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Free tool

Let guests join your Wi-Fi
without the password dance.

Generate a Wi-Fi QR code with your network name and password baked in. Guests scan, tap 'Join', and they're online — no spelling out 'capital-S, zero-not-O' across the room.

How it works

Live in three steps.

1

Enter your network

Type your Wi-Fi name (SSID), password and security type. We assemble the special Wi-Fi code format for you.

2

Brand & download

Style it to match your space, then download a crisp code to print for the counter, the wall or the welcome card.

3

Guests scan & join

Modern iPhones and Android phones connect straight from the camera — no app, no typing.

How a Wi-Fi QR code actually works

A Wi-Fi QR code doesn't open a website — it encodes your network credentials in a small standard format that phones understand. When someone scans it, their phone reads the network name, password and security type, and offers to join in a single tap.

It works on the built-in camera of current iPhones and most Android phones, so guests don't need to install anything. That makes it perfect for cafés, salons, offices, holiday rentals and waiting rooms.

Static or dynamic — which to use

If your password rarely changes, a static Wi-Fi code is ideal: it's free, never expires, and works even if your account is dormant. Print it once and forget it.

If you rotate your guest password regularly — good security practice for a busy venue — a dynamic approach lets you point the code at a small 'connect' page you can update, so you change the password in one place instead of reprinting signs.

FAQ

Questions, answered.

How do I make a Wi-Fi QR code?

Enter your network name, password and security type (usually WPA/WPA2) into QRs.bd, brand the code if you like, and download it to print. Guests scan it with their phone camera to join.

Is the Wi-Fi QR code generator free?

Yes. Generating and downloading a Wi-Fi QR code is free.

Do guests need an app to scan it?

No. Current iPhones and most Android phones read Wi-Fi QR codes from the built-in camera and offer to join the network automatically.

Is it safe to put my Wi-Fi password in a QR code?

For a guest network, yes — it's the same password you'd tell them anyway, just easier to use. Don't post your main private network code in a public space; use a separate guest network.

What if I change my password?

A static code stops working when the password changes. If you rotate passwords often, point a dynamic code at a connect page you can update instead.

Keep reading

Related guides & tools.

Ready in 30 seconds

Share your Wi-Fi with a scan, not a spelling test.

Free to create. Brand it to match your space.