Create a wedding QR code for RSVPs, maps and photos

Create QR codes for the wedding links guests actually need.

Create your code

Static
Encoded value length: 28 characters.
If you leave out https://, we add it in the QR payload.
Use H when adding a logo or printing small codes.
Optional. Use a simple square logo for the most reliable scans.
The scan reads the data in this image. Test the final file before you print or post it.
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When to use a wedding QR code

Most wedding QR codes exist for one reason: guest convenience. RSVP, venue directions, registry, schedule, dress code, shared photos. One stable wedding page that gathers all of it usually beats printing separate codes for every small detail.

Think like a guest

Wedding codes work best when they answer the first question people have.

  • Use one wedding site for RSVP, maps, schedule and registry links.
  • Check the page on a phone with larger text enabled.
  • Keep the wording warm, short and easy for older guests.

Before ordering stationery, ask someone outside the planning group to scan it.

Create a wedding QR code

  1. Choose one destination: RSVP form, wedding website, venue map, registry, schedule or shared photo album.
  2. Test the link on a phone without using your own planning account.
  3. Generate a high-contrast QR code that fits the invitation or sign style.
  4. Start stationery files from the SVG; share quick proofs as PNG.
  5. Print a sample at final size and ask someone else to scan it before ordering.

Where wedding QR codes fit

  • RSVP cards
  • Venue maps
  • Shared photo albums

Wedding link checks

  • Use one wedding hub page when invitations need to stay clean.
  • Test the code with family members who are not already logged into your planning tools.
  • Keep the printed wording warm and plain. Guests should understand the scan immediately.

Wedding QR mistakes to avoid

  • Printing separate QR codes for every wedding detail when one hub page would be calmer.
  • Using a planning-tool link that guests cannot open without the couple's account.
  • Choosing pale decorative colors that look nice but make the code harder to scan.

Wedding QR code questions

What should a wedding QR code link to?

Most couples use a wedding website or RSVP form. A single hub page can also hold maps, registry links, schedule details and photo sharing.

Will older guests know what to do?

Clear wording helps. Add a short line such as 'Scan to RSVP' and include a written URL or contact option when the response is important.

Can I use one QR code for several wedding links?

Yes, use a wedding website or hub page. That lets you update details without reprinting every card.

What size should a QR code be on a wedding invitation?

At least 2 cm wide for a standard invitation. If the card stock is textured or the print is foil, go a bit larger and print a test card first.

Can I match the QR code colors to our wedding theme?

Yes, but keep enough contrast between the dark modules and the background. Pastel-on-pastel combinations look elegant in a mockup and often fail in print. Test before ordering the full batch.

Should I put a registry link on the invitation?

Many etiquette guides suggest keeping registry details on the wedding website rather than the invitation itself. Link the QR code to your wedding website and let guests find the registry from there.

Can I use a QR code for a shared photo album?

Yes. Link to a shared Google Photos album or a simple upload page. Mention it on table cards or in a follow up message after the wedding so guests remember to use it.

What if my wedding website goes offline after the event?

The QR code will still scan, but it will lead to a dead page. If you want the code on keepsakes or thank you cards, make sure the site stays up at least a few months after the wedding.