WebsitesQR
Free Forever · Static QR · No Expiration

QR Code for Website

Make a free QR code for your website URL. Paste any website link below and download a permanent QR code in seconds — no signup, no watermark, no expiration. Print it on anything.

Looking for a QR Code? Try our dedicated guide with step-by-step instructions

Works For Any Type of Website

Custom domain, page builder, marketplace listing, blog, online store — if it has a URL, you can make a QR code for it.

Business websites (yourcompany.com)

WordPress / Wix / Squarespace

Shopify, Etsy, BigCommerce stores

Personal blogs and portfolios

Landing pages and one-pagers

Real estate listing pages

Restaurant menus (online or PDF)

Booking and appointment pages

Wedding & event websites

Nonprofit donation pages

Google Business Profile pages

App store download pages

How to Create a QR Code for Your Website

1

Copy Your Website URL

Open your website in a browser and copy the entire URL from the address bar — including the https:// part. To make a QR code for a specific page (e.g., your About page or a product), copy that page's URL instead.

2

Paste It Into the Generator

Paste the URL into the QR code generator at the top of this page and click Generate. The QR code is created instantly in your browser. Your URL never gets sent to our servers — it stays completely private.

3

Download the PNG

Click Download PNG to save your website QR code. The file is high-resolution and ready to print on business cards, packaging, signage, flyers, anything. No watermark, no compression, no upsell.

4

Test Before Printing

Before mass-printing, scan the QR code with your phone to confirm it opens your website correctly. Test it on at least one iPhone and one Android. This 30-second check has saved many businesses from reprinting 10,000 flyers.

Where to Put a QR Code for Your Website

Anywhere your customers can see it but cannot click it.

Printed Materials

Business cards, brochures, flyers, posters, packaging, product inserts, magazine ads, direct mail, receipts, invoices, thank-you notes.

In-Person Locations

Storefront windows, table tents, menus, point-of-sale displays, vehicle decals, trade show booths, event banners, real estate yard signs.

Digital Surfaces

Email signatures, slide decks, video end cards, podcast cover art, social media bios, presentation handouts, virtual backgrounds.

Why Every Website Should Have a QR Code

A QR code for your website is the bridge between everything offline (signs, packaging, business cards, conversations) and your actual website. Without it, you are asking customers to remember a URL, type it correctly into their phone keyboard, and hope autocorrect does not break it. With it, they point their camera and tap once. Conversion goes up, friction goes down. There is essentially no downside to adding a QR code to anything you print.

Static vs Dynamic Website QR Codes (Important)

Other QR code generators will try to push you toward “dynamic” QR codes. Here is the honest difference:

  • Static QR code (what we make). The QR code encodes your website URL directly into the pixel pattern. It links straight to your site with no middleman. It works forever, costs nothing, and cannot be turned off by anyone.
  • Dynamic QR code. The QR code points to a third-party server, which redirects to your URL. You can change the destination later, but you also have to pay forever — and if you stop paying, every printed QR code stops working. For a website QR code, this is almost always the wrong choice.

For 99% of website use cases, you want a static QR code. Your URL does not change often, and even if it does, you can put a redirect on your own domain (which is permanent and free).

The Hidden Trap with “Free QR Code for Website” Tools

Many of the top-ranking tools for “free QR code for website” are running a bait-and-switch. You create the QR code, they let you preview it for free, then they require a credit card to download a clean version, or they expire the QR code after 14 days. By the time you discover the QR code on your printed business cards is dead, you have already spent the money. We are deliberately the opposite: free, static, no signup, no expiration, no watermark, no upgrade button. Print millions of copies. You will never owe us anything.

Website QR Code FAQ

How do I make a QR code for my website?

Copy your website URL from the browser address bar (the part that starts with https://), paste it into the generator on this page, and click Generate. Your QR code is created instantly. Click Download PNG and you have a QR code for your website you can print on anything — business cards, packaging, signage, flyers. It is free and your QR code never expires.

Can I create a QR code for my business website for free?

Yes. Our generator is 100% free for business use. There is no subscription, no Pro plan, no upsell. The QR code you download is a static QR code that links directly to your website URL — meaning we have no ability to charge you later or shut it off. Many sites that show up for “free QR code for business” will let you create a QR code, then charge you to download it without a watermark or to keep it active. We do not do that.

How do I get a QR code for a specific page on my website?

It works the same as your homepage. Open the page on your website that you want to link to, copy the full URL from the browser address bar (including any path after the slash, like /about or /products/blue-shirt), and paste it into our generator. Each page on your site has its own URL, so each page can have its own QR code.

Will my website QR code work on every phone?

Yes. Every modern smartphone — iPhone (iOS 11+) and Android (8+) — has built-in QR code scanning in the camera app. Older phones might need a free QR scanner app, but anyone with a phone made in the last 7 years can scan your QR code without installing anything.

Do I need a fancy URL or domain for my website QR code?

No. The QR code works with any valid URL — your custom domain (yourcompany.com), a Squarespace or Wix site, a Shopify store URL, a free Wordpress.com page, a Google Site, even a long URL with parameters. As long as the link works in a browser, it will work as a QR code.

Does the QR code for my website expire?

No. The QR code we generate is a static QR code that encodes your URL directly into the pixel pattern. It does not route through our servers, so it cannot expire. As long as your website is online, the QR code keeps working — even if WebsitesQR.com disappears tomorrow.

Where should I put a QR code for my website?

The most common places: business cards, product packaging, store signage, restaurant menus, table tents, brochures, flyers, posters, vehicle decals, real estate yard signs, event banners, receipts, and email signatures. Anywhere your customers might want to visit your website but typing the URL would be slow.

What size should I print my website QR code?

The minimum readable size is about 1 inch × 1 inch (2.5 cm × 2.5 cm) at normal scanning distance (12 inches / 30 cm). For posters and signage scanned from further away, scale up: roughly 1 inch of QR code for every 10 inches of scanning distance. Always test the printed version with multiple phones before mass production.

How do I make sure my website QR code is safe?

QR codes themselves are safe — they just encode a URL. The risk is when you scan a QR code from an untrusted source and it sends you to a phishing site. For YOUR QR code, the safety question is: does the URL it encodes go to your real website? You can scan your own QR code with your phone to verify before printing. We have a complete QR code safety guide if you want to know what to watch for.