Overview
Use this generator when you need a scannable code for a web address, network login, short note, or contact card. Type or paste the content, check the live preview, and export a version that fits posters, menus, labels, or digital sharing. SVG is the best choice when the code needs to stay sharp in print or be edited later. PNG is useful when you want a simple image file for documents, slides, chat apps, or product mockups. Keep the content concise: very long text creates denser codes that are harder to scan and may need a larger size or stronger error correction.
Use cases
- Restaurant menu linkCreate a QR code that opens a digital menu, reservation page, or daily specials page from a table tent or receipt.
- Guest Wi‑Fi loginEncode the network name, security type, and password so visitors can join without typing credentials manually.
- Business card contact blockAdd a QR code that opens a phone number, email address, or contact record on a printed card.
- Product insert or package labelPoint buyers to setup instructions, warranty registration, support pages, or a product video.
How it works
- 1
Paste the content you want to encode.
- 2
Check the QR preview and adjust the data if needed.
- 3
Download the result as SVG or PNG.
Examples
Homepage link
Input: https://example.com
Output: QR code that opens the homepage when scanned.
Good for posters, handouts, and packaging.
Office Wi‑Fi
Input: WIFI:T:WPA;S:StudioGuest;P:Seaside2025!;;
Output: QR code for joining the guest network.
Useful near reception desks and meeting rooms.
Email contact
Input: mailto:hello@example.com?subject=Project%20quote
Output: QR code that opens a prefilled email message.
Helps on invoices, support cards, and event stands.
FAQ
What kinds of content work best in a QR code?
Short URLs, Wi‑Fi credentials, contact details, phone links, email links, and brief text work well. The longer the content, the denser the code becomes.
Why does a long message sometimes look crowded?
A QR code stores data in a compact grid. More data means more modules, so the code becomes harder to scan unless you enlarge it or reduce the text.
Can I use this for Wi‑Fi sharing?
Yes. Use the standard Wi‑Fi format with security type, network name, and password. If one of those fields is wrong, the scan may open but fail to connect.
Which format should I choose for printing?
Choose SVG when you need clean scaling on business cards, stickers, posters, or packaging. Use PNG when you need a regular image file for slides or documents.
What is the most common mistake when generating a QR code?
People often paste too much text, include extra spaces, or use the wrong Wi‑Fi syntax. Trim the content and make sure special characters are entered exactly as needed.
