Free birthday bouquet · for a teacher

Send Birthday Flowers For A Teacher

A grateful bouquet in sunny yellows with one pink blossom for warmth. Sunflowers, daisies, tulips. The kind of thank-you that doesn't break the no-gifts-over-$10 rule or wilt in the classroom by Friday. Build it in a minute, email it or print the card.

🌻 Free · Grateful · Never wilts

Free forever No account Sends via email / WhatsApp / print Works in any country

Build their birthday bouquet

We started one in grateful yellows. Swap any flower, change the colors, write a thank-you note.

0 / 12 stems
Occasion
Style
Pick flowers

Color
Write a note
Drop it

Why send virtual birthday flowers to a teacher?

Teachers get more candles and store-bought mugs than they can use. This is different. It's specific, it's free, and it doesn't take up classroom space.

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No school rules to break

Most schools cap teacher gifts at $10–25. A virtual bouquet sidesteps the rule entirely. No price tag means no awkward conversation with the school office.

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Works on a school email

Send the link to their school address. It opens like any other email link. No app to install, no account to make.

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Print it as a card

If your kid wants to hand them something, the Print button turns the bouquet into a printable card. Sign it, fold it, put it in their bag.

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Doesn't take up classroom space

A real bouquet has to go somewhere. This one stays on their phone. They can revisit it during prep periods or after the school year ends.

Best flowers for a teacher's birthday

Yellow does heavy lifting here. In flower language, yellow tones mean friendship, joy, and gratitude — all the things you'd want to tell a teacher.

Message ideas for a teacher

Grateful, specific, not too long. The best teacher notes reference one real thing. Tap to drop one in.

Happy birthday, [Name]. Thank you for everything you do for our kids. Hope today is calm and slow. 🌻
Wishing you a wonderful birthday. You make this classroom feel safe and we're so lucky to have you. From Mrs. Garcia's 4th Grade 💛
Happy birthday from one of your old students! I still think about [specific thing] all these years later. Thank you for being a great teacher. 🌼

How it works

Four steps, about a minute total.

Pick flowers

Tap a flower to add it. We started you with a grateful yellow set. Swap any of them.

Write a note

Their name, who it's from, a short thank-you message. Up to 240 characters.

Generate the link

One click. The whole bouquet encodes into a single URL.

Email it or print it

Send to their school email, or print the bouquet as a card and have your kid bring it in.

Frequently asked

What if school's already out for summer?

Send by email. If you have your teacher's school email, that still works through the holidays. If you only had their classroom address, you can also print the bouquet as a card using the Print button and mail it. The link itself doesn't expire.

Can I send this to a teacher I had years ago?

Yes, and they will love it. A short note that says "You were my fifth-grade teacher and I still remember [specific thing]" lands harder than any expensive gift. Old teachers rarely get thanked after the year ends. This is one way to do it.

Is this an appropriate gift from a parent vs. a student?

Both work. A student's bouquet should be a little simpler, with a clearer thank-you message. A parent's can be slightly more formal, signed with the student's name (e.g., "Happy birthday from Maya and her mom."). The flowers themselves stay the same.

Can I make one from the whole class?

Yes. Build one bouquet, put "Mrs. Garcia's 4th Grade" in the From field, and email the link to your teacher. Or print the card and have all the kids sign it. One bouquet, every student.

What if I don't know my teacher's birthday until that morning?

Build and send it from your phone before the bell. Sixty seconds. Email the link to their school address. They'll see it during their morning prep. No store run required.

Ready to send their bouquet?

Sixty seconds. They'll remember it.

Build their bouquet ↑