Contact details
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Preview
Enter at least a name, phone or email to generate a contact QR code.
Put an "add-to-contacts on scan" QR code on your business card, email signature or reception sign — completely free. Enter last/first name, company, job title, mobile and work phone, email, website, address and a note, and the preview updates instantly. The QR uses the standard vCard 3.0 format, so an iPhone or Android stock camera reads it and offers "Add to Contacts" — no one has to type your name or number by hand. Export as SVG (vector), which stays razor-sharp at any print size for business cards, flyers and signage; as PNG (raster) for slides and the web; or as a .vcf file that imports straight into a contacts app. Most online contact-QR generators send your name, phone and email to a server to render the image, but this tool performs the entire encoding (including Reed-Solomon error correction and mask selection) inside your browser. Your personal details — phone numbers and email addresses included — are never uploaded, stored or sent to a server. You can also tune the foreground/background colors and module size to match your card design.
How to use
- Enter the contact details you want on the QR — name, company, phone, email, etc. Use "Sample" to try an example (blank fields are left out of the QR).
- Tune the foreground/background colors and module size. The preview updates instantly.
- Click "Download PNG/SVG" for an image, or "Download .vcf" for a contact file. Your details are never sent anywhere.
FAQ
Are the name, phone and email I enter sent to a server?
No. The whole vCard QR generation — encoding, error correction and mask selection — runs in your browser with JavaScript. The name, phone number, email and address you enter are never uploaded, stored, or sent to a server, so it's safe to encode personal details like a phone number or email.
What happens when someone scans the code?
Point an iPhone or Android stock camera at the code and an "Add to Contacts" sheet opens with the name, company, phone and email you entered — tap it to save the contact. The code uses the standard vCard format (VCARD 3.0), so no special app is needed.
Can I make a contact QR to print on a business card?
Yes — that's the classic use of a vCard QR. Enter your details, export as SVG, and it stays crisp even in the small space on a card, so it scans reliably. Whoever receives it just points their camera at it and saves your name, phone and email in one tap.
Which fields should I fill in? Are any required?
As long as you fill in at least one of name, phone or email, the QR is generated. Blank fields are simply left out, so you only include what you need. A business card QR usually has name, company, title, phone and email; a personal one often just name, mobile and email.
How do I choose between PNG, SVG and .vcf?
SVG is a vector format that stays crisp at any size — best for printed business cards, flyers and signage. PNG is a ready-to-use image, ideal for slides, social posts and web pages. The .vcf is a vCard file that imports straight into a contacts app without a QR — handy for email attachments or importing on a computer.
Will too many details make the QR hard to scan?
The more fields you add, the denser (higher version) the QR becomes and the harder it is to scan. Keeping the note and address short keeps the QR simpler and easier to read. If there's too much data to fit in one QR code, remove some fields or lower the error-correction level (ECC) in the toolbar — you can still export the .vcf in that case.