Short answer. The best florist subscription platforms for UK independents in 2026 fall into three groups. Paid-subscription / membership software: PerkClub is the strongest pick if your goal is owned, branded recurring revenue — a weekly seasonal bouquet membership under your shop's name, typically around £90/month. All-in-one loyalty platforms: Embargo bundles loyalty, CRM, email and order-ahead for florists that want one supplier. Digital stamp cards and points apps: Magic Stamp and Loopy Loyalty digitise stamp cards; Loyverse and Square Loyalty add points on top of a POS; RWRD and Paace are consumer discovery apps that drive footfall. Pick a subscription platform for recurring revenue, a loyalty app for engagement, and a discovery app for reach — most florists run two of these together.
What "florist subscription platform" actually means
The phrase gets used loosely, so it's worth being precise before comparing tools. Three different categories of software all get filed under "florist loyalty" — and they solve genuinely different problems.
A subscription platform (also called membership software) sells a recurring paid product: the customer pays a fixed monthly fee — say £90 — for an ongoing perk like a weekly seasonal bouquet. Revenue is booked before the customer walks in, and the entitlement repeats every week rather than once a month. The job of the software is recurring billing, branded sign-up and redemption.
A loyalty app rewards behaviour after it happens. A digital stamp card gives a free bunch after nine paid ones; a points programme accrues points per pound spent. The customer commits nothing up front. The job of the software is to lift repeat-visit frequency.
A discovery app is really a marketing channel. It's a consumer-facing app that puts your shop in front of new people — on a map, or inside a rewards network — in exchange for a discount or a fee.
None of these is "best" in the abstract. The right question is which problem you're trying to solve: predictable cashflow and steadier stem-buying (subscription), more frequent visits from existing customers (loyalty app), or new footfall (discovery app). This roundup covers the eight platforms UK independent florists most often shortlist across all three categories. Most of these tools were built for hospitality and retail broadly, but the mechanics apply cleanly to a flower shop.
At a glance: the eight platforms compared
| Platform | Category | What it actually is | Best for | Brand ownership |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PerkClub | Subscription / membership | White-label paid monthly membership, billed by Stripe | Owned, branded recurring revenue | Your brand |
| Embargo | All-in-one loyalty | Loyalty, CRM, email marketing and order-ahead in one stack | Florists wanting one supplier for everything | Co-branded |
| Magic Stamp | Digital stamp card | Digital stamp card with a physical Bluetooth stamper | The simplest possible loyalty programme | Your brand |
| Loopy Loyalty | Digital stamp card | Wallet-pass digital stamp card | Digitising paper stamp cards, nothing more | Your brand |
| Loyverse | POS + points loyalty | Free POS with a bundled points-per-pound loyalty add-on | A free till plus basic points together | Loyverse's app |
| Square Loyalty | POS add-on points loyalty | Points add-on for businesses already on Square POS | Existing Square users wanting simple points | Square's app |
| RWRD | Consumer discovery app | Map-based discovery app with stamps and a premium tier | New customer discovery, especially in London | RWRD's brand |
| Paace | Consumer discovery app | Steps-for-rewards app with 400+ partner venues | Off-peak London footfall via partnership | Paace's brand |
Read the table by category, not by row. The subscription platform and the discovery apps aren't really competing — they sit at opposite ends of the funnel. The honest framing throughout this guide is "which problem are you solving", not "which platform wins".
Why subscriptions matter for an independent florist in 2026
Before the platform-by-platform breakdown, it's worth being clear on why the subscription category has grown so quickly — and why it fits a flower shop especially well.
A florist's trading year is dominated by spikes. Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, Christmas and wedding season carry a disproportionate share of annual revenue, and the weeks between them can be brutally quiet. Fresh stock is also perishable: flowers ordered on a Wednesday that don't sell by Sunday are written off. That combination — lumpy demand and a wasting product — is exactly the problem a subscription is built to soften.
The loyalty psychology is well established across consumer-facing trades: 74% of restaurant leaders now run a loyalty programme of some kind (Square, Future of Commerce 2025), and the same instinct applies to florists, where the buying decision is deliberate and emotionally loaded. The structural difference between a stamp card and a subscription is timing — one rewards a visit that already happened, the other books revenue before the visit and tells you how many stems to order.
A subscription at £90/month with 80 active members is £7,200 of monthly recurring revenue, or £86,400 a year — and because the entitlement is a bouquet per week, that book also tells you roughly how much stock to buy every Monday. That predictability is why the subscription category exists as its own thing, and why this roundup treats it separately from loyalty apps. Waste reduction is part of the return too: with a known order book, less of your weekly buy ends up in the compost (WRAP's Hospitality and Food Service waste guidance covers the broader perishable-stock case).
