Standard vCard format
Compatible with iOS, Android, and most email clients without any plugin or app.
Turn your contact details into a QR code that saves directly into a phone's address book. Name, organization, phone, email, and website in one scan. Export as PNG, PDF, or ZPL for printing on business cards, signs, and digital signatures.
A vCard QR code encodes contact information (name, organization, phone, email, website) in the standardized vCard format. When scanned, the receiving phone offers to save the contact directly to its address book, no typing required.
vCard QR codes are popular on business cards, conference badges, signage, and digital email signatures. The data is statically encoded into the QR image so it works without any server or hosting, even after you've handed it over.
Name, organization, phone, email, and website. Only the name is required, the other fields are optional.
Add a center logo and adjust the error correction level for your design.
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 a team of vCards at once, switch to CSV mode and upload a spreadsheet, one image per row.
Compatible with iOS, Android, and most email clients without any plugin or app.
Name, organization, phone, email, and website covered.
Set dimensions in millimeters or inches. Export at 150, 203, 300, or 600 DPI.
Three output formats covering business cards, name badges, and email signatures.
Generate a unique vCard QR per team member from a spreadsheet.
No signup, no watermark, no usage limits, no paid tier hiding the good features.
A vCard QR code encodes contact information in the standard vCard format. Scanning it offers to save the contact directly to the receiving phone's address book.
Yes. Both iOS and Android handle vCard QR codes through their built in camera apps, no extra software needed.
vCard supports photos but most phone scanners ignore embedded images in QR form. We recommend keeping the vCard text only and using a printed photo separately on the card.
No. The contact details are baked into the QR image, you'll need to print a new code if your details change. If you anticipate changes, encode a URL that resolves to your contact card instead.