Hong Kong’s florists, Sorted By Office Districts

Hong Kong’s business core isn’t one place — it’s a string of districts strung along both sides of the harbour, each with its own towers, its own crowd, and its own flower shops. Some serve corner-office corporates. Some serve the wedding crowd. Some have been quietly doing the same excellent thing since before the MTR existed. Here’s the district-by-district rundown, from Central all the way out to Kowloon East.


Central

The financial heart of the city, and unsurprisingly the most competitive floral scene too. Five shops worth knowing, all within a fifteen-minute walk of each other.

greenfingers.com.hk

Forty years in business. Kenny Chan opened Greenfingers back in 1985, having trained in floristry in Germany and the Netherlands, and the European fingerprints are still all over the work — bold, structural, nothing too fussy or pastel. Chan’s still teaching floristry today, still designing, and the shop’s client roster reads like a who’s-who of Hong Kong fashion, hospitality, and interiors.

Where: G/F, Tung Tze Terrace, 6 Aberdeen Street Hours: 9am–6:30pm, Monday to Saturday Phone: +852 2827 8280

Go here for a wedding. Go here for a funeral wreath, too — they do both with equal care. Skip it if you want something soft and Instagram-pink.

ellermann-flowers.com

Everything here is made to order. No fixed packages, no cookie-cutter bouquets — just layered, textured arrangements built around what you actually want. It’s been running since 2011, and the flagship is tucked inside the Landmark Atrium, which tells you something about the price point before you even walk in.

Where: Shop 109, Level 1, Landmark Atrium, 15 Queen’s Road Central Hours: 10am–7pm weekdays, 10am–6pm weekends

There’s a second location in Pacific Place, so if you’re bouncing between Central and Admiralty, you’re covered either way. Worth a browse even if you’re not buying flowers — they stock home decor too.

mflorist.hk

The baby of the group, and it shows in the branding: moody colour stories, poetic bouquet names, a same-day cutoff at 2pm sharp. But don’t mistake newness for small ambition — M Florist ships to London and Dubai as well as around Hong Kong.

Where: Room 1104, 11/F, 70 Queen’s Road Central

If you want something that photographs well and reads a little more editorial than traditional, this is your stop.

the-floristry.com

Quieter than the others, and deliberately so. No maximalist arrangements, no drama — just carefully composed, minimal bouquets a short walk from Greenfingers on Gough Street. If your taste runs toward restraint, start here.

Where: G/F, 18 Gough Street

solomonbloemen.com

The opposite of restraint. Dr Solomon Leong runs this one, and the arrangements are conceptual, sculptural, built to make a statement rather than sit quietly in a vase. This is the shop for event florals that need to do some visual heavy lifting.

Where: Winner Building, 27 D’Aguilar Street


Admiralty

One MTR stop from Central, home to the government offices, law firms, and — thanks to Pacific Place — some genuinely upmarket floral shopping.

petalandpoem.com

Named Hong Kong’s Best Luxury Florist, and it leans into that reputation. The signature move here is pairing bouquets with agnès b. chocolate, which makes it the obvious pick if you’re sending something a notch above flowers alone. The team also runs a same-day delivery network wide enough to cover everywhere from Central to Sai Kung and Discovery Bay.

Where: Level 35, Two Pacific Place, 88 Queensway

Ellermann Flower Boutique (Pacific Place)

Yes, Ellermann again — the second of its two Hong Kong boutiques sits inside Pacific Place, a short walk from the Landmark branch if you’re crossing between districts. Same bespoke, continental-influenced philosophy, different mall.

Where: Shop 126, Level 1, Pacific Place, 88 Queensway


Wan Chai

Older, scrappier, and full of hidden gems tucked into converted shophouses and side streets like Star Street. This is where a lot of Hong Kong’s most-loved independent florists actually live.

Magenta-florist.com

Winner of Hong Kong’s Best Luxury Florist award and a regular fixture on best-of lists, Magenta Florist draws on both grand European garden style and delicate Chinese floral artistry. It sources flowers directly from farms in Ecuador, South Africa, and the Netherlands, and its client list includes luxury brands, financial institutions, and more than a few celebrities.

Good for: proposals, corporate accounts, and anyone who wants five-star service to match the flowers.

bloomboxhk.com

A Wan Chai fixture that’s grown from small-scale luxury arrangements into high-end commercial and wedding floral design. The design style ranges from minimalist to genuinely opulent, and the shop runs a flower subscription service for people who can’t go a week without fresh blooms at home.

maisonxxii.com

Established in 1994, Maison xxii is one of the longest-running names on this list and has picked up clients like Louis Vuitton and Cartier along the way — a fair signal of the calibre of arrangement on offer. It also has a Causeway Bay branch at Times Square, so you can find it on both sides of this guide.


Causeway Bay

Shopping-mall central, but also home to a genuine luxury florist scene thanks to Times Square and the surrounding streets.

bloomandsong.com

Based on Level 34 of Times Square’s Tower One, Bloom & Song positions itself as one of Hong Kong’s finest luxury florists, with same-day delivery running across Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, and the New Territories. Expect soft, sculptural, seasonally led bouquets rather than anything too structured.

Where: Level 34, Tower One, Times Square, 1 Matheson Street

commablooms.com

the fashion house does flowers too. Established in Hong Kong in 2002, Comma’s floral arm brings the brand’s clean, minimalist aesthetic to bouquets, flower boxes, and greenery, with several outposts around the city including one near Causeway Bay’s office towers.


Island East (Quarry Bay & Taikoo Place)

Once an industrial strip, now home to Taikoo Place and Cityplaza — two of the biggest office and retail hubs on the eastern side of the island, and a growing base for banks and tech firms relocating out of Central’s rent bracket.

andrsnflowers.com

A go-to for the Quarry Bay office crowd, known for polished, globally sourced arrangements spanning classic roses to more exotic orchids and tropical blooms. It also has a Wan Chai presence under the Gary K name for anyone who’s seen that branding around.

fleurologybyh.com

Tucked into Eastern Centre on King’s Road, this is a strong, consistently well-reviewed local option for the Island East crowd who want quality without the mall markup.

floristicsco.com

A hidden-gem, appointment-feeling shop inside the Wing Wah Industrial Building — the kind of place locals know about and visitors don’t, prized for personal service and premium blooms without the storefront overhead.


Tsim Sha Tsui

Kowloon’s answer to Central, thick with luxury malls, hotels, and headquarters — and a floral scene to match.

loverflorals.com

An award-winning florist with a genuinely unusual home — inside the Eslite bookstore in Tsim Sha Tsui. Good for browsing books and bouquets in the same trip, with bouquets, flower boxes, and gift hampers all on offer.


Kowloon East (Kwun Tong & Kowloon Bay)

The newest business district on this list. Once solid industrial blocks, Kwun Tong and Kowloon Bay have spent the last decade turning into Hong Kong’s “CBD2” — glossy office towers, co-working spaces, and a wave of creative studios moving in behind them. The florists here reflect that shift: fewer mall boutiques, more working studios tucked into converted industrial buildings.

Sunny-florist.com

A favourite among Kwun Tong’s design-and-corporate crowd, Sunny florist operates out of the Kwun Tong Industrial Centre and has built a reputation for artistic, sophisticated arrangements aimed at both personal gifting and corporate clients.

flowerbee-hk.com

A genuine Kwun Tong veteran, in business for more than three decades near APM in Kwun Tong Plaza. Not the flashiest shop on this list, but a dependable, wide-ranging local option that’s outlasted plenty of newer arrivals.