Make a WiFi QR code guests scan to join
Turn your network name and password into a QR code. Guests point their phone camera at it and connect in one tap — no reading passwords aloud, no typos. Then use the code anywhere: a table card, a printed notice, or an engraved oak WiFi sign.
Build your WiFi QR code
Type your network details exactly as a guest would on their phone — capital letters and spaces matter.
Advanced (optional)
What is a WiFi QR code, and how does it work?
A WiFi QR code holds your network name, password and security type in a single scannable square. When a guest points their phone camera at it, the phone reads those details and offers to join — no menus, no typing, no reading the password out across a busy room.
It works on the built-in camera of iPhone (iOS 11 and later) and most Android phones (Android 10 and later) — no app to download. It's ideal for cafés, salons, waiting rooms, holiday lets and Airbnbs, offices and event spaces: anywhere you'd otherwise pin up a scrap of paper with the password on it.
The code is just your details encoded as a picture. If you change your WiFi password later, make a new code — the old one will stop working, which is exactly what you'd want.
Want your WiFi code engraved on a sign?
No pressure — your PNG works on any printed card. But if you'd like it engraved to last, made to order in oak in our North Wales workshop, here's the range.
Good to know
Is my password safe? Where does it go?
It stays in your browser. The code is built on your own device using a small script on this page — your network name and password are never sent to us or stored anywhere on our side. Once you've made the code, the only place your password lives is in the QR image you choose to print.
Which phones can scan it?
The built-in camera app on iPhone (iOS 11+) and most Android phones (Android 10+) reads WiFi QR codes with no extra app. Older phones may need a free QR scanner app. It's always worth scanning your own code before you print it.
Do I need a password? My WiFi is open.
No. Choose None — open network for the security type and leave the password blank. The code will simply connect guests to the open network.
It won't connect — what's wrong?
Almost always a typo. WiFi names and passwords are case-sensitive, and a stray space or a capital letter in the wrong place will stop it working. Re-check the network name and password against your router exactly, then make the code again. If your network is hidden, tick the hidden-network box under Advanced.
Do I have to make the sign myself?
Not unless you want to. The tool gives you a free PNG to print. If you'd like it engraved on oak to last, order one of our wooden WiFi signs and we'll engrave the code for you, made to order in North Wales. Need a code for a link or menu instead? Use our free QR code generator.