Same-day flower delivery sounds simple until you have actually run a flower shop through one. A customer calls at 1:45 needing an arrangement at Lenox Hill Hospital by 4. Another order comes in online for a Madison Avenue office, no floor number, no contact name. Meanwhile a funeral delivery is due at Frank E. Campbell that cannot be late for any reason. Of everything we do at the shop, same-day is the order that separates a real florist from an app with a logo. There is no slack in the schedule and no room to wing it.
I am William Stamos, third generation, and my family has been arranging flowers at 96th and Madison since 1929, when my grandfather, one of the many Greek immigrants who built small businesses across this city, opened the doors. This post is about what actually happens between clicking "order" and someone opening their door, so you know what you are paying for and how to make it go right.
What "same-day" actually means in Manhattan
Same-day is not a promise that flowers appear the instant you order. It means we design and deliver within the same business day, provided the order comes in before our cutoff, which is 3 PM. That cutoff exists for a real reason. Our designers need time to build the arrangement properly, and our drivers need daylight and a traffic cushion to reach every stop.
Here is what happens behind the counter. Every same-day ticket gets grouped by neighborhood and by urgency, hospital and funeral deliveries first, since those often have visiting-hour windows or service times that cannot move. Designers work the queue in the order it needs to go out, not the order it came in. Once an arrangement is built, it goes into the cooler briefly to firm up, then out to whichever driver is running that route. On a normal weekday we can fit a 3 PM order into that afternoon's run, but on Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, or during a snowstorm, that window tightens considerably, which is why we stay firm on the cutoff rather than make promises we cannot keep.
What people rarely see is the morning end of it. Our day starts before the shop opens, with runs to the flower market to select stems by hand and bring back what we need for that day. Same-day delivery only works because that inventory is already in the building before the first order comes in, not because we are scrambling to source flowers after you have already paid for them.
Which neighborhoods we deliver to same-day
Our home base is the Upper East Side, where we are fastest and most flexible, Carnegie Hill, Yorkville, and the blocks around Madison Avenue. We also run same-day routes to the Upper West Side, Midtown, and Downtown Manhattan. Delivery within Manhattan is a flat $15, and for Brooklyn and Queens it is $25.
A large share of our Upper East Side deliveries go to Lenox Hill Hospital and Mount Sinai, and we know both buildings well enough to know which entrances are fastest and what each front desk requires before sending flowers to a room. We also handle a steady flow of sympathy deliveries to Frank E. Campbell, the funeral home on Madison, where timing against a service schedule matters as much as the arrangement itself. If you are ordering for a hospital stay or a service, we wrote a longer guide on sympathy flowers for NYC hospitals and funerals that covers timing and what hospitals typically allow in patient rooms.
Which flowers travel well same-day, and which don't
Not every flower survives a delivery van the same way. Roses, orchids, and lisianthus are workhorses. They hold their shape, tolerate being jostled, and still look fresh hours after leaving our cooler. These are the backbone of most same-day arrangements for that reason, not just because they are popular.
Peonies and hydrangeas are a different story. They are gorgeous, but they bruise easily, drink water fast, and wilt visibly if they sit somewhere warm for even a short stretch. In summer this becomes a real problem. A delivery van parked in July sun turns into an oven within minutes, and a hydrangea that looked perfect when it left the shop can look tired by the time it reaches the tenth floor. We account for this by hydrating stems heavily beforehand, packing delicate flowers last so they spend less time in transit, and, when the heat is bad enough, telling customers honestly that roses or orchids will hold up better that day.
Why a local florist beats a national wire service on same-day
This is the part most customers never see, and it explains why arrangements do not always look like the photo online. Big national names like 1-800-Flowers usually do not arrange or deliver your flowers themselves. Your order gets relayed to a local "fulfillment" florist wherever you are sending to, and that florist fills it with whatever stock they have that day, often substituting flowers, colors, and even the container, not what you pictured when you clicked buy. Documented reporting on the industry has shown wire services can take a commission of 27% or more off the top of every order, money that never goes toward the flowers, leaving the filling florist to make something worthwhile with what is left.
When you order from us, there is no relay. We make what you actually ordered, with flowers we selected that morning, and one of our own drivers delivers it. No substitution three states away, no commission eating into the quality of what shows up at your door.
How to order for same-day success
A few small things on your end make a real difference in how smoothly delivery goes.
- Order by 3 PM if you need it delivered that day, earlier around holidays.
- For hospital deliveries, include the floor and room or unit number, or front desks may hold flowers rather than send them up.
- Include a working phone number for the recipient or location. Drivers often need to call ahead at office buildings, hospitals, and funeral homes.
- If something is urgent or unusual, call us directly. A two-minute call can solve a problem an online order cannot.
Same-day, done right
We have been getting flowers across this neighborhood since 1929, and the fundamentals have not changed. Order same-day online at jeromeflorists.com by 3 PM, or call us at (212) 289-1677 for anything urgent. We would rather talk it through with you than have you guess.