WiFi QR Code Generator

Let guests connect with one scan. No typing the password, no spelling out the SSID.

Settings

Pattern
Eye
Background

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WIFI:T:WPA;S:MyNetwork;P:;H:false;;

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A WiFi QR code encodes your network's SSID, password, and encryption type into a single scannable image. When a guest's phone camera focuses on the code, the operating system offers a "Join network" prompt directly — no manual typing, no spelling out the password over a noisy room, no taping a faded sticky note to a router.

This tool builds that code in your browser without a sign-up. Pick your encryption (WPA/WPA2, WEP, or open), enter your network name and password, and the code generates live as you type. Customize the dot pattern, the eye style, and the colors so the QR feels designed rather than dropped-in from a free clip-art site. Add a centered logo (your business mark, a café icon, a wifi glyph) and the tool automatically bumps the error-correction level so the code still scans cleanly with the logo overlay.

Common use cases we hear: restaurants and cafés posting the network at every table; AirBnB and short-term-rental hosts including it in the welcome-binder PDF or framed on the kitchen counter; conference organizers providing the wifi on the back of name badges; offices giving the guest network as a printed handout at reception; co-working spaces putting the daily code on the entry wall.

Export as PNG for slides and printed materials, or SVG for any-size print without quality loss. The SlideModel QR codes are styled to look like a designed asset, not a default black-on-white grid — so they fit into a polished space rather than feeling like an afterthought.

Frequently asked questions

What does a WiFi QR code actually contain?

It encodes a small text string with three fields — your SSID (network name), your password, and the encryption type (typically WPA, WPA2, or open). When a phone scans it, the OS reads those fields and offers to join the network. It never sends anything to a server; the credentials live inside the image itself and only on the device that scans it.

Is it safe to share my WiFi password as a QR code?

It's safe in the same sense that writing your password on a sticky note is safe: anyone with physical access to the image can extract the password. We never upload or store the password — generation happens entirely in your browser. For sensitive networks (offices, anywhere with internal systems on the same network), use a dedicated guest network with its own password rather than encoding your main network's credentials.

Will the QR code work on both iPhone and Android phones?

Yes. The WiFi QR format is a documented standard supported natively by iOS (since iOS 11) and Android (since Android 10) via the built-in camera app. No third-party scanner needed. On older devices the user can install any free QR scanner app and the code still works.

Can I add my logo to the WiFi QR code?

Yes — drop a PNG, JPG, or SVG logo and the tool places it in the center of the code. We automatically raise the error-correction level to High when a logo is added, so the QR still scans reliably even with up to ~30% of the modules covered by the logo. Logos are inserted client-side and never uploaded.

What size should I export for a printed WiFi sign?

For a counter sign or table tent, export at 1024px (Presentation size) — that prints crisply at up to about A5. For a larger wall poster, use 2048px (Print size) or download the SVG and scale it to whatever size you need. Don't go below 512px for any printed use — the code's modules need to be large enough for phone cameras to discriminate.