25+ Spring Wreath Ideas That’ll Make Your Front Door the Best on the Block
Why I’m Obsessed With Spring Wreaths (And You Should Be Too)
I used to think wreaths were strictly a Christmas thing. Then one March, I hung a simple eucalyptus and wildflower wreath on my front door and my neighbor stopped her car to ask where I got it. That was it for me โ I was completely hooked. Spring wreaths do something that a potted plant can’t quite pull off: they greet people at eye level, right at the moment they arrive. There’s something about a beautiful wreath that makes a home feel intentional and alive even before anyone steps inside. Whether you’re working with a painted Victorian door or a plain builder-grade one, the right wreath transforms the whole entry. In this post, I’m walking you through every style worth considering โ from fresh florals to dried botanicals to the whimsical stuff I can’t stop pinning.
1. Faux Hydrangea and Sunflower Wreath

This combination is one of my absolute favorites for early spring because it bridges that awkward gap between winter’s muted tones and full summer color. Hydrangeas bring softness and volume, while sunflowers add a burst of warmth that reads cheerful without being overwhelming. Look for wreaths built on a grapevine or plastic base โ they hold their shape season after season. Silk flowers make the biggest difference here; cheap plastic ones look exactly like cheap plastic ones the moment the sun hits them. I’ve kept a silk version like this on my door for two full seasons and it still looks fresh.
2. Fresh Mimosa Wreath

Real flower wreaths have a short life, and honestly, that’s kind of the point. A fresh mimosa wreath โ the fluffy yellow kind sourced from Italy or specialty florists โ lasts about one to two weeks on your door, but those two weeks are spectacular. Yellow is having a major moment in spring decor right now, and mimosa gives you that color with a texture that’s almost impossibly soft and airy. I’d hang this the first week of March when you’re desperately ready for warmth and the garden hasn’t delivered yet. It’s a splurge, but it’s a seasonal ritual I look forward to.
3. Cherry Blossom Wreath in White or Blush

Cherry blossom wreaths look delicate in a way that most artificial florals don’t quite pull off โ and the best faux versions genuinely do capture that soft, almost translucent quality of the real bloom. I lean toward white over pink because it reads more refined and pairs with practically any door color. Blush works beautifully on charcoal, navy, or black doors if you want more contrast. This style suits a neutral interior aesthetic perfectly; it extends that calm, organic feeling right from the entryway. If you have a deep-toned door, go blush. If your door is a lighter color or natural wood, white cherry blossom is the move.
4. Wildflower and Rose Garden Wreath

This is the one that looks like it was made in a cottage garden by someone who doesn’t overthink things. Roses, wildflowers, and trailing greenery woven together on a natural base โ it reads effortless but takes real skill to do well. The key is making sure the flowers vary in scale; if everything is the same size, the wreath looks flat and commercial. Smaller filler flowers tucked between larger blooms create the kind of depth that makes people stop and look twice. I’ve tried DIYing this style twice. The first time was a disaster. The second time was passable. At this point I just buy a good one and don’t feel bad about it.
5. Daisy Wreath With Lush Greenery

Daisies begin blooming in March and there’s nothing that signals spring more simply or cheerfully. A daisy wreath with good greenery coverage has this open, meadow-like quality that feels genuinely seasonal rather than decorative-for-the-sake-of-it. For curb appeal, bigger is usually better here โ a 22-inch wreath filled with vibrant daisies reads well from the street. Pair it with a matching garland along a porch railing if you want to really commit to the look. I know that sounds like a lot, but in the right space it’s stunning rather than overdone.
6. Purple and Lavender Tulip Wreath

Tulips in wreaths are underused and I genuinely don’t understand why. They bring a verticality and elegance that rounder blooms like peonies and hydrangeas don’t. Purple and lavender tulips specifically work beautifully because they photograph incredibly well โ which matters if you care at all about your entryway looking good on Instagram or in listing photos. Pair faux tulips with eucalyptus leaves to ground the cooler tones and keep the whole thing from looking too sweet. A grapevine base in this style feels natural and earned rather than crafty.
7. Peony Wreath in Deep Pink

Peonies are the flower everyone loves but nobody can quite keep alive long enough to enjoy. That’s what makes a faux peony wreath such a good investment โ you get the lushness and romance of the bloom without the three-day countdown before it drops. Deep pink is my preferred color here because it’s bold enough to hold its own on most door colors. Soft blush peonies can get lost if your door is anything lighter than a medium tone. Add deep green foliage and keep the wreath full โ sparse peony wreaths look sad. This is one where more is genuinely more.
8. Eucalyptus Half Wreath

