Most anniversary gifts fall into one of two categories: expensive things that look impressive but feel generic (jewelry, weekend getaways), or personal things that feel heartfelt but look cheap (homemade cards, framed photos).
A personalized anniversary webpage sits in a third category: something that feels deeply personal AND looks genuinely beautiful. Here's how it works and why it hits differently.
Why a webpage works as an anniversary gift
Cards get thrown away. Flowers die. A webpage lives at a URL they can revisit on their phone whenever they want — while making dinner, during a hard day, on a flight.
It's also a format that scales with what you put into it. A few sentences and one photo becomes a clean, elegant one-pager. A full love letter plus 5 photos and a Spotify link becomes a full experience — a scrollable celebration of your relationship.
The format is inherently personal in a way most gifts aren't: it can only exist because you created it for them specifically.
What to include
The most memorable anniversary pages aren't the longest — they're the most specific. Instead of 'you make me so happy,' write about the Tuesday in March when they surprised you with takeout from that place you'd been craving.
A good structure: start with what you love about them (not generically — specifically), move into a memory or two that captures something true about your relationship, and end with what you're looking forward to.
Photos matter too. A picture of you both from the first year next to one from today is worth a thousand words. A film strip of your favorite trips does more than any list of places you've been.
How to create one in 5 minutes
With MadeFor, you answer a few short questions: what they mean to you, your favorite memories together, and what you're grateful for. You upload a few photos. You pick a vibe — soft & dreamy, elegant & minimal, bold & colorful.
AI generates a beautiful single-page website from your answers. You preview it, adjust if needed, and publish. You get a link to share.
The page is mobile-first (they'll open it on their phone), and it looks genuinely stunning — not like a template. Add your song via Spotify or YouTube and it'll play when they open it.