What content types are supported?
The page supports URL and plain text, WiFi credentials, vCard contact details, email actions, and SMS actions. Each type is encoded in a format commonly recognized by phone cameras and QR reader apps.
QR Generator
The QR Generator creates scannable QR codes for common everyday tasks such as sharing a URL, giving guests WiFi access, distributing contact information, or packaging a quick action into a code that a phone can read instantly. It is built for people who need a result quickly without opening a design suite or installing a separate mobile app.
The page supports both digital and print-oriented outputs. PNG works well for chat, slides, and web pages, while SVG is better for layouts that need to stay crisp at larger sizes. All generation happens in the browser, so the content you encode can be prepared quickly with less concern about server-side storage.
A useful QR generator is not only about rendering a square image. The important part is helping users choose the right data format for the task. A plain link, a WiFi setup, a vCard contact, an email action, and an SMS action all have slightly different needs. This page organizes those formats into distinct input modes so that the encoded result is more likely to work as expected on real scanners and devices.
The page is especially practical for situations where typing is inconvenient or error-prone. Sharing a complex WiFi password, a contact card, or an event registration link becomes much easier when the recipient can scan instead of manually entering details. That is why the generator pairs the form inputs with an immediate visual preview before download.
Select the content type that matches your task, then fill in the relevant fields. For a URL, paste the destination link. For WiFi, enter the network name, password, and security type. For a contact card, provide the name and other details you want the scanner to save. The preview updates as the input changes, so you can confirm that the page is producing a code before downloading it.
Once the preview looks right, export PNG for regular digital use or SVG for print. If the code will appear on posters, packaging, menus, or signage, do a quick test scan on a phone before producing copies at scale. This small verification step helps catch problems such as overly dense codes, low-contrast print choices, or incorrect input values.
The page is useful for designers placing codes in layouts, event organizers linking visitors to schedules or check-in pages, businesses that want to share WiFi details without exposing a typed password workflow, and individuals who want a fast way to share contact information or messages through a single scannable image.
Longer content creates denser QR patterns. Very long URLs, heavily populated contact cards, or detailed text blocks may still work, but the final code can become harder to scan at small sizes or from a distance. In practice, shorter content improves reliability.
A QR code is only as useful as its surrounding design choices. Poor contrast, excessive reduction, or awkward placement on reflective materials can hurt scan results even when the encoded content itself is valid.
The page supports URL and plain text, WiFi credentials, vCard contact details, email actions, and SMS actions. Each type is encoded in a format commonly recognized by phone cameras and QR reader apps.
PNG is a raster image and works well for standard digital sharing. SVG is a vector format that stays sharp at different sizes, which makes it a stronger choice for print layouts, signage, packaging, and other uses where the code may need to scale up.
The more information the code stores, the denser its grid becomes. That extra density can make the code harder to scan when printed small, viewed from far away, or captured by lower-quality cameras. Shorter content usually improves reliability.
No. QR generation happens directly in the browser. Inputs such as WiFi passwords, contact details, and messages are not uploaded to or stored on a UtilityHub-managed server during normal use of the page.