Paid-subscription and membership platforms
PerkClub
What it is. A UK-focused, white-label subscription and membership platform built for independent hospitality and personal services — including florists. PerkClub gives a shop its own branded monthly membership — a "Club" with the florist's name on it — billed through Stripe in GBP. There is no POS integration to negotiate, and customers carry a wallet pass in Apple or Google Wallet rather than downloading a separate app. The platform is product-agnostic: you define the benefit — a weekly seasonal bouquet, say — and PerkClub handles the membership, billing and redemption.
Who it suits. Florists whose priority is owned, predictable recurring revenue and steadier stock planning. The natural offer is a weekly seasonal bouquet membership at roughly £90/month — note the entitlement is one bouquet per week, so the customer collects four to five times a month. PerkClub is the platform in this roundup whose entire purpose is converting a base of regulars into booked monthly cashflow under your own brand — and the one best positioned for the paid-subscription-membership use case. If you've got customers who already buy flowers most weeks, this turns that habit into a contract.
Honest watch-outs. PerkClub is intentionally narrow. It does not do email marketing in the depth Embargo does, it does not include a CRM or order-ahead, and it is not a discovery channel — it will not bring you new customers the way RWRD or Paace can. It monetises the regulars you already have. Florists who need marketing automation or new footfall should pair it with another tool. It also does not manage your stem ordering — it tells you your committed weekly demand, but the buying decision is still yours.
Pricing. A flat monthly platform fee plus standard Stripe processing on member billing — the fee doesn't scale with member count. See the PerkClub pricing page for current figures.
All-in-one loyalty platforms
Embargo
What it is. A mature UK hospitality and retail platform combining digital loyalty, a CRM, email marketing, order-ahead and gift cards in a single stack, used by 2,500+ venues with strong roots in London independents.
Who it suits. Florists — particularly small groups of 2–10 sites — that want one supplier handling loyalty, customer database, email campaigns and order-ahead under a single login. Embargo's CRM is genuinely useful, and for a florist the order-ahead module has real value: customers can reserve a bouquet for collection rather than risk the shelf being bare. Its email deliverability is solid, which matters when you're prompting customers ahead of Mother's Day or a birthday. If vendor consolidation is itself a goal, it's the most credible all-in-one in the UK indie space.
Honest watch-outs. Embargo is loyalty-first — points, stamps and rewards are the headline mechanics. A subscription module exists but isn't the centre of gravity, so florists whose specific goal is a recurring weekly-bouquet membership will find more depth in a subscription-first platform. Tiered SaaS pricing also means a single-site florist can land on a plan priced for a chain. For a full breakdown, see PerkClub vs Embargo.
Digital stamp card and points apps
Magic Stamp
What it is. A digital stamp card paired with a physical Bluetooth stamper that customers tap their phone against. Most businesses run it through a wallet pass, so customers don't download anything new. Published pricing is £39–£99/month.
Who it suits. Florists that want the simplest possible move from paper stamp cards to a digital programme — "buy nine bunches, get the tenth free", run cleanly. Setup takes hours, staff training takes about ten minutes, and the hardware is genuinely satisfying to use, which matters for staff adoption.
Honest watch-outs. It is a stamp card. It rewards visits that already happened and does not book revenue in advance — which means it does nothing for stock planning or the quiet weeks between Valentine's and Mother's Day. If your problem is guaranteed monthly cashflow, this is the wrong tool — see PerkClub vs Magic Stamp.
Loopy Loyalty
What it is. One of the better-known digital stamp card platforms in the global wallet-pass market. Customers receive a branded pass in Apple or Google Wallet; staff stamp it by scanning a QR code or entering a PIN, and a free reward unlocks at the configured threshold. Tiers typically run from around £15–£25/month up to £50–£100/month for multi-location and analytics.
Who it suits. Florists whose actual ask is "I want to stop printing paper stamp cards" and nothing more. It's clean, well-designed and sensibly priced for that single job.
Honest watch-outs. Same as any stamp card — it's a promise of a future discount, not a contract. The customer commits nothing, so it doesn't change cashflow timing or tell you how much stock to buy. For the full comparison, see PerkClub vs Loopy Loyalty.
Loyverse
What it is. A free point-of-sale system with a built-in points-per-pound loyalty add-on, used by small retailers and independent shops globally. The core POS is free; paid add-ons for inventory, staff management and analytics typically sit in the £20–£40/month band.
Who it suits. Florists that need a free till and a basic points programme bundled together. If "I need a POS that won't bankrupt me" is the problem, Loyverse is a genuinely cheap, credible answer — and its inventory features can help track perishable stock.
