Why Is the Rose a Popular Flower for Valentine’s Day?

Why is the rose a token of love (or friendship) and a popular flower for Valentine's Day? Here are the details.

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When it comes to gifts and tokens of affection, flowers are a classic choice. But of all the flowers given on holidays, none are as closely associated with Valentine’s Day as the red rose. Even if you’re not someone who pays attention to this mid-February holiday, it’s hard to miss the sales displays filled with dozens of Valentine’s Day roses situated front and center in supermarkets, drugstores and even gas station mini-marts. There’s a reason the rose is iconic and a popular flower for Valentine’s Day.

Of course, Valentine’s Day roses aren’t strictly for expressing romantic love. Thanks to different rose color meanings, the classic beauties make great Valentine’s Day gifts for friends and family members too. But before you hit the nearest florist for a rainbow’s array of roses, find out how the tradition of giving roses for Valentine’s Day started and which roses are tops.

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How much do people spend on Valentine’s Day roses?

Florist at worktolgart/Getty Images

Some Valentine’s Day trivia: In 2022 alone, people spent $23.9 billion on Valentine’s Day, and the total spending hit $25.9 billion in 2023—the second-highest year on record, according to the National Retail Federation. In 2022, $2.3 billion went to Valentine’s Day flowers—averaging out to nearly $17 per person. Because the rose is a popular flower for Valentine’s Day, that number typically increases every year, so there’s a decent chance the figure will be even higher in 2024. And grumble as they may about the cost of Valentine’s Day roses (the price of roses skyrockets around the holiday), Americans are willing to pay the price for the flower that best signifies love.

“Plants are great for long-lasting tokens of love, and a simple red rose plant is ever popular,” says Sandra Varley, a florist with more than a decade of experience and the sales and marketing manager for Flying Flowers. And while a bouquet of cut roses may not last quite as long as a rose bush, it’s still a beautiful way of saying “Happy Valentine’s Day” and “I love you” for as long as the flowers live—even longer if you dry them.

Why is a rose given on Valentine’s Day?

Close-up of roses in vase on table by wall at homeCavan Images/Getty Images

There’s history behind why the rose is a popular flower for Valentine’s Day. The tradition of giving roses for Valentine’s Day has several origin stories, and like the Valentine Cupid, it’s rooted in Greek mythology. “Some stories say that the first red rose was created when the Greek goddess Aphrodite was scratched by a white rose’s thorn, causing that rose to turn red,” says Sara Cleto, PhD, a folklorist and co-founder of the Carterhaugh School of Folklore and the Fantastic. “Others say that the first red rose grew on the ground where Adonis, Aphrodite’s lover, died and the goddess’s tears fell.”

As far as the history behind the tradition of Valentine’s Day roses, an early figure sometimes connected to the association between roses and romance is Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, wife of a British ambassador to Turkey during the 1700s. “Lady Montagu wrote letters home enthusing over a version of Turkish ‘flower language,’ or the process of assigning certain symbolic meanings to certain flowers, but she seems to have misinterpreted this local custom, which had more to do with rhyming words than the significance of the flowers themselves,” Cleto says. “Still, the concept of ‘flower languages’ caught on, especially in 19th-century England, and over the course of that century, roses became ever more tightly linked to romantic love.”

But a huge reason giving roses for Valentine’s Day has persisted as a tradition is “simply because roses are beautiful, fabulous-smelling flowers that happen to travel really well,” says Cleto. “Flowers are usually shipped over long distances, and roses are both gorgeous and hardy, so that’s a huge part of why this practice has continued.”

What are the best roses for Valentine’s Day?

Just like candy hearts, red roses are the best gift for Valentine’s Day because the color is associated with passion and romantic love. That may be why couples book romantic hotels and sprinkle roses on the beds and floors as a gesture of love. “Part of this is probably because red dye used to be particularly expensive, difficult to obtain and sometimes synonymous with royalty,” Cleto explains. “All these factors made red feel especially desirable and luxurious.”

Everyone has their preferences as far as the variety, but according to Varley, the Samourai rose is at the top when it comes to the perfect Valentine’s Day flower. “It is the perfect intense red that oozes luxury, and the large petals are velvety in texture and are complemented well by the surrounding dark green leaves,” she says. “The shape of the bloom is perfect for a romantic bouquet also, as the oval buds open to a large double bloom flower, which is full and impactful. One further advantage is that this particular rose is thornless, which is perfect for gift giving.”

While COVID-19–related quarantine ignited a love of houseplants in Americans across the country, plants haven’t supplanted roses as Valentine’s Day gifts. “Red roses are still far and away the most popular stem on Valentine’s Day,” says Varley. “The younger you are, the more likely you are to buy red roses. Mixed-stem bunches in hot pinks are becoming more popular. However, nothing quite says love like a red, red rose.”

Of course, if you’re celebrating platonic love—say, for Galentine’s Day—you’ll want to go with something that signifies friendship. Skip the red and go straight for yellow roses. You could even use online flower delivery services for a seamless shipment to your gal pal.

Those looking for inexpensive Valentine’s Day gifts may want to make homemade Valentine’s Day cards featuring the Valentine’s Day flower and a love quote. Or go with a solo stem. It’s a small nod to tradition that you can present before a date at a romantic restaurant.

About the experts

  • Sara Cleto, PhD, is a folklorist and the co-founder of the Carterhaugh School of Folklore and the Fantastic.
  • Sandra Varley is a florist and the sales and marketing manager for Flying Flowers.

Sources:

Elizabeth Yuko
Elizabeth is an award-winning journalist and bioethicist from New York City covering knowledge, culture, politics, history and lesser-known facts about holidays and traditions. In addition to Reader's Digest, she writes for the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Architectural Digest, the Atlantic, Bloomberg CityLab, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, CNN, Teen Vogue, the History Channel, Real Simple and Lifehacker.