a practical starting point before you choose specific stems, our guide to choosing a wedding florist can help you sort through style, priorities, and budget.

Below, you will find 10 flowers that work especially well for spring weddings, along with notes on seasonality, design pairings, and where each bloom makes the biggest impact.

1. Peonies

Peonies are one of the first flowers couples ask for, and for good reason. They are full, soft, and instantly romantic. Even a few stems can make a bouquet feel finished.

Availability and popular varieties

Peonies usually peak from late April through June. Favorites include blush ‘Sarah Bernhardt’, white ‘Duchesse de Nemours’, and rounder varieties like ‘Charlie Bucket’.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: White peonies with garden roses and eucalyptus feel classic and calm.
  • For centerpieces: Coral peonies with ranunculus and sweet peas create a lush garden look.

Budget and handling tips

Peonies are a premium stem because the season is short and demand is high. If they are important to you, ask early and stay flexible on the exact variety.

2. Tulips

Tulips feel clean, fresh, and unmistakably spring. They work well when you want shape without too much fuss, and they suit both modern and garden-inspired palettes.

Availability and popular varieties

Tulips are strongest from March through May. Double tulips like ‘Angelique’ have a softer, fuller look, while parrot tulips bring more texture and movement.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: A single-color bundle of white or blush tulips looks simple and polished.
  • For centerpieces: One-color tulips in bud vases feel crisp, while mixed tulips in low arrangements feel more relaxed.

Budget and handling tips

Tulips are often more budget-friendly than peonies and garden roses. Their stems keep moving after they are cut, so it helps to design with that natural curve in mind.

If you love a gathered, less formal look for a shower, courthouse ceremony, or smaller celebration, Fiore’s Hand-tied bouquet is built around seasonal stems and natural movement.

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3. Ranunculus

Ranunculus gives you layered petals and a high-end look without the price of peonies in every recipe. It is one of the most useful spring flowers because it can read soft, playful, or refined depending on color.

Availability and popular varieties

Ranunculus is most common from March through May. Cloni ranunculus is especially fluffy, while the Elegance series is known for strong color and shape.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: Blush and white ranunculus with lisianthus feel soft and romantic.
  • For centerpieces: Peach and bright pink ranunculus mixed with chamomile or delphinium bring a fresh spring palette.

Budget and handling tips

Ranunculus is usually mid-range. It needs gentle handling, but it gives a lot of texture for the spend, which makes it a smart flower when you want a more layered look.

4. Garden Roses

Garden roses are fuller and softer than standard roses, with a scent that can make a bouquet feel more personal. They work especially well when you want classic wedding flowers with more depth and texture.

Availability and popular varieties

Garden roses are available year-round, but many varieties feel especially right in spring. Popular choices include ‘Juliet’, ‘Keira’, ‘Patience’, and ‘Quicksand’.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: A bouquet of white ‘Patience’ garden roses feels timeless and fragrant.
  • For centerpieces: Dusty pink garden roses with trailing greenery suit long tables and sweetheart table designs.

Budget and handling tips

Garden roses are premium flowers. A good compromise is to save them for personal flowers and key tables, then mix in standard roses elsewhere.

That kind of thoughtful tradeoff matters. Many couples worry they will have to compromise on the look once the numbers come in, but a clear floral plan usually comes from knowing where the statement flowers will do the most work.

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5. Lilacs

Lilacs bring scent, softness, and a just-cut-from-the-garden feeling. They are beautiful in spring weddings, but because the season is short, they work best as an accent rather than the entire plan.

Availability and popular varieties

Lilacs usually run from March through May. Classic purple is the best known, while white ‘Madame Lemoine’ works well in light palettes.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: Add small sprigs to tulips or garden roses for texture and fragrance.
  • For centerpieces: Use lilac branches in taller pieces for movement and height.

Budget and handling tips

Lilacs can be harder to source and need extra prep because of their woody stems. If you like the shape but need more flexibility, ask your florist for a clustered bloom with a similar feel.

6. Sweet Peas

Sweet peas are delicate, fluttery, and very fragrant. They are perfect when you want movement and softness, especially in smaller bouquets or airy centerpieces.

Availability and popular varieties

Sweet peas are usually best from March through May. They come in soft pastels, cream tones, and richer shades, including heirloom bicolors that photograph beautifully.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: A sweet pea bouquet alone can feel simple and romantic.
  • For centerpieces: Let the vines move through ranunculus and garden rose arrangements for a lighter look.

Budget and handling tips

Sweet peas can be mid-range to premium because they are fragile and have a shorter vase life. They are best used where that softness will be seen up close.