Honest watch-outs. The loyalty mechanic is retroactive points, and the customer identifies themselves through Loyverse's generic app or a phone number — the branding is Loyverse's, not yours. Because loyalty is bundled into the till, replacing one means replacing the other. See PerkClub vs Loyverse.
Square Loyalty
What it is. A points-based loyalty add-on available only to businesses already running Square POS. Customers identify themselves at checkout, usually by phone number, and points accrue automatically on each sale. UK pricing typically starts in the £40–£60/month per-location band.
Who it suits. Florists already committed to the Square ecosystem that want a minimum-effort, one-click points programme sitting in the same dashboard as their sales reports. For a single-site Square user with modest ambitions, that's a genuine win.
Honest watch-outs. It only works inside Square — leave Square POS and you lose the loyalty programme and its data with it. Points also expire, which customers notice. It's a retroactive points mechanic, not a recurring-revenue tool. See PerkClub vs Square Loyalty.
Consumer discovery apps
RWRD
What it is. A consumer-facing discovery app — primarily London-focused — where customers browse a map of independent venues, collect stamps and unlock free rewards. RWRD+ is a paid premium tier for customers.
Who it suits. Florists whose problem is acquisition rather than retention, especially newer shops in dense urban markets. RWRD genuinely brings in customers a florist would not otherwise have reached, and its revenue-share model keeps the effective acquisition cost low.
Honest watch-outs. The customer relationship sits with RWRD — they downloaded RWRD's app, not yours, and they'll see other shops on the map. It's a discovery channel, not a tool for owning your customer relationship or planning your weekly buy. See PerkClub vs RWRD.
Paace
What it is. A consumer app where users earn points for walking and spend them as discounts at 400+ partner venues, mostly in London. It's effectively partnership marketing in the shape of a wellness app.
Who it suits. London florists with quiet midweek windows to fill. Paace is a low-friction, low-cost way to pull footfall into those windows — and a small discount on a midweek bunch is cheap when the alternative is the stem ending up in the bin.
Honest watch-outs. It is a marketing channel, not a loyalty programme for your customers — the customer belongs to Paace and the relationship is built on the discount. Outside London, partner density is thin. See PerkClub vs Paace.
How to choose the right platform
The platform question is really a strategy question. Work through it in this order.
1. Name your single biggest problem. Be honest about whether it's cashflow, engagement or footfall. Each maps to a different category.
- Predictable monthly cashflow and steadier stock planning under your own brand → a subscription platform. PerkClub is built specifically for this.
- Lifting visit frequency among existing customers → a digital stamp card or points app — Magic Stamp or Loopy Loyalty if you want simple stamps; Loyverse or Square Loyalty if you want points tied to your till.
- New customers walking in for the first time → a discovery app — RWRD or Paace, especially in London.
- One supplier doing loyalty, CRM, email and order-ahead together → an all-in-one — Embargo.
2. Decide who should own the customer. White-label tools (PerkClub, Magic Stamp, Loopy Loyalty) put your brand on the membership — "The [Your Shop] Bloom Club" beats "the flower programme on the RWRD app". Marketplace apps (RWRD, Paace) deliberately build their own consumer brand — a reasonable model, but the customer is theirs, not yours.
3. Check the POS integration burden. POS-agnostic platforms launch in days. Anything tied to a specific till takes longer and breaks when you change card readers. PerkClub, Magic Stamp and Loopy Loyalty work alongside any POS; Square Loyalty and Loyverse are tied to their own tills.
4. Match the pricing model to your scale. Flat fees favour growth (the 100th member costs the same as the 20th). Per-location or tiered SaaS pricing can punish a single-site florist. Revenue-share marketplace models depend heavily on how you set redemption rules.
5. Expect to run two. Most independent florists end up running a subscription platform for owned recurring revenue plus one discovery or loyalty tool for reach or engagement. The two categories don't conflict — they target different cohorts at different points in the funnel.
If your priority is the paid-subscription-membership model — booking revenue before customers walk in, smoothing the quiet weeks between the big calendar dates, and doing it under your own brand — that's exactly the job PerkClub was built for. The deeper case for the model is in why memberships beat loyalty schemes, the florist-specific detail is on the PerkClub for florists page, and current figures are on the PerkClub pricing page.
Bottom line
There is no single "best florist subscription platform" — there are three categories solving three problems. For owned, branded recurring revenue and the predictability that comes with a known weekly order book, PerkClub is the subscription platform built for the job. Embargo is the all-in-one for florists that want one supplier. Magic Stamp and Loopy Loyalty digitise stamp cards; Loyverse and Square Loyalty bolt points onto a POS; RWRD and Paace bring discovery and footfall. Pick the category that matches your biggest problem first, then the platform within it — and if you'd like to talk through which combination fits your shop, the PerkClub team is happy to walk through the numbers.



