Type your message in the box provided at the top of the page and adhere to the 150 character limit in order to encode your text into a QR code. The content of your message becomes part of the code.
Choose a single colour fill or a two- or three-colour gradient using the colour options, but in the case where you intend to print a centrally placed logo, make sure that there is sufficient contrast to make it legible to a mobile device in one go.
In case you intend to print a QR code with graphical art piece over it, you need to insert a JPEG or PNG image to the background, then create a qr-code. Once you have created a qr-code, produce several thumbnail designs out of it. Adjust the size or placement of thumbnail image produced to obtain a ‘preview’ that you find satisfactory.
Pick between a PNG and a JPEG file format, and choose the right number of pixels for printing or computer screens. You can now save or share to your device memory or other devices using the share functionality if available.
This website allows you to create QR codes for short messages without having to register. Enter your message up to 150 characters, and we will convert it into an image. It is very convenient when you need to let someone else read what you have written.
Text codes typically pop up within a few seconds—activate additional styling options only when necessary.
Choose from solid colors, gradients, logo at the center, or background imagery—ensuring adequate contrast to enable mobile scanning on first attempt.
Export your files in PNG or JPEG formats—selecting an appropriate pixel resolution to match print or social media design templates.
Codes follow noThe codes adhere to conventional QR code standards, which ensures compatibility with modern smartphone camera technology, without requiring any dedicated application.
A QR code is a square barcode that smartphones can scan using their camera. This code contains some information, usually a link, although on our page, we encode only plain text to show exactly what you have entered.
This makes the QR code useful for encoding texts without having to worry about whether the site remains available. On the downside, this limits the text size: We limit the number of characters to 150 to make the code easily scannable.
The three large corner boxes allow the device to orient itself. The remaining parts contain the characters and have extra modules just in case of dirt and creases that might interfere with reading.
Software reads dark and light modules, rebuilds the string, and shows it on screen. Good lighting and a steady hand help; so does leaving a quiet border around the code.
Longer messages produce more complex patterns. Observing the limits helps make sure modules are big enough for printing on stickers, badges, or posters.
Scanning copies your wording exactly—no fat-fingered address or note left behind.
The message travels on paper or a sticker even if your website is down for maintenance.
The 150-character cap keeps the pattern dense but still readable on a badge or counter card.
Readers see the words you typed—not an auto-generated link title from somewhere else.
Type in the box above (up to 150 characters), tweak optional colours or logo, then press generate. Download when the preview looks right.
Yes. Creating and downloading a static text QR here is free, and you do not need an account for the main workflow.
A text QR stores the characters directly. A URL QR opens a website. Use text when you want the exact wording on screen with no extra tap.
Not without printing a new code. The wording is baked into the pattern, so treat it like permanent signage.
Most cameras from the last few years read standard QR codes out of the box. If a scan fails, print larger or simplify colours.
Longer copy needs more modules, which shrink when printed. The cap keeps codes scannable on small surfaces.
Yes, optionally. Keep the logo small so it does not cover critical data—shrink it if scans get flaky.