Gabriel Uribe Tools • Updated July 5, 2026

DigiBouquet Alternatives: 6 Websites Like DigiBouquet to Send a Digital Bouquet (Free)

DigiBouquet Alternatives: 6 Websites Like DigiBouquet to Send a Digital Bouquet (Free)
The best DigiBouquet alternative is Attached's free virtual flowers maker — you design a bouquet, add a private note, and send it by link, text, email, or WhatsApp in under 3 minutes, with no signup and no app. Other websites like DigiBouquet include Canva (DIY designs), Paperless Post (digital cards), and 800 Florals (classic flower e-cards). Here's how they compare.

Someone sent you a DigiBouquet, or you saw one on TikTok, and now you want to send your own — but maybe you want more flower styles, a different look, other languages, or the site was busy. Whatever brought you here, you have options.

Here are 6 websites like DigiBouquet for sending someone flowers digitally, starting with the one we (obviously, but honestly) think does it best.

1. Attached's Virtual Flowers Maker — best overall alternative

Attached's free bouquet maker is built around the same simple idea: design a bouquet, write a note, send a link.

What you get:

  • Free, no signup, no app. Open the page, build, send. Under 3 minutes.
  • A real message, kept private. Your note stays between you and your recipient.
  • Send it anywhere. Share by link, text, email, or WhatsApp — it opens in any browser on any phone or computer.
  • A shared garden. Every bouquet sent gets planted in a garden you can wander, while the notes stay private.
  • Occasions and languages. Birthday, anniversary, get well, Mother's Day and more — plus Spanish, German, Hindi, and Chinese versions if your person doesn't read English.

If you want the closest experience to DigiBouquet with a few more ways to make it personal, start your bouquet here.

2. DigiBouquet — the original

Credit where it's due: DigiBouquet made digital bouquets a thing. It's a free tool by an indie maker where you build a bouquet in color or black-and-white and can view a public garden of flowers.

It's charming and simple. The main reasons people look elsewhere: you want a different visual style, more sending options, or the site is slow during viral spikes. If you just want the original experience, it's still there.

3. Canva — DIY bouquet graphics

If you'd rather design something fully custom, Canva's free tier has flower illustrations and card templates you can arrange into your own bouquet image, then download and text it.

The trade-off: it's a static image, not an interactive bouquet your person "opens," and it takes longer than 3 minutes. Good for craft-y people; overkill for a quick gesture.

4. Paperless Post — polished digital cards

Paperless Post is the dressed-up option: elegant digital cards, including floral designs, delivered by email or link. It's the right pick for formal occasions — think sympathy notes or thank-yous to someone who appreciates stationery.

Basic cards are free, but the more polished designs use their paid credit system, and it's a card rather than a bouquet you build flower by flower.

5. 800 Florals — classic flower e-cards

800 Florals is a traditional florist that offers free virtual flower e-cards: pick a flower photo, add a message, send by email. It's the most old-school option on this list — real flower photography instead of illustrated bouquets.

No building involved, so it's less personal, but it's quick and free.

6. Real flowers — when digital isn't enough

Sometimes the answer is actual flowers. If it's a big moment and your person is reachable by delivery, a local florist or a delivery service beats any link.

A move we love: send a virtual bouquet now — the moment you think of them — and let the real ones follow. The digital bouquet is the "I thought of you at 2pm on a Tuesday" gesture; the physical one is the occasion.

Attached vs. DigiBouquet at a glance

AttachedDigiBouquet
PriceFreeFree
Signup requiredNoNo
Build your own bouquetYesYes
Private noteYesYes
Share by link / text / WhatsAppYesLink
Shared gardenYesYes
Occasion versionsYes (birthday, anniversary, get well…)No
LanguagesEnglish, Spanish, German, Hindi, ChineseEnglish

The point of all of this

Whichever site you pick, the bouquet is just the wrapper. The note is the gift. Say the specific thing — what they did, what you remembered, why they crossed your mind today. That's the part they'll screenshot.

Ready when you are: send your virtual flowers free.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best free DigiBouquet alternative?

Attached's virtual flowers maker is the closest free alternative: you build a digital bouquet, write a personal note, and share it as a private link by text, email, or WhatsApp. There's no signup, no app download, and it works in any browser.

Are there other websites like DigiBouquet?

Yes. Besides Attached's bouquet maker, you can make DIY bouquet graphics in Canva, send digital flower cards through Paperless Post, or use a florist's free e-card option like 800 Florals. Each works a little differently — some are cards rather than interactive bouquets.

Can I send a digital bouquet by WhatsApp?

Yes. With Attached's bouquet maker, you get a private link after you finish your bouquet, and you can share that link directly in WhatsApp, iMessage, email, or any messaging app. It opens in the browser on any phone.

Is DigiBouquet free?

Yes, DigiBouquet is free to use. Most of the alternatives on this list, including Attached's virtual flowers maker, are also free — so you can try a couple and pick the style you like best.

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