Branded QR Code Generator
Add your logo, brand colors, and a frame. Higher scan rates than plain QR codes — for free.
Pattern
Eyes






The basics
What Makes a QR Code “Branded”
A branded QR code is a QR code that carries your visual identity: your logo in the center, your brand colors on the dots and background, and a frame with a call-to-action. The underlying QR pattern is identical to a plain black-and-white one — the same data, the same scan compatibility. What changes is the design treatment.
The point isn't cosmetic. Branded QR codes get scanned more often than plain ones because they look like part of a designed experience rather than an alien technical symbol. They also reinforce brand recognition every time someone interacts with them: at a restaurant table, on a business card, on packaging, on a real estate sign. A plain black QR code is a missed branding opportunity.
The trade-off: a poorly designed branded QR can fail to scan. The good news is that QR codes have built-in error correction precisely to allow logo placement and design treatments. The rest of this page covers the design rules that keep your branded QR scannable.
Five steps
How to Create a Branded QR Code
Enter Your Destination
Step 1Paste the URL you want the QR code to open. Or pick a QR type like vCard, WiFi, menu, or social media and fill in the fields.
Upload Your Logo
Step 2Upload your logo as a PNG (transparent background ideal) or SVG. The generator centers it and adjusts the QR pattern around it to keep the code scannable.
Pick Your Colors
Step 3Choose foreground (dots) and background colors that match your brand. Keep contrast high — dark dots on a light background scan most reliably.
Add a Frame
Step 4Optional but high-impact: add a frame with call-to-action text like “Scan to follow,” “Scan for menu,” or “Scan to review.”
Download & Test
Step 5Download as SVG for print or PNG for digital. Always test-scan from a realistic distance on iPhone and Android before producing in volume.
Comparison
Plain QR Code vs Branded QR Code
Functionally, both encode the same data and scan the same way. The difference is in trust, scan rate, and brand reinforcement.
Plain QR Code
GenericBlack-and-white, no logo, no frame, no design treatment. Encodes data perfectly but looks like a technical artifact. Lower scan rates because users don't know what's on the other side and don't recognize the source.
- Encodes data
- Universally scannable
- Logo
- Brand colors
- Call-to-action frame
- Brand recognition on every scan
Branded QR Code
RecommendedYour logo in the center, your brand colors on the dots and background, a frame with a CTA. Same scan compatibility, plus brand reinforcement and noticeably higher scan rates because users trust the source.
- Encodes data
- Universally scannable
- Logo
- Brand colors
- Call-to-action frame
- Brand recognition on every scan
Design rules
Six Design Principles for Branded QR Codes
Follow these and your branded QR will scan reliably on every modern phone. Ignore them and you risk scan failures, especially on older devices.
Logo at 20-25% of total area
Larger logos cause scan failures even with high error correction. Keep yours centered, sized at no more than 25% of the QR’s area, with a small white border around it.
High contrast on the dots
Dark foreground on a light background scans most reliably. Brand color on white is usually fine. Light dots on a dark background is risky and should be tested heavily.
High error correction (Level H)
Error correction lets the QR survive damage, smudges, or a centered logo. Level H recovers up to 30% of the code, which is what makes branded designs possible.
Keep the three corner squares clean
The three large squares in the corners are position-detection markers. Don’t put your logo or any decoration over them. Phones use them to orient the scan.
Quiet zone (white border)
Leave at least a 4-module quiet zone around the QR — that’s the white border. Without it, surrounding text or imagery confuses the scanner.
Add a frame with a CTA
A simple frame with “Scan to follow,” “Scan for menu,” or “Scan to review” lifts scan rates noticeably. People scan things when they know what’s on the other side.
Where to use them
Where Branded QR Codes Earn Their Keep
Restaurants & cafes
Branded menu QR codes on table tents, receipts, and packaging. The frame says “Scan for menu” in your brand colors.
Real estate
Branded QR codes on yard signs and listing flyers that link to virtual tours, listing details, or your agent vCard.
Networking & business cards
Branded vCard QR codes that share your full contact info in one scan. Carries your logo on every card you hand out.
Product packaging
Branded QR codes on retail packaging linking to a product video, how-to guide, or registration page. Reinforces brand at every scan.
Events & ticketing
Branded QR codes on event signage, lanyards, and welcome packs. Use a frame matching the event theme.
Marketing campaigns
Branded QR codes on flyers, posters, and direct mail. Track scans by placement so you know which channels are working.
Avoid these
Six Mistakes That Break Branded QR Codes
Logo too big
Anything over 30% of the area starts breaking scans on older phones. Stay at 20-25%.
Red foreground
Phone cameras struggle with red dots on white. Use dark blue, dark green, or black instead.
Decorating the corner squares
The three position markers must stay readable. Don’t put logo elements over them.
Missing quiet zone
Printing the QR right against text or graphics breaks scanning. Always leave a white border.
Low resolution download
Screenshotting a QR and enlarging it pixelates the design. Download as SVG for any print use.
Skipping the print test
Designs that look fine on screen sometimes fail on print. Test-scan the printed version from a realistic distance on iPhone and Android before producing in volume.
Branded QR Code — Frequently Asked Questions
Get started
Create Your Branded
QR Code Free
Logo, brand colors, frame — in under a minute. No account, no watermark, print-ready download.
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Published: May 2026