Fresh tulip bouquets you can carry on board
Aviflora at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport is the flower shop you see right in the terminal, packed with tulip bouquets clearly labeled as “OK for export” and hand luggage. Prices for small mixed bunches often start around the low double digits in euros, with larger gift-ready arrangements and boxed bulbs climbing from there. Everything is set up so you can grab a bouquet on the way to your gate without hunting around the airport.
The shop sits airside in the main departure area of AMS, near the central shopping zone that most passengers walk through between security and the gates. Because it’s post-security, you can buy fresh flowers without worrying about Dutch export rules at check-in, and staff regularly point out which items meet airline and customs restrictions. Expect typical airport opening hours that track the busiest bank of flights morning through late evening.
Flower focuses here are Dutch classics: tulips, amaryllis, and boxed bulb sets branded for Amsterdam and the Netherlands, plus occasional ready-packed gift bags with printed prices in euros. Many bouquets come sleeved with cardboard or plastic to keep water off your cabin bag, and some dry arrangements and bulbs avoid water entirely. If you want something that survives a long-haul flight to North America or Asia, ask for bulbs or dried options instead of fresh stems.
Quick tip: check your destination’s customs rules on plants and bulbs before you buy anything more than a simple cut-flower bouquet, so you don’t watch a 30-euro arrangement go straight into the bin on arrival.