WiFi QR Code Generator
Let guests connect instantly — no passwords, no typing
A WiFi QR code encodes your network name and password directly into a scannable image. When a customer or guest points their phone camera at it, they connect to your WiFi automatically — no fumbling through menus, no typos, no asking staff for the password. Modern iPhones and Android phones read WiFi QR codes natively through the built-in camera app. No app download required.
Create Your WiFi QR Code Free
PNG for digital use · SVG for print-quality
Download as PNG or SVG · No account required for static QR codes · Free forever
Why businesses use WiFi QR codes
For any hospitality or service business, a smooth WiFi experience sets the tone for the visit. Cafes, restaurants, hotels, co-working spaces, and retail stores all benefit from displaying a scannable QR code near the entrance or on each table. Staff no longer need to recite or write down the password. Customers get online in under five seconds. Airbnb and vacation rental hosts print the QR code and leave it on the kitchen counter — guests connect the moment they walk in without hunting for the router card.
Offices and conference rooms use WiFi QR codes to onboard visitors without handing them guest credentials. Event organizers print them on wristbands, lanyards, or backdrop signage so hundreds of attendees get online simultaneously without congestion at the help desk.
How to create a WiFi QR code
Fill in your network name (SSID) and password in the form on this page. Choose your security type — most modern routers use WPA2. Click the eye icon to check the password before generating. The QR code updates live as you type. Once it looks right, download it as a PNG for printing or SVG for scalable print-quality output. Place it in a frame on your counter, tape it under a glass table, or include it in your welcome booklet.
Security considerations
WiFi QR codes encode the password in plain text within the QR data — anyone who scans your QR code can read the password from the decoded string. This is fine for guest networks, but do not use a WiFi QR code for a network that also serves sensitive internal systems. Best practice: create a dedicated guest network with a separate SSID and password, then generate the QR code for that guest network. Change the password periodically and reprint the QR code. For WPA2 networks, the security of the underlying connection is unchanged — the QR code is just a convenient delivery mechanism for the credentials.
Who uses wifi qr code generators?
Cafes & Coffee Shops
Display on each table so customers connect the moment they sit down.
Hotels & Airbnb
Print in the welcome folder — guests connect before they even unpack.
Offices
Onboard visitors and contractors to the guest network instantly.
Events & Pop-ups
Print on signage, lanyards, or wristbands for fast mass onboarding.
Gyms & Studios
Let members connect to the training floor WiFi without interrupting staff.
