Evergreen value guide
How to Compare Flower Prices Without Ignoring Weight
A flower price only makes sense beside the amount attached to it.
A flower price only makes sense beside the amount attached to it.
Two listings can show different prices because they represent different weights, different sections, or different current offers. The useful comparison begins by reading the full line.
Keep price and weight together
Before deciding which listing offers stronger value, confirm:
- The weight of each listing
- The current posted price
- Whether both listings use the same quantity
- The flower section
- Any current item notes
Comparing a smaller quantity with a larger quantity as if they were equal creates a false result.
Use price per gram carefully
Price per gram can make different quantities easier to compare. It is a calculation tool, not the only measure of value.
A clear listing may already show a per-gram figure. When it does not, divide the total price by the listed number of grams.
Even then, current product details still matter. The lowest calculated number does not automatically answer every shoppers priorities.
Compare within a section first
Budget listings are easiest to compare against other current Budget listings. The same principle applies to AA, AAA+, Premium, and Exotic.
Cross-section comparisons can still be useful, but the shopper should understand that the section itself is part of the browsing decision.
Search language can stay direct
Cheap weed, affordable weed, Budget flower, and weed deals are normal shopper phrases. A page targeting those terms should answer the value question directly instead of hiding behind vague language.
The practical answer is current price, current weight, and the correct category page.
Browse current flower sections
Use the live menu for current product details and the store page for current visit information before heading to Queen and Lansdowne.
Open the store page