Turn a link, WiFi network, contact card, or any text into a scannable QR code. Download it as a PNG to print on packaging, receipts, shelf tags, or posters. No signup, never expires.
A QR code is a square pattern that stores a small amount of data - a link, some text, WiFi login details, or a contact card - which any phone camera can read instantly. This tool builds the QR in your browser from the details you enter and lets you download it as a PNG. Because the data is encoded directly inside the pattern (a static QR), the code never expires, needs no account, and keeps working long after it is printed.
Put a link QR on shelf tags and packaging so shoppers open the product page or a how-to video. Print a WiFi QR at the counter so customers join your in-store network without asking for the password. Add a contact-card QR to your visiting card so a supplier saves your details in one tap. Point a link QR at your Google review page to collect more reviews, or at your online store so a walk-in customer can reorder from home.
A Pune apparel store wants walk-in customers to browse the full catalogue online. The owner selects "Open a website or link", enters the store URL, generates the QR, and downloads the PNG. It goes on a small poster near the trial room reading "Scan to shop the full range". Customers who liked something in-store scan it, browse sizes and colours that were not on the rack, and order for home delivery.
No. This tool creates static QR codes that encode your data directly inside the pattern, so they never expire and have no scan limit. Once printed, a static QR keeps working forever with no account or subscription.
Not for a static QR, because the destination is baked into the pattern. If you need to change the target later, point the QR at a short link you control (for example a link on your own domain) and update where that link redirects. The QR stays the same; only the redirect changes.
A website or product link, plain text, WiFi login details, a phone number, a prefilled SMS, an email, or a contact card (vCard). Pick the type at the top of the tool and fill in the fields; the QR is built in your browser.
Yes. The QR code standard is open and royalty-free, and the codes you make here are yours to print on packaging, receipts, shelf tags, posters, or business cards with no licence or attribution required.
As a rule of thumb, keep the printed QR at least 2 x 2 cm for a phone held close, and scale it up for greater scan distance (roughly one cm of QR width for every 10 cm of scan distance). Keep a clear white margin around it and avoid printing it too small on shiny or curved surfaces.
Commmerce puts your online store, POS, and inventory in one system, so a scan turns into a sale you can actually fulfil.
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