Birth Flower Calculator

Finds the traditional birth flower for a birth month, with its symbolic meaning.

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How this calculator works

What it does: Finds the traditional birth flower for a birth month, with its symbolic meaning.

You enter: Birth Date (or provide month), Birth Month 1-12 (optional).

Method: A card, symbol or reading is selected using the method of the tradition (deterministic when a date or seed is supplied).

Result: Press Calculate above to see your full result; the detailed interpretation is explained below.

ⓘ For entertainment only. Not a prediction, reflects traditional belief, not scientific fact.

Every month has its own birth flower, and this calculator finds yours in a moment. Enter your birth date or month to see the flower or flowers tied to that month, along with the meaning each has carried in tradition. It is a gentle, charming way to discover the bloom that belongs to your time of birth.

The Flowers of the Year

Birth flowers come from European and especially Victorian custom, when flowers were given carefully chosen meanings and used to send quiet messages. January is linked with the carnation and snowdrop, June with the rose and honeysuckle, and October with the marigold and cosmos. Several months carry two flowers, and the calculator lists them together with their shared symbolism.

What Birth Flowers Mean

In the language of flowers each bloom stands for a quality or sentiment. The daffodil of March speaks of new beginnings and rebirth, the rose of June of love and devotion, and the chrysanthemum of November of loyalty and honesty. These meanings are part of a long cultural tradition rather than anything measurable, which is exactly what makes them a warm, personal touch.

Using Your Birth Flower

Knowing a birth flower adds meaning to bouquets, cards and gifts, letting you match a bloom to the person and the month. It is also a small piece of self-knowledge to enjoy, a flower that quietly represents your birth season. As with all such customs, read the meaning as tradition and sentiment rather than fact.

Where the Tradition Comes From

The idea of a flower for every month grew out of floriography, the language of flowers that flourished in Victorian Britain and France. Writers of the 1800s, drawing on older almanacs and folklore, printed lists that paired each month with a bloom and gave that bloom a settled meaning, so a bouquet could carry a message that words sometimes could not. The pairings you see today come down from those books, which is part of why they lean toward flowers that thrive in the northern seasons.

A Glance Across the Year

Spring leans on early bloomers, so February takes the violet and primrose, March the daffodil, and April the daisy and sweet pea. Summer turns to fuller flowers, with the rose and honeysuckle for June and the larkspur and water lily for July. Autumn and winter reach for hardier blooms, the marigold and cosmos in October, the chrysanthemum in November, and the narcissus and holly in December. Where a month carries two flowers, both show up in your result with their meanings side by side.

Why Lists Sometimes Disagree

You might find a different flower for your month elsewhere, and that's normal. Older almanac lists, modern florist lists and regional customs each made their own choices, so a single month can have more than one accepted flower depending on the tradition you follow. The calculator gives the most widely recognised pairings, and any extras are simply more blooms you can claim for your season.

Questions People Ask About Birth Flowers

What is a birth flower?

A birth flower is the bloom traditionally associated with your birth month. Many months have two. Enter your month and the calculator shows the flower or flowers and their symbolic meaning.

Where do birth flowers come from?

The custom comes mainly from European and Victorian tradition, when flowers were given specific meanings. The pairings of months to flowers have been passed down through that floral language.

Do birth flowers have a fixed meaning?

The meanings are cultural and symbolic rather than scientific. They come from the old language of flowers and are best enjoyed as a charming tradition to bring to gifts and cards.

This tool is for entertainment and reflection only and has no scientific basis.

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