7. Hellebores

Hellebores bring a quieter kind of beauty. Their nodding blooms and muted tones suit early spring weddings and designs that feel more natural than formal.

Availability and popular varieties

Hellebores are often available from January through early April. The Winter Jewels line includes plums, apricots, speckled whites, and soft greens.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: Pair hellebores with ferns and trailing greenery for a woodland feel.
  • For centerpieces: Use plum or green hellebores with ranunculus in low, wide arrangements.

Budget and handling tips

Hellebores are a specialty stem, so pricing varies. Some blooms face downward, which means placement matters if you want them to show well in photos.

If you are still building your palette, our wedding flower checklist can help you map out what you need for bouquets, ceremony flowers, and tables.

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8. Anemones

Anemones are known for their dark centers and clean petals. They are a strong choice for modern weddings, especially if you want contrast without a heavy palette.

Availability and popular varieties

Anemones are most common from late winter through spring. White forms with dark centers are the classic choice, but blush, red, and magenta are also available.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: White anemones with silver foliage feel crisp and graphic.
  • For centerpieces: Mix them with ranunculus and ferns in clear vessels for a light, modern look.

Budget and handling tips

Anemones are usually mid-range. They bruise easily, so they need cool storage and gentle handling.

9. Hyacinths

Hyacinths add strong scent and dense color in a small amount of space. They are especially useful as accents when you want a room to feel more like spring right away.

Availability and popular varieties

Hyacinths are usually best from March through May. Popular shades include deep purple, white, and soft pink.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: A few florets tucked into tulips add texture and fragrance.
  • For centerpieces: Full spikes work well in compact, low arrangements.

Budget and handling tips

Hyacinths are often moderately priced, but the scent is strong. That can be lovely in an open room and less ideal in a very small venue.

10. Bleeding Heart

Bleeding heart is one of the most whimsical spring flowers. Its arching stems and heart-shaped blooms make it feel storybook-like, which is why it works best as a special accent.

Availability and popular varieties

Bleeding heart tends to peak from April through early June. Pink ‘Spectabilis’ is the most common, while white ‘Alba’ is a softer option.

Design and pairing ideas

  • For bouquets: Use it in loose bouquets with sweet peas and ferns for movement.
  • For centerpieces: Let it drape over the edge of taller vessels as a detail stem.

Budget and handling tips

Bleeding heart can be harder to source and is fragile to work with. It makes the most sense when you want one unusual detail rather than a full design built around it.

How to choose the right spring wedding flowers

The easiest way to narrow your options is to choose one priority first. That might be shape, scent, color, or budget. Once that is clear, the flower list gets much easier to build.

  • If you want volume: Start with peonies or garden roses.
  • If you want movement: Look at tulips, sweet peas, or bleeding heart.
  • If you want strong contrast: Use anemones.
  • If you want scent: Lilacs, sweet peas, and hyacinths stand out.
  • If you want better value: Tulips and ranunculus usually give you more flexibility.

It also helps to think about where each flower will be seen. Bridal bouquets, bridal party flowers, centerpieces, and sweetheart table arrangements do not all need the same stems. The strongest floral plans usually mix premium focal flowers with supporting blooms that carry the palette through the whole day.

If you are planning a ceremony statement or want help shaping flowers around your venue, Fiore’s wedding ceremony flowers, wedding reception flowers, and wedding installations are designed around the space, the season, and the moments that matter most in photos.

Choosing spring wedding flowers should feel exciting, not confusing. If you already have a date, palette, or inspiration images, read our budget guide for smart ways to spend, then reach out to start planning flowers that feel clear, personal, and true to the day you want.

Questions we hear most

Frequently Asked Questions

Peonies, garden roses, ranunculus, and sweet peas are some of the strongest choices for a romantic spring look. They bring soft texture, layered petals, and a natural garden feel that works well in bouquets and centerpieces.
Start with one or two priority flowers, then build the rest of the design with in-season supporting blooms. Tulips and ranunculus often give good value, while premium flowers like peonies or garden roses can be saved for the bridal bouquet or sweetheart table.
Garden roses, ranunculus, hellebores, and tulips are generally easier to work into a full wedding day than more delicate stems. Fragile flowers like sweet peas or bleeding heart are often best used as accents rather than the main structure of the design.
Lilacs, sweet peas, hyacinths, and many garden roses are strong choices if fragrance matters to you. Because scent can feel stronger indoors, it helps to think about the size of the room and where guests will be seated.
No. A strong floral plan often uses different stems for different jobs. You might use premium flowers in personal flowers and key focal areas, then carry the palette through centerpieces with more flexible supporting blooms.
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