Free get well bouquet

Send Get Well Flowers Online

A warm bouquet of sunflowers, daisies and soft tulips with a short "thinking of you" note, sent in a minute to anyone recovering. No hospital delivery hassle, no scent in a small room, no fee. Customize the bouquet below and share via WhatsApp or text.

🌼 Free · Instant · Hospital-friendly

No hospital restrictions No allergens Sends via text in seconds They can revisit anytime

Build the get well bouquet

We started one with warm sunflowers and daisies. Soften the colors, swap flowers, rewrite the note.

0 / 12 stems
Occasion
Style
Pick flowers

Color
Write a note
Drop it

Why send virtual get well flowers?

Real flowers can be tricky during a hospital stay or a long recovery. A digital bouquet arrives without complications.

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Hospital-friendly

Many wards restrict real flowers because of pollen, scent and hygiene rules. A virtual bouquet works anywhere a phone does.

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No interruption

No doorbell during a nap, no delivery window to coordinate. They open it when they're ready.

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Nothing to manage

No vase to find, no water to change, nothing to throw out later. Just color on a screen when they need it.

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Revisit on bad days

Recovery isn't linear. The bouquet stays in their chat so they can pull it up on a quiet afternoon weeks later.

Best flowers for a get well bouquet

Warm, gentle, low-key. Each carries a meaning that fits recovery. Tap any to read the full meaning guide.

Message ideas

Short and low-pressure beats long and well-meaning. Tap "Use this" to drop one into the builder.

Sending some color to your day. Rest hard. No need to reply. 🌼
Heard you've been having a rough run. Hoping every day from here feels a little lighter.
Thinking of you. The flowers don't wilt and the door doesn't ring. Open whenever.

How it works

Four steps, about a minute total.

Pick flowers

The bouquet starts with warm yellows and soft pinks. Swap any you like.

Write a note

To, From, and a short message. One sentence is plenty.

Generate the link

One click. The whole bouquet is encoded into a single URL.

Share it

Text, WhatsApp, email. They tap when they're ready and the bouquet opens.

Frequently asked

Which flowers say get well?

Sunflowers (warmth and loyalty), daisies (cheer and innocence), yellow tulips (sunshine), pink carnations (gentle affection) and cherry blossoms (gentle renewal). Skip strong scents like lilies if they're in a hospital. Yellow and soft pink read as the warmest "feel better" palette.

Are virtual flowers okay when someone is sick?

They're often better. No delivery person ringing the bell during a nap, no vase to deal with, no scent in a small room. They can open it when they're ready and revisit it whenever they need a smile.

What should I write to someone who is sick?

Keep it short and free of pressure. Avoid "let me know if you need anything," which puts the work on them. Instead try: "Thinking of you. No need to reply." Or: "Sending some color to your day. Rest up."

Should I avoid sending flowers if they're in a hospital?

For real flowers, yes, many hospitals restrict deliveries on certain wards (especially ICU and oncology) because of pollen, scent and infection control. Virtual flowers sidestep all of that. The bouquet arrives on their phone, no risk of allergens or hygiene concerns.

Can I send this anonymously?

You can leave the From field blank. The bouquet still shows the message and the flowers. Most people sign theirs, but it's optional.

How long can they keep the bouquet?

Forever. The share link doesn't expire, so they can open it again on a tougher day during recovery. The bouquet stays in their chat history indefinitely.

Send something soft.

A minute of your time. A small lift on a long day.

Build the bouquet ↑