Generate a QR code for any text or URL
Type any text or URL and get a scannable QR code instantly, generated entirely in your browser — no server, no account, no watermark. Download the result as an image and drop it into a flyer, slide, menu, or label.
Because generation is local, the content of your QR codes is never logged or stored anywhere.
Paste https://example.com/rsvp?event=summer-bbq and the code appears immediately. Download it and place it on the invitation at roughly 2×2 cm or larger for print. Scan it once yourself from arm's length before printing a hundred copies — thirty seconds of testing beats a stack of unusable flyers.
No. The code is a direct encoding of your text — there's no shortener or redirect service in the middle, so it works as long as whatever it points to exists. The flip side: the destination can't be edited after printing, because the URL is baked into the pattern.
Up to a few thousand characters technically, but density is the enemy of scannability. Codes under about 300 characters scan quickly and survive small print sizes; for long content, host it at a short URL and encode that instead.
The usual culprits: printed too small (stay above 2×2 cm for close-range scanning), too little contrast between foreground and background, inverted colors (dark-on-light scans most reliably), or a glossy surface causing glare.
Yes — encode the string WIFI:T:WPA;S:YourNetworkName;P:YourPassword;; and phones will offer to join the network when scanned. Replace the name and password with your own, keeping the semicolons.