For hotels, cafes, offices, homes
WiFi QR Code Generator
Create a WiFi QR code guests scan to connect instantly. No password typing. Supports WPA2, WPA3, and open networks. Free PNG and SVG download, no signup.
Password never sent to a server. Free, instant, no login.
Where people use it
Why use a WiFi QR code
Connect without typing
Guests point their phone camera at the QR and tap the prompt. They join the network without ever seeing or typing the password.
Keep the password private
Share WiFi access without giving out the actual password string. Rotate the password later without reprinting the QR, just generate a new one.
Works instantly, no app
Both iOS (since iOS 11) and Android (since Android 9) read WiFi QR natively from the camera app. No third-party app needed.
Print-ready SVG output
Download as SVG for any print size from a business card to an A4 poster. Resize without pixelation in any design tool.
Supports WPA2, WPA3, open
Works with all common security protocols. Handles SSIDs and passwords with special characters, spaces, and Unicode correctly.
No login, no tracking
The WiFi QR is generated entirely in your browser. The SSID and password are never sent to any server. Free, private, instant.
How to create a WiFi QR code
Enter your WiFi details
Go to /qr/wifi. Type the network name (SSID), choose the security type (WPA2, WPA3, or open), and enter the password. The form handles special characters.
Preview and style
The QR previews instantly. Optionally add your venue logo and change colors to match your branding. Works for cafes, hotels, offices, or home.
Download and print
Download PNG for on-screen use or SVG for print. Place it in a table tent, stick it to the wall, or include it in a welcome card. Guests scan once and connect.
- WiFi QR code generator, free
- WPA2, WPA3, and open network support
- Password never sent to a server
- PNG and SVG download formats
- Logo and color customization
- Works on every iOS and Android phone
WiFi QR code: common questions
- The QR encodes the password, but it is not displayed as readable text. Someone with a QR code reader app could decode it if they tried. For shared-space guest WiFi this is acceptable because guests need to connect anyway. For a private home network, consider using a guest network with a separate password specifically for printing on QR.