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Family watching a garden firework display from their patio on Bonfire Night in a British back garden

Best Fireworks for Garden Displays in the UK

The short version: Stick to F2 (category 2) fireworks, which need just 8 metres of safety distance. Don't buy loads of small stuff — buy fewer, bigger fireworks and fire them one at a time. For Bonfire Night, aim for 15–25 minutes. For New Year's or parties, 5–10 minutes is the sweet spot. A £40–£50 pack gives you a solid base to build from.
Family watching a garden firework display from their patio on Bonfire Night in a British back garden

Most people's first firework display happens in their back garden. It's also where most mistakes get made. Buying the wrong category, cramming too many small fireworks in, or ending up with a display that's over before anyone's put their phone away.

We've been helping people plan garden displays since 1999 — across three shops and thousands of customers. This guide covers everything we've learned: what to buy, what to avoid, and exactly how to get the most out of a small space and a sensible budget.

F2 Is Your Friend

Garden fireworks are category F2, which means they need a minimum safety distance of 8 metres from the firing point to your spectators. That's roughly the length of two parked cars. Most back gardens can manage this comfortably.

F3 fireworks (display category) need 25 metres — that's the full length of a swimming pool. Unless your garden is the size of a football pitch, F3 is off the table. And honestly? Modern F2 fireworks are so good that you're not missing out as much as you'd think.

Our entire garden fireworks collection is F2, so if you're browsing there, everything is garden-safe.

The Number One Mistake: Sky-Puke

What is sky-puke? It's the affectionate trade term for what happens when someone buys twenty cheap little fireworks and sets them all off at once because nothing individually feels big enough. The result is a confused mess of colour going in every direction, over in about 45 seconds, and nobody's impressed — least of all you.

This is the single most common mistake we see with garden displays. People think more fireworks = better display. It doesn't. A handful of properly-sized cakes, fired one at a time with a gap between each, will always look better than a dozen tiny ones going off in a chaotic heap.

Duration vs Wow-Factor

A single firework cake erupting in a fan of colourful stars over a British garden while a family watches from the decking

Here's how we explain it to every customer who walks through our doors. Whatever your budget — £50, £200, £400 — you've got a dial. On one side is duration. On the other is wow-factor.

Crank the wow-factor all the way up and you can blow £400 in 40–60 seconds of absolute carnage. It'll be spectacular — but your audience will feel short-changed. "Was that it?" is not what you want to hear.

Turn the dial the other way and that same £400 can stretch to an hour of small fountains and tiny cakes. But people will get bored. Attention drifts, phones come out, and by the twentieth little firework nobody's watching anymore.

The sweet spot depends on the occasion:

Bonfire Night — aim for 15–25 minutes. Fireworks are the main event, so the display should feel like a proper show with a build, a peak, and a big finish.

New Year's Eve, weddings, birthdays — aim for 5–10 minutes. Fireworks are an exciting addition to the evening, not the whole evening. People love to see them, enjoy the moment, then get back to the party.

Get the balance right and your budget works twice as hard. Get it wrong and you end up with sky-puke — or a spectacular 30 seconds that nobody had time to enjoy.

What to Buy: Our Top Garden Picks

Here are our honest, staff-tested recommendations at different budgets. These aren't just the most expensive things we sell — they're what we'd actually buy for our own gardens.

Best Budget Option: Family Bargain Bag — £39.99

Family Bargain Bag by Galactic Fireworks

Family Bargain Bag

Galactic Fireworks own brand · F2 garden safe · 34 items + sparklers

If you're doing a first garden display or keeping things family-friendly on a budget, this is the one. You get sparklers for the kids, fountains, candles, rockets, and a couple of cakes to finish with. Everything you need for a proper 15-minute back garden display, all F2 safe. It's not going to rattle the windows, but it'll put a grin on everyone's face — and for forty quid, that's a bargain.

View the Family Bargain Bag →

Best Value Pack: The Mob Box — £47.95

The Mob Box by Sky Crafter

The Mob Box

Sky Crafter · F2 garden safe · 6 individual barrages

Quite possibly the best value multipack in the UK right now. Six proper 12-shot cakes for under fifty quid — that's less than eight pounds a firework. Don't let the price fool you. These aren't glorified fountains. You get proper barrages with genuine variety across the six cakes. If you want to stretch your budget as far as it'll go without sacrificing quality, this is the box.

View The Mob Box →

Our Staff Pick: Conqueror Pack — £47.97

Conqueror Pack by Xtreme

Conqueror Pack

Xtreme · F2 garden safe · 3 cakes

Three cakes that genuinely punch above their weight. The team here rates the Conqueror Pack as one of the best F2 packs we've ever stocked — the effects are closer to what you'd expect from F3 display fireworks, but at garden-safe distances. Better than loads of F3 products at twice the price.

Important note: the Conqueror Pack isn't a complete display on its own — it's three multi-shot cakes. Think of it as an incredible base to build from. Add a couple of fountains, some sparklers, and maybe a pack of rockets and you've got a display that punches well above its price. Same goes for the Mob Box — use these packs as your foundation, then add bits around them.

View the Conqueror Pack →

Building Your Display: Mix It Up

Firework cakes and fountains laid out on a garden table ready for a display, with a bucket of sand nearby

A common mistake is thinking you should fire all your fountains, then all your cakes, then all your rockets in neat little blocks. It ends up feeling predictable. Instead, mix your firework types throughout the display and save your biggest piece for the very end.

Here's a rough structure that works well for a 15–20 minute garden display:

Open with a fountain — something like the Gold Conic Spectrum (£7.99) or Funky Frog (£11.99). It signals to everyone that the show has started, and buys you time to get settled at the firing point.

Then start mixing. Fire a cake, then a few rockets, then another cake, maybe a fountain to change the pace, then back to a bigger cake. Keep people guessing. The variety is what makes a display feel professional rather than repetitive.

One word on F2 rockets: don't overrate them. At category F2, garden rockets are going to be smaller and quieter than your multi-shot cakes. They're a nice addition to the mix, but they shouldn't be your grand finale. Until you get into F3 1.3G rockets — which need 25m and aren't suitable for most residential gardens — your cakes will outperform your rockets every time. Save your biggest, best cake for the last firework of the night. That's your closer.

Budget Breakdown

Here's roughly what different budgets will get you for a garden display:

£40 budget: The Family Bargain Bag — everything included, no decisions needed. Perfect for families.

£50 budget: A Mob Box or Conqueror Pack as your base, plus a fountain and sparklers. These packs aren't a complete display on their own, but they're an incredible foundation — add a few bits around them and you've got a seriously good show.

£75–£100 budget: Combine a Conqueror Pack with a Mob Box for nine cakes total. Add a couple of fountains to mix in between, a pack of rockets for variety, and sparklers for the kids. That's a solid 15–20 minute Bonfire Night display that'll rival what some people spend three times as much on.

Quick Garden Display Checklist

Measure your garden — you need at least 8 metres from the firing point to where people will stand.
Stick to F2 fireworks — everything in our garden collection is safe for 8m.
Buy fewer, bigger fireworks — don't fall into the sky-puke trap.
Plan a firing order — mix your types throughout (don't do all fountains then all cakes), and save your biggest cake for last.
Use portfires — never a household lighter. Arm's length, every time.
Check the weather — a tarp or bin bag over your display area keeps fuses dry.
Warn the neighbours — a quick heads-up goes a long way, especially if they have pets.
Bring pets inside — or consider our low-noise fireworks if noise is a concern.

Ready to Build Your Display?

Browse our full range of garden-safe F2 fireworks or visit one of our three shops for hands-on advice.

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