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The long trip your flowers will make before you can say ‘I love you’ this Valentine’s Day

- - The long trip your flowers will make before you can say ‘I love you’ this Valentine’s Day

Alexandra Skores, CNNFebruary 12, 2026 at 2:00 AM

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An employee cuts roses for export at Ayura Flowers near Bogota, Colombia on February 3. - Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images

This Valentine’s Day, your bouquet will likely travel thousands of miles in a jetliner’s cargo and refrigerated truck before it gets to your local florist and ultimately, your sweetheart.

In the United States, most fresh cut flowers come from Colombia and Ecuador. Roses, chrysanthemums, and carnations are the three most common types of imported flowers.

The busiest times for shipments are Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day, when about 30% of all flowers imported from Colombia each year are brought to the US, said Diogo Elias, CEO of Avianca Cargo.

Workers arrange boxes of flowers before loading them onto a cargo plane for export at El Dorado International Airport in Bogota on Tuesday. - Diana Sanchez/AFP/Getty Images

US Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists inspect imported cut flowers for harmful pests on January 20, 2023. - US Customs and Border Protection

The Colombia-based airline, and other cargo air carriers, fly massive amounts of flowers each year. For Valentine’s Day 2026, Avianca transported more than 19,000 tons of flowers from Colombia and Ecuador, a 6% uptick from last year.

“Valentine’s Day requires a large-scale operational surge across the air cargo system,” Elias said.

The airline typically doubles cargo capacity for the holiday, adding nearly 300 flights this season.

Miami International Airport is the primary port of entry for commercial flower stems, processing 88% of all cut flower imports, according to US Customs and Border Protection. Los Angeles International Airport and the land border crossing near San Diego handle most of the rest.

Harvested roses ready to be exported abroad are displayed at Ayura Flowers, in Sopo, Colombia February 3. - Luisa Gonzalez/REUTERS/REUTERS

A worker harvests rosebuds to be shipped to the U.S. ahead of Valentine's Day at the Ayura flower company in Sopo, Colombia, on February 3, 2026. - Fernando Vergara/AP

The agency estimates it will inspect over 1.3 billion stems this year, surpassing last year’s record.

“Every cut flower inspected by CBP is a testament to our vigilance and unwavering commitment to preventing the entry of plant pests and diseases without compromising our agricultural protection,” said Suzette Kelly, acting executive director of CBP’s Agriculture Programs and Trade Liaison, in a news release.

Inspectors intercepted more than 600 pests and plant diseases so far this year, the agency said.

Once the flowers are on US soil, they are packed in refrigerated trucks or loaded onto connecting flights.

Cut roses for export are pictured at Ayura Flowers in Sopo municipality near Bogota on February 3. - Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images

“The Valentine’s season represents one of the highest-value periods of the year for the flower export industry,” Elias said. “While shipment values vary by species and market pricing, the seasonal flower trade between Colombia, Ecuador, and the United States represents hundreds of millions of dollars in commercial value.”

Consumers will spend $3.1 billion on flowers for Valentine’s Day this year, according to the National Research Foundation, which estimates 2026 will set new records.

The Trump administration’s threat of tariffs on foreign countries could also play into the increased costs this year. Tariffs start at 10% for Colombia and Ecuador.

One thing is for certain, regardless of the price or the miles they have to travel - there still will be flowers gifted with love this February 14.

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Source: “AOL Money”

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