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Drop a PNG or SVG into the middle of the QR. Error correction adjusts automatically.
Create scannable QR codes that open any website. Add an optional logo, pick an error correction level, and export as PNG, PDF, or ZPL. Single codes or in bulk from a CSV.
A URL QR code is a Quick Response (QR) matrix barcode that encodes a website address. When scanned with a phone camera, the device opens that URL in the default browser, no typing required. URL QR codes are the most common kind, used on packaging, posters, business cards, menus, and digital marketing materials.
QR codes have four error correction levels (L, M, Q, H). Higher levels let the code be partially obscured, for example by a logo in the center, and still scan reliably. The generator picks a sensible default and you can override it in the editor.
Type or paste any website URL (https or http). The QR code updates as you type.
Upload a transparent PNG or SVG to place in the center of the QR code. The encoder bumps error correction so the code still scans reliably.
Pick a print size in millimeters or inches, and an export DPI (150, 203, 300, or 600). 300 DPI is right for most label printers.
Click download. For many URLs at once, switch to CSV mode and upload a spreadsheet, one image per row.
Drop a PNG or SVG into the middle of the QR. Error correction adjusts automatically.
Four levels (L, M, Q, H) for varying logo size and scan reliability.
Set dimensions in millimeters or inches. Export at 150, 203, 300, or 600 DPI.
Three output formats covering digital use, page layout, and Zebra thermal printers.
Upload a list of URLs, get one QR per row, useful for product catalogs and campaign assets.
No signup, no watermark, no usage limits, no paid tier hiding the good features.
A URL QR code is a Quick Response barcode that encodes a website address. When scanned with a phone camera, the device opens that URL in its default browser.
Yes. Upload a PNG or SVG and the editor places it in the center of the QR. Error correction is bumped automatically so the code still scans with the logo overlay.
A rule of thumb is that the printed QR side should be roughly 10% of the scan distance. For a 30 cm scan distance, aim for a 3 cm wide QR. Smaller is fine if the print quality is high and the scan distance is short.
L (7%) and M (15%) are good for clean digital prints. Q (25%) and H (30%) leave more room for logos and damage but produce denser codes. Use the highest level your space allows.