Send Private Encrypted Messages to Your Partner
Write a message only your partner can read. Encrypt it with a shared password and send the link — no app, no account, just privacy.
Some messages are meant for one person only. A love note. A surprise plan. A private conversation that should not live in plaintext on a messaging server forever. Even "private" messages in apps like iMessage, WhatsApp, or Instagram are stored on servers, backed up to the cloud, and potentially accessible to anyone with access to the device.
This tool lets you write a message, encrypt it with a password only you and your partner know, and turn it into a link. When they open the link and enter the password, they see the message. No app. No account. No trace on any server.
Features
Truly Private
Your message is encrypted with AES-256-GCM before it leaves your browser. No server, no app, no company ever sees the plaintext.
Romantic & Fun
Perfect for surprise birthday plans, anniversary messages, love notes, or any conversation meant for two eyes only.
Send as a Link
The encrypted message becomes a URL you can text, email, or even write on a card with a QR code.
How It Works
Type the private message you want to send — a love note, a surprise plan, or something just between the two of you.
Use a password you both know — a private joke, a date, a pet's name — or agree on one beforehand.
Click encrypt to turn your message into a scrambled URL that only the password can unlock.
Text the link to your partner. They open it, type the password, and read your message.
Why Encrypt Messages to Your Partner?
Not every private message needs military-grade encryption. But there are moments when you genuinely want a message to be for one person only — not stored in a chat history that a child could scroll through, not backed up to iCloud where a shared family account could expose it, not sitting in a messaging app that could be opened if a phone is left unlocked.
Encrypted messages are also a fun, thoughtful gesture. Send a birthday surprise plan that cannot be accidentally seen in a notification preview. Write a love note that requires a shared secret to unlock. Create a scavenger hunt where each clue is encrypted with a different password.
The encryption is real — AES-256-GCM, the same standard used by banks — but the use case can be as lighthearted or serious as the moment calls for.
Frequently Asked Questions
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