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Generate QR codes for any content

Nobody is going to type a 50-character URL from your flyer into their phone.

How It Works

  1. 01

    Paste text or code

    Paste your content into the input field or type directly.

  2. 02

    Instant processing

    The tool processes your content immediately and shows the result.

  3. 03

    Copy result

    Copy the result to your clipboard with one click.

Privacy

All calculations run directly in your browser. No data is sent to any server.

Print materials are great, but typing links from paper is terrible UX. Whether you need to share a website, let guests join your WiFi, or distribute a digital business card, a QR code bridges the gap. Generate one instantly, download it as a PNG or SVG, and put it on your poster.

Error correction
4levels
Max data
4296chars
Output
SVG + PNG
01 — How to Use

How do you use this tool?

  1. Choose a content type: URL, Text, WiFi, or vCard.
  2. Fill in the relevant fields (e.g., paste a URL or enter WiFi credentials).
  3. Adjust the size and error correction level if needed.
  4. Click 'Generate' and preview your QR code instantly.
  5. Download the QR code as a PNG (for images/print) or SVG (for scalable vector use).

What This Tool Does

The kittokit QR Code Generator creates scannable QR codes from four types of content: URLs, plain text, WiFi network credentials, and vCard contact information. Output is available as PNG (raster, ideal for web and digital use) and SVG (vector, ideal for print at any size).

Supported content types:

TypeWhat gets encodedExample use
URLAny web addressLink to your website, social profile, or online form
TextUp to ~4,000 charactersA coupon code, a short message, a product serial
WiFiSSID + password + security typeGuest network sign-in at a home, office, or event
vCardName, phone, email, addressScannable business card contact

All four types generate a standard QR code that any smartphone camera app (iOS, Android) or QR reader can scan without a special app.

How It Works

QR codes encode data using a matrix of black and white squares following the ISO/IEC 18004 standard. The tool runs entirely in your browser to:

  1. Encode — convert your input into the QR bit string using the appropriate encoding mode (numeric, alphanumeric, byte, or Kanji).
  2. Apply error correction — add Reed-Solomon redundancy blocks at the selected level (L/M/Q/H) so the code remains scannable even if up to 30% of it is obscured.
  3. Render — draw the matrix onto an HTML canvas (for PNG) or build an inline SVG (for vector output).
  4. Download — the canvas is exported as a PNG blob or the SVG is serialized for download. Nothing leaves your device.

What Are Common Use Cases?

Restaurant menus. Since 2020, QR-code menus have become standard in US restaurants. Print a QR code linking to your PDF menu or online ordering page and place it on tables or at the host stand.

Small business marketing. Add a QR code to business cards, flyers, and packaging that links directly to your Yelp listing, Google Business profile, or a special landing page — no URL typing required.

Event signage. Conference exhibitors, trade show booths, and pop-up shops use QR codes on banners to drive traffic to their website, app download, or lead capture form.

WiFi access for guests. Instead of reciting a complex WiFi password at a party, Airbnb, or vacation rental, display a QR code guests scan to join instantly. The WiFi QR type encodes the SSID, password, and security protocol in one code.

Digital business cards. Print a vCard QR code on your physical card. When a contact scans it, their phone offers to save your name, phone number, email, and address automatically — no manual data entry.

Product packaging. DTC brands use QR codes to link from packaging to instructional videos, warranty registration pages, or loyalty program sign-ups.

Classroom and education. Teachers use QR codes on printed handouts to link to supplemental videos, Google Forms quizzes, or classroom portals — making resources accessible without students manually typing URLs.

How Do I Generate a WiFi QR Code?

Switch to the WiFi mode and fill four fields — the QR code updates as you type:

  1. Network name (SSID) — exactly as it appears on your router. Special characters like ;, :, and \ are escaped automatically for the WIFI URI scheme.
  2. Security type — WPA2 covers nearly every home and office router; WPA3 if every device is recent; WEP only for legacy hardware; Open for guest hotspots without a password.
  3. Password — the “Show” toggle next to the field reveals the password briefly, useful when you copy it from the router sticker.
  4. Hidden network — only check this if your router does not broadcast the SSID. Leave it off for normal home networks.

iOS and Android camera apps recognise the WIFI: scheme natively. The user scans, taps the prompt, and is connected — no password typing, no spelling out characters across the room.

Where a WiFi QR Code Pays Off

  • Cafes, restaurants, hotels — a laminated card on the table replaces the handwritten password behind the counter. Guests are online in three seconds.
  • Offices and coworking spaces — printed at reception or in meeting rooms for visitors and contractors. No more reciting the guest WiFi password.
  • Vacation rentals and Airbnbs — placed on the welcome sheet. Guests connect immediately, hosts skip the message exchange.
  • Conferences and events — included on programmes or in welcome bags. Attendees connect to the event WiFi without booth staff repeating the password.
  • Home guest WiFi — pinned to the fridge. The code exposes only the guest network; your main network with smart-home devices stays separate.

Note: the QR code contains the password in plaintext. Anyone who photographs the code gains access. For semi-public spaces, run a separate guest network and rotate the password periodically.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between static and dynamic QR codes? Static QR codes (what this tool generates) encode the destination directly. Dynamic QR codes use a short redirect URL managed by a third-party service, allowing the destination to be changed after printing. Dynamic codes require a paid subscription to services like Bitly or QR Tiger. For most personal and small business use, static codes are sufficient.

Will the QR code work without internet? The code itself does not require internet to scan. However, if it encodes a URL, the person scanning needs internet access to open the linked page. WiFi and vCard codes work entirely offline — they write data directly to the phone.

How small can a QR code be and still scan? The ISO standard recommends a minimum size of 0.4 × 0.4 inches (10 × 10 mm) for close-range scanning. For reliable scanning in various lighting conditions, 1 × 1 inch is a safer minimum for print.

Can I use the generated QR code commercially? Yes. The generated QR codes are yours to use for any purpose — personal, commercial, or non-profit — without attribution.

Last updated:

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