Free forever · no account · no watermark
High resolution QR codes: 2048-pixel PNG or true vector.
Every download here is print-grade: PNG at 2048×2048 pixels, real vector SVG, and a print-ready PDF. No 300-pixel thumbnails, no 'HD export' behind a paid tier, no account. Generated in your browser, free.
Try it now: point your phone camera at the preview.
This code is pure data. It carries your content directly instead of a link through our servers, so it can't expire and we couldn't turn it off if we wanted to.
It cannot expire
Static codes are pure data. There is no timer, no scan limit and no trial, so there is nothing that can run out.
It never touches our servers
The code is generated in your browser. We never see your content, so we have nothing to hold hostage.
No account, no watermark
Download PNG, SVG or print-ready PDF and use it commercially, without signing anything.
Pixels versus vectors, in one honest paragraph
A 2048-pixel PNG prints crisp at 300 DPI up to about 17 cm per side, which covers menus, flyers, packaging and posters viewed from close by. Beyond that, stop counting pixels and switch to the SVG: it stores the code as geometry, so the printer draws razor-sharp squares at 10 cm or 10 metres identically. Print shops will ask for the vector file anyway — hand them the SVG or the PDF and the resolution conversation is over.
Blurry QR prints almost never come from the generator, and almost always from a small PNG stretched up in a layout program. If you take one thing from this page: never scale a QR bitmap above 100%, and when in doubt, use the vector.
Resolution is free; here is what actually matters
Some generators sell 'high resolution' as a feature tier, which is charging for a number in an export dialog. Here the full-size files are simply the default, because generating 2048 pixels costs your browser the same as 300. Spend your attention where scans are really won: size (at least a tenth of the scanning distance), contrast (dark modules on a light background), the quiet zone kept clear, and one test scan from a real phone before the print run.
Questions, answered plainly
- What resolution is the PNG download?
- 2048×2048 pixels, which holds 300 DPI print quality up to roughly 17 × 17 cm. It is the default and only PNG size — there is no smaller 'free' version and no larger 'premium' one.
- I need it bigger than a poster. What do I use?
- The SVG (or the PDF, also vector). Vector files have no resolution to run out of: shop-window decals, exhibition walls and billboards all print perfectly sharp from the same file.
- What DPI should I tell my print shop?
- For the PNG, place it so it prints at 300 DPI or higher — at 2048 pixels that means 17 cm or smaller. Better: give them the SVG or PDF and DPI stops mattering entirely.
- Is the high-resolution export really free?
- Yes. Full-size PNG, SVG and PDF are all free, without an account or watermark. Resolution costs us nothing, so putting it behind a paywall would be theatre — our landing page oath commits to keeping it free.
- Why does my printed code look blurry then?
- Almost certainly a bitmap scaled above 100% in the layout, or a screenshot of a code instead of the downloaded file. Re-place the original 2048px PNG at its natural size or smaller, or use the SVG, and the edges come back.