Generate a QR code
Paste a URL, WhatsApp link, portfolio link, map link, or short text. The QR image is generated in your browser using a public QR image endpoint.
Make a quick QR code for your website, WhatsApp link, location, or public profile.
Paste a URL, WhatsApp link, portfolio link, map link, or short text. The QR image is generated in your browser using a public QR image endpoint.
QR codes are helpful when offline visitors need to open an online page quickly. Local businesses can put QR codes on counters, posters, packaging, invoices, flyers, and visiting cards. Job seekers can add QR codes to printed resumes. Coaching centres can place QR codes on admission posters. Restaurants can use QR codes for menu or contact pages.
The best QR codes point to a stable page, not a temporary file or random social post. A DeployLaunch page, WhatsApp link, Google Maps link, portfolio, menu page, or enquiry form can all work well. Short, clean links generally scan more reliably and look more professional.
Always scan the QR code from your own phone before printing it. Test it from another phone too if possible. Keep enough white space around the QR code and avoid placing it on a busy image. If you print it very small, scanning may fail, especially on low-quality paper or glossy surfaces.
A cafe can add "Scan for menu and timings." A repair shop can add "Scan to send repair enquiry." A freelancer can add "Scan to view portfolio." A tutor can add "Scan for subjects and batch details." The text near the QR code should tell people exactly what they will get.
This tool creates a QR image from the text or URL you enter. Do not put private passwords, identity numbers, confidential files, or sensitive customer data inside a QR code. Only encode information you are comfortable sharing publicly.
Can I use a QR code for WhatsApp? Yes. Generate a WhatsApp link first and then create a QR code from it. Can I print it? Yes, but test it before printing in bulk. Should I use a short URL? A clean URL is usually better for scanning and trust.
Use the tool output as a draft, not as the final truth. The best results come when you add your own context: your city, service category, audience, timings, process, proof, work samples, and contact preference. Visitors trust pages that feel specific and current. A short but accurate paragraph is better than a long generic paragraph that could belong to anyone.
If you are using the output on a public DeployLaunch page, read it once from a visitor's point of view. Ask whether a new customer, parent, recruiter, student, or client would understand what to do next. If the answer is no, add one more sentence that explains the next step clearly.
You can use the generated result on your DeployLaunch page, WhatsApp Business profile, Google Business Profile, Instagram bio, resume, portfolio, printed flyer, visiting card, admission poster, local directory listing, or proposal document. Keep the wording consistent across these places so people do not see different names, numbers, timings, or service details on different platforms.
Helpful content is usually simple, but it should not be empty. A visitor should leave the page with a clear understanding of what you offer, where you are available, and how to contact you safely.