Turn your contact details into a scannable business card. One scan adds you straight to someone's contacts.
How to create a contact QR code
- Fill in your name — everything else is optional.
- Add the details you want to share: phone, email, company, job title, website.
- Watch the preview update, then download as PNG or SVG.
- Put it on business cards, email signatures, résumés, or a conference badge.
A business card that never runs out
Paper business cards get lost; a vCard QR code goes straight into the other person's phone
with zero typing errors. Print it on the back of your card, add it to a slide deck's closing
slide, or stick it on your laptop. Because the contact data lives inside the code itself,
there is no subscription and nothing to expire.
Hosting visitors at your office? Pair it with a
WiFi QR code at reception, or create a quick
link QR code to your booking page.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a vCard QR code?
- It is a QR code containing a vCard — the standard digital business card format. When someone scans it, their phone shows your name, phone number, email and company with an "Add to contacts" button. No app or typing needed.
- Is my contact information uploaded anywhere?
- No. The vCard and the QR code are built entirely in your browser. Your details never touch a server, so the tool is safe to use even with private phone numbers.
- Which fields should I fill in?
- Only a name is required. A typical business card QR includes name, mobile number, email, company and job title. Fewer fields make a simpler code that scans more easily, so skip anything you don’t need.
- Does it work on iPhone and Android?
- Yes. Both iOS and Android recognize vCard QR codes with the built-in camera and offer to create a new contact from the details.
- Can I update the QR code after printing it?
- The contact details are stored inside the code itself, so a printed code cannot be changed. If your details change, generate a new code. The upside: it works forever and depends on no third-party service.
- Why does my vCard QR code look so dense?
- The more text you encode, the more modules the QR code needs. A dense code still works but should be printed larger. If yours looks crowded, leave out optional fields like the website or job title.