Half wreaths are still underrated as a design choice and I think it’s because people aren’t sure how to use them. The trick is placement โ a half wreath sits at the top of your door frame or along one side, which gives a more architectural, considered look than a traditional centered wreath. Eucalyptus is ideal for this format because the long stems follow the curve naturally. White cosmos or small wildflowers tucked into a eucalyptus half wreath on a natural twine base is one of the most elegant door treatments I’ve seen. It reads expensive even when it isn’t.
9. Pre-Lit Spring Flower Wreath

Okay, I was skeptical of lit wreaths for spring because they felt very Christmas-coded to me. Then I saw one with warm micro LED lights nestled into lilac, sage, and cream blooms on a twig frame and I completely changed my mind. The glow is subtle during the day and genuinely magical at dusk. This style works especially well for doors that don’t get a lot of natural light, or if you tend to come home after dark and want your entryway to feel welcoming. Keep the surrounding area simple โ a lit wreath is already a statement.
10. Pansy Wreath in Pink, Purple, and Yellow

Pansies are such a Southern staple that they almost feel nostalgic at this point. The varieties that mix pink, purple, and yellow together have this cottage garden energy that’s both charming and a little retro โ in the best possible way. A pansy wreath on a 20-inch base with lush green foliage backing is the kind of thing that makes your front door look like a real home rather than just a house. What I love about this style is how approachable it looks. Not intimidating, not precious. Just genuinely pretty.
11. Blue Wildflower and Daisy Wreath

Blue flowers in a wreath are genuinely surprising in the best way โ most spring wreaths lean pink, yellow, or white, so a blue wildflower wreath stops people in their tracks. Blue daisies and wildflowers paired with eucalyptus greenery create this effortlessly airy look that feels like something between a French country garden and a wildflower meadow. The key is contrast: the blue reads well against warm door tones like terracotta, mustard, or red. Against a cool-toned door it can get a bit lost.
12. Pussy Willow Wreath

This is one of the earliest-of-season wreaths you can hang โ pussy willows are legitimately one of the first signs of spring, so there’s something poetic about using them at your door before anything else has bloomed. Hand-woven pussy willow wreaths have a softness and natural texture that’s very different from floral styles. The color palette is quiet โ silvery white buds, pale grey tones โ which makes this wreath a good fit if your exterior is already colorful and you want the door to breathe rather than compete. It’s restrained in a way I appreciate.
13. Peach Blossom and Lavender Wreath

Peach and lavender is a color combination that feels like late spring transitioning into early summer, and that’s exactly why it works so well from April onward. Faux peach blossoms with small lavender sprigs and daisies in between create a soft, warm palette that photographs beautifully in golden hour light. This is a transition wreath โ the kind you can hang in April and leave up comfortably through June without it feeling out of season.
14. Pastel Easter Egg Wreath

I’ll be honest โ this style is very specific and it’s not for everyone. But if you have kids, or if you genuinely love leaning into seasonal moments, a wreath with speckled pastel eggs woven into sprigs of greenery and purple flower buds is charming in a way that’s hard to find elsewhere. It works for the door but also looks sweet on a mantelpiece or above a dining sideboard. The key is keeping the eggs small and the surrounding greenery natural-looking so it reads whimsical rather than craft-store.
15. Dried Flower Heart Wreath

Dried flower wreaths are having a long-overdue moment and I’m here for it. A heart-shaped dried wreath with strawflowers, bunny tails, and statice has a completely different energy than fresh or faux โ it’s more romantic, more artisanal, and honestly more interesting. The color palette of dried florals โ dusty rose, muted yellow, pale purple โ works year-round but feels especially right in spring. These are also the most durable option; a well-made dried wreath genuinely lasts for years. Just keep it out of direct rain.
16. Bright Multicolor Floral Wreath

Sometimes you just want color โ real, unapologetic, joyful color. A wreath with faux pansies, daisies, and tulips in pink, yellow, purple, and white all together sounds like it should be chaotic, but with the right balance of greenery to anchor it, it reads festive and alive rather than messy. These work especially well on plain white or black doors where the door itself isn’t competing. I’ve seen these hung in entryway hallways on a mirror frame too, which is a look I’m completely into.
17. Greenery-Only Wreath With Minimal Florals

Not every spring wreath needs to explode with flowers. A dense greenery wreath โ eucalyptus, fern, or mixed leaves โ with just one or two blooms tucked in is actually one of the more sophisticated options out there. It reads year-round but skews spring with the right stem choices. This is my go-to recommendation for people who feel like they can never make a floral wreath work with their home’s exterior because it’s too busy or too colorful. Green works with everything. It’s not a cop-out; it’s taste.
18. Yellow Daisy and Eucalyptus Wreath

