Why QR codes are still useful

QR codes bridge the gap between offline and online content. They let people open a website, connect to WiFi, or save a contact by simply scanning a square code with their phone camera. Creating one should be just as effortless.

Common QR code use cases

Link to a website or landing page, share WiFi credentials without typing them out, distribute digital business cards, or point users to an app download page. QR codes also work well for event check-ins, restaurant menus, and product packaging.

How to generate a QR code

Open the QR Generator tool, enter your text or URL, and the QR code renders instantly. You can download it as a PNG image to use in print materials, social media graphics, or digital documents. No account, no upload, and no watermarks.

Privacy considerations

Some QR generators send your data to a server to create the code. EverydayHub's QR Generator works entirely in your browser. The content you enter never leaves your device, which matters when you are encoding internal URLs, sensitive WiFi credentials, or personal contact info.

Try the related tool

Open QR Generator from EverydayHub when you are ready to create your first QR code.

Open QR Generator