FlowMapp — when it makes sense.
Worth it if you deliver at least 2 UX planning deliverables per month to clients.
You do UX consulting and deliver sitemaps/user flows to clients. You plan the architecture of sites or apps before designing
You don't have a UX planning phase in your work. You do everything in Figma or FigJam — no need for an extra tool
Niche tool — doesn't replace Figma for visual design
FlowMapp Summary
In short- Category
- productivity tool.
- Price from
- 14€/mo (Pro).
- Best for
- freelancers and solopreneurs.
- Avoid if
- You don't have a UX planning phase in your work; You do everything in Figma or FigJam — no need for an extra tool.
- ToolTrim verdict
- Worth it if you deliver at least 2 UX planning deliverables per month to clients.
Who is FlowMapp for?
Solo / Freelance
Highly recommended
Team
Highly recommended
FlowMapp, strengths and limitations.
What it does well
- Interface dedicated to UX planning — no need to adapt Figma or Miro
- Sitemaps, user flows and wireframes in one tool
- Perfect for delivering structured deliverables to clients
- Real-time collaboration included on Pro
- Reasonable price for a well-executed niche tool
Where it falls short
- Niche tool — doesn't replace Figma for visual design
- Less known than Miro or FigJam for UX workshops
- Wireframe features more basic than Figma
- Can feel redundant if you already have Miro or Whimsical
What FlowMapp covers.
What is FlowMapp used for?
Our take on FlowMapp.
FlowMapp is a web tool dedicated to the UX planning phase: creating sitemaps, tracing user flows, sketching wireframes and organizing the architecture of a site or app. All in a visual interface without needing Figma or Miro for these upstream steps.
The Pro plan at $15/month (≈€13.80) unlocks 15 active projects, unlimited pages and unlimited editors. In practice: ideal for a freelance UX designer delivering planning deliverables to clients before moving to design.
Difference from Figma: FlowMapp specializes in navigation structure and logic — not visual design. It complements Figma rather than replacing it.