Free sympathy bouquet
Send Sympathy Flowers Online
A quiet, dignified virtual bouquet (white lilies, peonies, soft pastels) with a short personal note. The right gesture when distance or grief makes flowers hard to deliver in person. No account, no fee, sent in seconds.
Build the sympathy bouquet
We started one for you with white lilies and peonies. Swap, soften, or rewrite the note.
Why send virtual sympathy flowers?
A real arrangement isn't always possible. A short, sincere gesture sent today often matters more than a card that arrives a week later.
Quiet & immediate
The moment you hear the news, you can reach out. No florist hunt, no service hours, no awkward delay.
No awkward delivery window
You're not asking a grieving family to be home for a delivery, or to manage a vase they didn't ask for. Just a quiet message.
Works across distance
Whether they're an ocean away or three towns over, the bouquet arrives in their hand within seconds.
Stays with them
The link doesn't expire. They can return to it on a hard day, a quiet reminder you were there.
Best flowers for sympathy
White and pale flowers traditionally carry condolence. Each one says something slightly different.
White Lily
Purity, restored innocence
White Peony
Compassion, healing
Cherry Blossom
The impermanence of life
White Carnation
Remembrance, pure love
White Rose
Honor, reverence
What to write
Short and sincere beats long and searching. Tap "Use this" to drop one into the builder.
How it works
Four steps, under a minute.
Pick flowers
The bouquet is started with white lilies, peonies, and soft pastels. Adjust any you like.
Write a note
To, From, and a short message. One sentence is enough.
Generate the link
One click. The whole bouquet is encoded into a single URL.
Share it quietly
Message, email, or text. They tap once and the bouquet opens.
Frequently asked
Are sympathy flowers appropriate to send digitally?
Yes. A virtual bouquet reads as a quiet, modern condolence, especially when distance or timing makes a real arrangement difficult. The gesture is the message: you stopped, you thought of them, you reached out.
Which flowers are right for a sympathy message?
White lilies (purity and restored innocence), white peonies (compassion), white carnations (remembrance), white roses (honor), and cherry blossom (the impermanence of life). They read as dignified, not festive, which is why we pre-fill them above.
Is it okay if I can't attend the service in person?
Yes. A short, sincere message sent the day you hear the news is often more meaningful than a delayed card. The recipient knows you were thinking of them in the moment.
What if I don't know what to write?
Keep it short. "Thinking of you" or "I'm so sorry for your loss" is enough. Avoid trying to explain or fix anything. Presence is what matters. We have a few starter messages above.
Will the recipient see this as informal?
No. The card is quiet: white and pale flowers, no emoji clutter, just your message. Many people find a thoughtful link easier to receive in grief than a phone call or a public post.
How long do they have access to the bouquet?
Forever. The link doesn't expire, so they can return to it any time they need to. Some people revisit on the anniversary; some keep it pinned in a chat.
Other occasions: Birthday · Mother's Day · Thank you · Flower meanings: Lily · Rose · Peony · Sympathy etiquette guide