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Top Wedding Flower Trends for 2025–26

Your Pinterest boards are about to get a floral refresh!

If you're tying the knot in 2025 or 2026, chances are you've already started piecing together your dream day. When it comes to flowers, we've rounded up the standout trends set to bloom at weddings over the next year.


Top Wedding Flower Trends for 2025–26

Whether you're newly engaged and starting from scratch or deep into the planning process and in need of some floral inspiration, the latest wedding flower trends are a great place to begin. With Instagram and Pinterest still shaping what’s popular, ideas from around the world are now being reimagined by local florists using seasonal, locally-sourced blooms. Whether your style leans modern and bold or timeless and romantic, the trends for 2025/26 offer plenty of ways to create something that feels personal and fresh. It's an exciting time for wedding florals—old favourites are getting a modern twist, and bold new ideas are blooming.



Grasses and dried flowers

Although we’ve loved the greenery trend, it’s slowly giving way to the earthier, more neutral tones of dried flowers and grasses such as pampas grass, dried hops and wheat sheaves. We think this looks stunning at summer and autumn weddings in particular, although dried fruits and branches are ideal for winter weddings.


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Locally-grown

More and more brides are working with sustainable floristry to help keep their bouquets and floral arrangements eco-friendly. Rather than flying in unseasonal blooms, brides are preferring to choose in-season, British-grown flowers help to keep our carbon footprint low.


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Floral aisles

For aisle decoration with impact, we’re loving the look of loose, wild flower-style arrangements placed all down the aisle. It looks incredible in photos and will make you feel like you’re walking through a meadow. Plus, after the ceremony is over, you can reuse the arrangements in front of the top table.


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Fragranced bouquets

These days, we’re finding that brides are placing equal importance on the way their bouquet smells as how it looks! Beautifully scented florals such as freesias, lavender, sweet peas and lilacs are making their way into more wedding florals, and we’re even seeing fresh herbs make an appearance! Sprigs of rosemary, mint, thyme, or sage work just as well as table decor as they do in the wedding food!


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Statement blooms

If your budget doesn’t stretch to a giant bouquet of traditional blooms, then why not focus on one statement flower and build your arrangements around it? A single protea, bird of paradise, sunflower or even artichoke can make a big difference in a bouquet! We’re even seeing brides and brides carrying large paper flowers in lieu of real ones – could this be the next wedding flower trend?


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