Yellow and green is one of the most reliable spring combinations there is โ it’s literally the color of new growth. Yellow daisies surrounded by eucalyptus leaves and small white wildflowers give you warmth, freshness, and just enough variety to keep it interesting. This is the wreath I’d recommend to someone who’s buying their first spring wreath and doesn’t want to overthink it. It’s not trendy in a way that will feel dated next year. It just looks like spring, properly done.
19. Oversized Statement Wreath

If you have a large door โ a double door, a tall entry, or a wide farmhouse-style front โ a standard 22-inch wreath will look miniature and a little lost. Go oversized. A 60cm or larger wreath filled with layered blooms commands the space it’s supposed to fill. Proportions matter enormously in entryway styling and this is one of those things where people consistently undersize out of caution. The rule I use: when in doubt, go one size bigger than feels comfortable. You can always take it down. You can’t un-see a too-small wreath on a big door.
20. Cottagecore Mixed Bloom Wreath

The cottagecore trend has officially moved past being a trend and into being a legitimate aesthetic category โ which means this style of wreath isn’t going anywhere. Mixed blue wildflowers, daisies, and trailing vines in a loose, slightly imperfect arrangement is the hallmark look. It should feel like it was foraged rather than purchased, even if it wasn’t. This style suits older homes, cottages, and bungalows perfectly, but I’ve also seen it look incredible on a very modern flat-front door because the contrast is so good.
21. Mimosa and Fern Spring Wreath

Pair the feathery texture of fern fronds with the fluffy pompom quality of mimosa and you have something that’s genuinely tactile and interesting, even in photo form. This is a more unusual pairing than the standard flower combinations and it rewards a closer look. Green and yellow together keep this feeling fresh rather than heavy. It’s a good wreath for a shaded porch where bolder colors might feel off โ the soft yellow of mimosa carries beautifully even without direct sunlight.
22. Pastel Hydrangea Wreath in Lilac and Cream

Hydrangeas in lilac and cream are the most requested wreath style I see on Pinterest every single spring, and it’s honestly for good reason โ the color combination is soft, sophisticated, and works with almost any exterior. Lilac and cream together read both feminine and elegant without being cloying. The trick is finding a wreath where the hydrangea clusters are full and rounded rather than flat; flat hydrangeas look deflated and sad. Good volume is everything with this style.
23. Sunflower and Berry Wreath

Sunflowers on their own can tip into full-on summer territory, but pair them with small faux berries โ white, green, or soft pink โ and the whole thing pulls back toward spring beautifully. The berries add a delicacy that balances the sunflower’s boldness. This works well on darker doors and is one of those wreaths that gets compliments because it’s not a combination people see constantly. Under $25 at most retailers, too, which makes it even easier to recommend without reservation.
24. Rose and Wildflower Pastel Wreath

Soft pink roses combined with an assortment of small pastel wildflowers โ think pale peach, cream, and the lightest lavender โ is one of those combinations that photographs well in literally every light condition. Morning, afternoon, overcast โ it always looks good. This style suits homes with a more romantic or traditional aesthetic and pairs beautifully with an ornate door knocker or lantern-style porch light. Keep the surrounding entryway simple so the wreath reads clearly.
25. Herb and Greenery Wreath With White Blooms

This is my personal favorite for anyone who wants a spring wreath that doesn’t look obviously seasonal โ the kind you can hang in late February and leave through early June without a second thought. Rosemary, eucalyptus, and fern with small white blooms tucked in creates something that’s more botanical than floral. It smells incredible if you use real herbs. The silhouette is elegant, the palette is quiet, and it suits modern, transitional, and traditional homes equally well. I genuinely think everyone should have one of these.
26. Bright Spring Porch Wreath Under $30

I want to end on something practical because not everyone wants to spend $100 on a wreath, and honestly, you don’t have to. The faux wreath market at the $20โ$30 price point has gotten genuinely good over the last few years. Silk flowers that actually look like silk rather than plastic, grapevine bases that don’t fall apart after one season, colors that don’t fade weirdly. Look for wreaths described as “handcrafted” with fabric flowers rather than plastic โ that’s usually the differentiator. A 22-inch wreath in that range is the right size for most standard doors and won’t look budget even if it was.
I change my front door wreath four times a year, and spring is genuinely my favorite round. There’s nothing like walking up to your own front door and feeling the season reflected back at you. Pick one that makes you happy when you see it โ that’s really the only rule that matters.
