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flower shop for Sale in Kansas

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What to know about flower shop acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating flower shop acquisitions.

Revenue concentration in events versus everyday matters

Walk through the past year of large orders. Florists with strong wedding and event books have lumpy but high-margin revenue; a single wedding might be $3,000–$10,000+. Sympathy and funeral work is steadier (deaths happen on a predictable rate) and high-margin. Everyday counter business (a $40 bouquet for a birthday) is lower-margin and competitive with grocery and online. The healthy mix is heavy on events and sympathy, light on everyday.

Wire service relationships are double-edged

FTD, Teleflora, 1-800-FLOWERS. Wire services bring orders to the florist (a customer in Boston orders flowers delivered in Denver, the wire service routes the order to a local Denver florist who fulfills). Wire services take a substantial cut (15–30%) and impose strict design and value standards. They're useful for filling capacity but eat margin. Verify the wire-service revenue percentage and consider whether some of it should be deprioritized in favor of direct relationships.

Cooler infrastructure is expensive and irreplaceable

Walk through the cooler. Florists need substantial refrigerated storage, typically a walk-in cooler plus display coolers. Equipment is expensive ($30K–$100K+) and old equipment runs inefficiently and breaks down at the worst times (Valentine's Day, Mother's Day). Verify equipment age, refrigeration condition, and the cost of any deferred replacement.

Fresh flower supply is a daily logistics problem

Wholesale flower distribution is competitive but not free. Florists buy fresh stems from wholesale distributors several times per week, often with hours-fresh delivery. Strong relationships with one or two wholesalers (plus access to multiple as needed) are essential. Verify the supplier relationships and the seller's typical buying patterns. A florist buying $200K/year of flowers has supplier leverage; one buying $40K does not.

Real estate and visibility matter to walk-in traffic

Most everyday business is walk-in. A flower shop on a main road with prominent signage and easy parking generates impulse and convenience business. One hidden in a strip mall depends entirely on phone and online orders. Verify the trade area, parking, and visibility. Walk-in traffic counts directly affect everyday revenue and the marketing strategy.

Online presence has become non-negotiable

Your website and Google profile are the storefront. Most flower orders begin online — customer searches "florist near me" or "flower delivery [city]," and the local results determine who gets the call. A florist without a modern website, current Google Business Profile, and reasonable reviews loses to competitors who have these. Verify the online presence quality and look at where the seller ranks for key local search terms.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Most independent flower shops trade in the Tier 1 range (under $500K), often $80K–$300K. Established shops with strong wedding/event books, good real estate, and significant corporate accounts can reach the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M). Florists rarely reach Tier 3 unless they're multi-location operations or specialty event design businesses with regional reach.