Your client won't make a Figma account. They don't need to.
Export the frame, share one link. Your client clicks the exact spot they mean and leaves a note — pinned to that element, not buried in an email. No Figma account, no extension, nothing to install.
The feedback you're getting today
Scattered across chat — every note a guess at which version, which element.
Every message here is a comment that belonged on the artifact. In Drafty they tap the exact spot and the note pins there — threaded, on one link that's always the current version. No “which one,” no screenshots, no “FINAL.html.”
How it works
Export the frame, share one link
Export your Figma frame as an image or PDF and drop it into Drafty. It becomes a review link anyone can open in a browser — no Figma account, no plugin, no setup on their end.
They point at the exact spot
Your client clicks the element they mean — the headline, the button, the nav — and pins a note right there. No red circles on screenshots. No 'the bit near the top.'
You fix it, they see the update on the same link
Push a revised version to the same URL. Claude reads the anchored comments and can apply the changes directly. The thread stays alive — resolved or open, version by version.
Why people switch
- Client is sent to Figma's editor instead of a clean review view
- 'Can you change the bit near the top?' — vague email feedback
- Feedback scattered across email, iMessage, and a Loom
- Standalone review link with no Figma UI — They see the design, not a toolbar — and leave notes without onboarding
- Element-anchored comments on the export — Each note is pinned to the exact frame element, not paraphrased in a thread
- One threaded review board per deliverable — Every round of notes lives on the same link — nothing lost between versions
Who it's for
Export the Figma frame, share the Drafty link. The client comments on the exact button — not a screenshot with a red circle pasted into an email.
Send the deck or wireframe as a review link. The stakeholder annotates the slide they mean. You resolve each note and push the updated version on the same URL.
Drop your v0 or Figma export in a thread before the build starts. Testers annotate what's unclear — without signing up for anything.
Questions
- Can clients leave feedback on a Figma design without a Figma account?
- Not natively — Figma requires an account to comment. The workaround is to export the frame and share it through a tool that allows guest commenting. Drafty lets them click the exact spot and leave a note with no account.
- How do I share a Figma design for client review?
- Export the frame (PNG, PDF, or image) and drop it into Drafty. Share the link — your client opens it in any browser, taps the element they mean, and types a note. No account, no Figma knowledge needed.
- What happens when a client gets sent to Figma's editor by mistake?
- Figma's share link opens the full editor by default on the free plan, which exposes all layers and confuses non-designers. Exporting first and sharing via a review tool sidesteps this entirely.
- How do I collect feedback on a Figma prototype without the client signing up?
- Export the frames you want reviewed, upload to Drafty, and share the review link. The client comments as a guest — Drafty tracks their notes with a name so the thread reads as a real conversation, not anonymous noise.
- Can I get formal approval on a Figma design — not just a comment?
- Drafty is built for anchored discussion and iteration, not a formal timestamped approve/reject flow. If you need a paper-trail sign-off tied to a specific version, tools like Aligno are designed specifically for that workflow.
- Does the review link work on a client's phone?
- Yes. The Drafty review board opens and accepts comments on desktop and mobile — useful when a client's first instinct is to check on their iPhone.
Keep exploring
Share a link. Get comments on the page.
Free to start. No account for reviewers. Works on any device.


