Reference

Where your floral dollar actually goes.

Most floral budgets bend on the same four decisions. Below is how the spend splits in a typical wedding — plus the trade-offs that let you tighten without hurting the photos.

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Typical split

Where it goes in a typical 100-guest wedding

The split is roughly consistent regardless of total budget. The biggest line item is almost always reception centerpieces because there are simply more of them than any other piece type.

  • 40%

    Reception centerpieces

  • 25%

    Ceremony decor

  • 25%

    Personal pieces

  • 10%

    Accents + extras

The four levers

Trade-offs that move the needle most

You don't have to make all four — most couples make one or two and keep the rest. The savings compound across guests and pieces.

  • Centerpieces low vs tall

    Low centerpieces use roughly 60% of the stems a tall riser piece needs. Same visual coverage at the table level.

    Saves ~40% per centerpiece
  • Single arch spray vs full set

    One corner spray on an arch reads as styled in photos. A full 3-piece set is "magazine" level.

    Saves ~50% on ceremony spend
  • Garland vs individual centerpieces (long tables)

    A single garland down a banquet table replaces 4–5 small centerpieces and reads as more cohesive in photos.

    Saves ~30% per table
  • Bridesmaid bouquet size

    Going from a 22 cm bridesmaid bouquet to an 18 cm "posy" doesn't affect photo composition — it lets the bride's bouquet stay the visual anchor.

    Saves ~20% per bouquet

Then build the list

Run the floral checklist for a concrete piece count.

Once you've picked a budget direction, the checklist computes the exact piece list — bouquets, centerpieces, arch, and more — based on your guest count and party size.