Use case
QR code for your website
Drive scans from the physical world to your homepage, a specific product, a menu, or any URL — free, and styled to match your brand.
A QR code for your website is one of the fastest ways to turn real-world attention into web traffic. Drop it on a business card, on packaging, on a poster, on a restaurant table, on a vehicle wrap — anywhere someone with a phone might pause for a moment — and you've added a shortcut to anything you have online.
QR This! is a free QR code generator built specifically for this use case. Paste your URL, pick a color that matches your brand, optionally drop in your logo, and download a crisp PNG you can hand straight to a designer or printer.
Good places to use a website QR code
- Business cards — link to a portfolio, LinkedIn profile, or contact page.
- Menus and table tents — let customers view full menus, order online, or leave a review.
- Flyers and posters — send event attendees to signup or ticketing pages.
- Packaging and product inserts — drive people to setup guides, warranty registration, or upsells.
- Storefronts and signage — let passersby browse your catalog or book after hours.
- Email signatures and slides — make it easy to save a link without typing.
How to generate a QR code for a website
- Open the QR code generator.
- Paste your website URL.
- Customize: pick a brand color and choose rounded or square corners.
- (Optional) Upload a center logo for a branded look.
- Click Generate, then Download PNG.
Prefer a more detailed walkthrough? See the full how to generate a QR code guide.
Print-ready by default
Every QR code you export is a 1024×1024 square PNG — plenty of resolution for business cards at 2 cm across or posters at 10 cm. You can drop the file straight into Canva, Figma, InDesign, or your printer's upload form without resizing.
Frequently asked questions
Will the QR code break if I change my website?
It will break only if the specific URL you encoded stops working. As long as that URL still resolves — either directly, or via a 301 redirect from your server — the QR keeps working. If you're planning a site migration, set up redirects from old URLs to new ones before changing anything.
Should I use my homepage URL or a deeper page?
It depends on intent. For general signage and brand visibility, point at your homepage. For a specific call to action (sign up for an event, view a menu, redeem an offer), point at the deepest page that completes that action with the least friction.
Can I track how many people scanned the QR?
Yes — add a UTM parameter to the URL you encode, like ?utm_source=qr&utm_campaign=table-tent. Your existing site analytics (Google Analytics, Plausible, Fathom, server logs) will then show you scan counts segmented by campaign.
Do I need a 'dynamic' QR code service for analytics?
Almost never. UTM parameters on a static QR pointing at your own site capture the same information you'd get from most dynamic-QR analytics dashboards — without the monthly subscription or third-party dependency.
What's the right size for a website QR on a flyer?
For an A4 or letter-sized flyer with the QR in a corner, aim for 5–6 cm wide. Smaller QR codes scan poorly under typical room lighting. Larger is always safer than smaller.
Can I use the QR on signage that's outdoors?
Yes, but plan for distance and weather. Increase the size proportional to scanning distance (about 1/10 of distance), use a matte laminate to avoid glare, and verify scans in actual lighting conditions before going to print.
Can I add my company logo?
Yes. QR This! lets you upload a logo to embed in the center, and automatically uses high error-correction so the code still scans. Keep the logo square, transparent if possible, and well within the brand-color palette.
Is there a limit on how many QR codes I can generate?
No. Generate as many as you want. There's no daily limit, no account, and no hidden fees — the site is free.
Generate a QR code for your website
Free, unlimited, and downloads instantly.
Open the generator