Enter your network
Type your network name and password and pick the encryption. The standard Wi-Fi QR string is built and encoded into the code live as you type.

Turn your network into a QR code and a printable guest card. Visitors point their camera and they're on, no reading the password off a sticky note. It all happens in your browser.
Guest Wi-Fi that's easy to join and walled off from your business.
Enter a network name and password to enable download and print.
The password is encoded into the QR image in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
Setting up an office or guest network?
We design and manage business Wi-Fi, from guest isolation to roaming access points, so the whole office stays connected and the guest network stays separate from yours.
Type your network name and password and pick the encryption. The standard Wi-Fi QR string is built and encoded into the code live as you type.
Choose a preset, heading and accent colour, portrait or landscape. The card is ready to print for a reception desk, meeting room or cafe counter, one or four to a page.
The password is encoded into the image in your browser. Nothing is sent to us or stored, so it is safe to use for real networks.
It encodes a short text string in a standard format (WIFI:T:WPA;S:network;P:password;;) that Android and iPhone cameras recognise. When someone points their camera at it, the phone offers to join the network automatically, so nobody has to read out or type the password.
The QR code literally contains the password, so anyone who can photograph the code can join the network. That is exactly what you want for a printed guest card on a counter, but do not post it publicly online. For sensitive networks, generate a code for a separate guest network rather than your main one. The code is built entirely in your browser and is never uploaded to us.
Recent iPhones (iOS 11 and later) and most Android phones (Android 10 and later) read Wi-Fi QR codes straight from the built-in camera app. Older devices may need a QR-scanner app. The code uses the widely supported WPA format for WPA, WPA2 and WPA3 networks.
It is a ready-to-print card with the QR code, your network name and password, and a heading like 'Guest Wi-Fi'. Stand it on a reception desk, a meeting-room table or a cafe counter so visitors can join without asking. You can print one per page or four to a page on A4.
Ideally not. Best practice is a separate guest network or VLAN that is isolated from your business devices and data, so a visitor's laptop can reach the internet but not your file shares or printers. We set this up as part of business Wi-Fi and network projects.
No. The QR code is a static image that simply holds your network details, so it works offline and does not expire. If you change your Wi-Fi password, generate and print a new code.