Receive £50 off 100 Luxury Red Roses Bouquet Orders with this Discount Code
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
You don’t need to be in a rom-com or recovering from heartbreak to send (or receive) flowers. Sometimes they’re simply what you give when you’ve run out of other socially acceptable gestures - or when you want to look like you care without the inefficiencies of actual conversation. Either way,…You don’t need to be in a rom-com or recovering from heartbreak to send (or receive) flowers. Sometimes they’re simply…
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
You don’t need to be in a rom-com or recovering from heartbreak to send (or receive) flowers. Sometimes they’re simply what you give when you’ve run out of other socially acceptable gestures - or when you want to look like you care without the inefficiencies of actual conversation. Either way, flowers still work. Which brings us to Moyses Stevens - a name with the kind of heritage that sounds like it should come engraved on the base of a solid silver vase. Founded in 1876 and still operating, they’re an old-school British florist touting high-end blooms, same-day London delivery, and the kind of packaging that signals you didn’t browse the supermarket discount bin at 9 p.m.
There’s something disarmingly understated about Moyses Stevens. The website feels less like a hard sell and more like it’s quietly confident in the fact that its flowers will speak for themselves - which, let’s be honest, they pretty much do. Bouquets like "Graceful in White" (£70) or "Wild Meadow" (£60) don’t shout "I love you" so much as they murmur "I’m thinking of you in an aesthetically sensitive way." They're tasteful, if slightly conventional. You won’t find avant-garde experimentation here - no moss walls or blue-dyed chrysanthemums - but what they do, they do well.
The new Hydrangea Collection sits in this same lane: pretty, poised, not terribly boundary-pushing. "Hydrangea Delight" (£80) is a classic example. It’s the sort of bouquet that looks like it belongs in a lifestyle magazine shoot about quiet luxury. Though one has to admit, hydrangeas - like all mercurial socialites - can go from breathtaking to city-centre-level wilty if left too long without proper care. Moyses Stevens provides care instructions, but your mileage may vary based on radiators and forgotten vases.
Nothing at Moyses Stevens is what you'd call cheap, but neither is it pretending to be. You’re shopping here for curated arrangements, not bulk-buy tulips. Expect to pay from £60 up to the £150 range for most items. Delivery charges start at £10 for same-day within London - expensive compared to Amazon, but then again, Amazon isn’t sending you "Sienna Days" packed in soft tissue and a magnetic-close box.
They offer occasional sale pricing - "Sienna Days" is currently marked down from £85 to £70 - which feels like a gentle nod to thrift rather than a full-blown promotion. For true discount seekers, this isn’t a site overloaded with voucher codes, but you can sign up for the newsletter, which promises "news and offers," though it’s unclear how inventive those offers actually get. Refunds are possible, but, unsurprisingly, subject to some fine print (perishable goods, and so on). Customer service is reachable seven days a week, which is almost enough to make up for the occasional courier hiccup.
The appeal here isn’t just in the flowers themselves - it’s in what they represent. Sending a bouquet from Moyses Stevens signals a specific kind of effort: not extravagant, but considered; not forced, but deliberate. It says you’ve chosen not just a floral gesture, but a florist with a staff of actual humans who hand-arrange rather than algorithmically sort Andean roses into cellophane.
If flowers aren’t your thing (or your recipient has hay fever), Moyses also offers planted gifts - orchids, monsteras, the obligatory succulents. Some are beautiful; some look like they belong in an upscale therapist’s waiting room. The "Large Money Plant" at £175 is either an investment in good feng shui or a rather expensive passive-aggressive hint. Refund policies apply here too, although buying a plant as a gift assumes a level of trust in the recipient’s ability not to kill it. Risky.
Moyses Stevens is not reinventing the wheel. They're content building a slightly nicer wheel out of Dutch peonies and sustainably-sourced eucalyptus. It’s a reliable choice for florals that feel genuinely special, with just enough restraint to avoid veering into cliché. The prices reflect both quality and branding, and while it’s certainly not a bargain shop, you won’t feel like you’ve overpaid for a handful of limp stems wrapped in plastic either.
If you've got a reason - or just need one - to send flowers that won’t feel like an afterthought, you could do worse than Moyses Stevens. At the very least, you’ll get a bouquet that looks expensive. Because let’s face it, half the battle is perception.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 3.8 / 5 (73 votes)