Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Bloomber positions itself as an “operating system for modern service-based merchants,” aimed at appointment-based businesses, local storefronts, and professional service teams. Its core idea is not to create yet another platform customers have to remember, but to let booking pages, payment pages, receipts, reminders, and the shop front all run under the operator’s own domain and brand.
Based on the available site content, Bloomber covers modules such as booking, payments, messaging, analytics, storefront, receipts, and reminders, and emphasizes that these features share the same customer record, avoiding the fragmented data that often results from stitching together tools like Squarespace, Calendly, and Stripe. Its white-label capability is the most notable differentiator: customers complete bookings on the merchant’s own domain, while receipts and reminders are also presented under the merchant’s identity. At the team level, it mentions that a Shop Owner can view revenue and employee performance, a Professional gets a portable identity, direct payments, and a portfolio, and a Platform Admin can handle cross-tenant oversight and billing views.
Bloomber does not primarily rely on transaction commissions. Instead, it uses a fixed subscription fee plus a usage-based credit pool for SMS, AI, outreach, and similar features. Online card payments carry no commission when trailing annual GMV is below $1 million; above that threshold, Bloomber charges a 1% fee-share. Terminal payments are always pass-through. Specific subscription plan prices are not disclosed, and there is no clear mention of a free plan or trial. The current page directs users to join a waitlist.
The strengths are strong brand control, clear ownership of customer relationships, and a relatively integrated flow from booking to payment and reminders. Bloomber also promises that domains, customer lists, and booking history can be exported. The downside is that public information remains incomplete: security and compliance certifications, SLA, API, permission details, final pricing, and product maturity are all still unclear. The only third-party integration explicitly mentioned is Stripe.
Bloomber is better suited to service businesses that care about owning their brand and repeat-customer assets, such as beauty, care services, studios, and professional appointment-based services. Access from China is unknown. Since payments depend on Stripe, it may not be friendly to Chinese entities, RMB settlement, or local payment methods. If your main market is China, you should evaluate WeChat ecosystem support, Alipay, SMS compliance, and local storefront SaaS alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on bloomber.co official site.
bloomber.co is an Unknown SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach bloomber.co directly.