Sending flowers internationally can be incredibly sweet… and a little stressful. You’re trusting a website you may have never used, paying online, and hoping your loved one in Russia actually receives something beautiful. If you’re looking up how to send flowers to Russia, this guide will help you do it safely, spot red flags early, and protect your money if anything feels off.
Why flower-delivery scams happen (and what they look like)
Scammers love time-sensitive purchases: Valentine’s Day, birthdays, anniversaries. That’s because people order quickly and emotionally. Fake “florist” sites often do one of three things:
- Take payment and never deliver
- Deliver something much smaller/cheaper than advertised
- Use the checkout process to collect personal/payment details
The goal is to make you rush. Your job is to slow down.
Step 1: Vet the website like a cautious shopper
Check the basics before you fall in love with the bouquet photos
A trustworthy international delivery site should make it easy to find:
- Clear contact details (email/phone, not just a form)
- Transparent delivery terms (where they deliver, how long it takes, what happens if the recipient isn’t home)
- Refund/replacement policy
- Real business presence (not just generic copy)
If the website feels vague about refunds and delivery guarantees, that’s usually a bad sign.
Confirm the checkout is secure
Before entering your card details, confirm the website address begins with https (the “s” indicates your data is encrypted in transit). The FTC specifically advises checking for “https” before entering payment information.
Also, look for normal security signals:
- No weird pop-ups forcing you to download something
- No “urgent” countdown timers pushing you to pay immediately
- No suspicious redirects during checkout
Step 2: Use payment methods that protect you
Use a credit card if you can
Credit cards typically offer better dispute options if the product never arrives or the charge is wrong. The FTC has guidance on disputing credit card charges and billing errors.
Avoid “no-return” payment methods
If a seller insists on wire transfers, gift cards, or other cash-like methods, treat it as a dealbreaker. The Better Business Bureau explicitly warns against paying strangers with untraceable methods like wire transfers or gift cards.
A safe rule: if your payment method can’t be disputed, don’t use it.
Step 3: Watch for the most common scam red flags
“Too good to be true” pricing
If you see luxury arrangements at unbelievably low prices, assume something’s off: the delivery fee might suddenly become huge at checkout (hidden fees are a common tactic).
A domain that looks slightly “wrong”
Scam sites often imitate legit brands with tiny changes:
- extra hyphens
- added words (“official,” “shop,” “delivery”)
- odd endings (.xyz, random country codes)
If the branding looks polished but the URL looks weird, trust the URL.
No real support, only automated replies
If the only way to contact them is a web form, and there’s no real response within a reasonable time, don’t pay.
Pressure tactics
Any site that pushes urgency hard (“Pay in 10 minutes or your order is canceled!”) is operating like a scammer, not a florist.
Step 4: Double-check delivery details (this prevents “fake failure” stories)
Sometimes scams look like “delivery problems.” You can protect yourself by giving complete information.
Provide full recipient details
- Full address, including apartment number
- Recipient name as used locally (avoid nicknames if delivery staff needs matching)
- Recipient phone number (very important for couriers)
- Notes like “call on arrival” or entrance instructions if relevant
A scammy service may use “we couldn’t reach the recipient” as an excuse. A legit service uses those details to complete delivery smoothly.
Step 5: Know the cultural basics so you don’t accidentally create an awkward moment
This is more of a “safe delivery” issue emotionally.
Avoid even-numbered bouquets for celebrations
In Russia, even numbers of flowers are traditionally associated with mourning, while odd numbers are used for happy occasions. Many professional services handle this automatically in designed bouquets, but it’s still worth knowing before you choose a stem-count arrangement.
Don’t overthink symbolism, better keep it appropriate
If you’re unsure which flowers are best, choose classic options (roses, tulips, seasonal mixed bouquets) and let the message do the emotional work.
Step 6: Look for signs the business handles payments responsibly
You don’t need to become a cybersecurity expert to know PCI DSS.
PCI DSS is a global security standard for organizations that store, process, or transmit cardholder data.
Some sites mention PCI compliance (or use major payment processors that are PCI-compliant). A simple explainer from Stripe covers what PCI compliance is and why it exists.
What this means for you: a serious seller usually uses reputable payment processing and doesn’t do sketchy “manual payment” requests.
Step 7: Validate credibility without spending hours
Here’s a fast, practical approach:
Search for reviews off-site (not only testimonials)
Testimonials on a site can be invented. Instead:
- Look for reviews on independent platforms
- Check whether people mention real delivery experiences (dates, cities, photos)
Check policy clarity
Legit services clearly explain:
- what happens if a specific flower is unavailable (substitutions)
- how they handle failed delivery attempts
- refund/replacement rules
Vague policy pages are one of the biggest warning signs.
Step 8: What to do if you suspect a scam (before and after you pay)
If you haven’t paid yet
- Don’t “test” with a small order. Scammers still win.
- Choose a different provider with clear policies and protected payment options.
If you already paid and something feels wrong
- Contact the seller immediately in writing (email is best).
- Document everything: order number, screenshots, promised delivery date, what was delivered (if anything).
- If they don’t resolve it, contact your card issuer to dispute the charge. The FTC explains steps for dealing with online shopping problems and reporting fraud.
- Consider reporting suspicious activity via the FTC’s reporting process as well.
A safe, simple checklist before you click “Pay”
Website checks
- https address ✅
- clear contact info ✅
- transparent delivery and refund policies ✅
Payment checks
- credit card preferred ✅
- no wire transfer / gift card requests ✅
Order checks
- complete recipient details ✅
- realistic delivery expectations ✅
- save confirmation emails/screenshots ✅
Final thoughts
Sending flowers to Russia should feel romantic, supportive, celebratory—never risky. The safest approach is simple: use secure checkout, choose protected payment methods, avoid “too good to be true” offers, and only order from services that are transparent about delivery and refunds.
