Google Form QR Code — Create QR Code for Google Forms
Turn any Google Form into a scannable QR code in seconds — no signup, no cost, no expiry. Open your form, copy the respondent link from the Send dialog, paste it below, and download your QR code as PNG or SVG instantly.
How to Create a QR Code for Google Forms
- Open your Google Form. Go to Google Forms and open the form you want to share. Make sure the form is live and accepting responses.
- Click the Send button.In the top-right corner of the form editor, click the purple “Send” button to open the sharing dialog.
- Copy the form link.In the Send dialog, click the chain link icon to switch to the link tab. Optionally check “Shorten URL” for a cleaner link, then click “Copy”.
- Paste the link into the generator above. Replace the placeholder URL with your actual Google Form link. The QR code will update in real time as you type.
- Download your QR code. Choose PNG for digital sharing or SVG for high-quality printing. Adjust the size if needed before downloading.
- Print or share. Add the QR code to flyers, posters, event programmes, worksheets, or email newsletters. Anyone who scans it will be taken directly to your form.
Where to Use Google Form QR Codes
A QR code makes it effortless to direct people to your Google Form without typing a long URL. Here are five situations where a Google Form QR code adds real value:
- Event feedback: Place QR codes on tables, chairs, or signage at conferences, workshops, and seminars. Attendees can scan and submit feedback on the spot while the experience is still fresh.
- Classroom surveys: Teachers can print QR codes on handouts or display them on a projector screen. Students scan with their phones to complete exit tickets, quizzes, or course evaluations without needing to type the URL.
- RSVP forms: Add a QR code to printed invitations for parties, weddings, or corporate events. Guests scan to confirm attendance and submit dietary requirements or preferences in seconds.
- Customer feedback at stores: Print QR codes on receipts, packaging, table tents, or window stickers. Customers can leave feedback while they are still in the store or immediately after a purchase.
- Conference check-in: Use a QR code at a registration desk that links to a check-in form. Staff can also hand out printed cards with the QR code for self-service registration.
Tips for Google Form QR Codes
- Use the shortened URL option.In the Google Forms Send dialog, check the “Shorten URL” checkbox before copying the link. Shorter URLs produce less dense QR codes that are easier to scan, especially when printed at small sizes.
- Test scanning before printing. Always scan the QR code on screen with a real device before committing to print. Verify that it opens the correct form and that the form loads properly on a mobile browser.
- Print large enough. For flyers and posters, make the QR code at least 3 cm x 3 cm. For business cards, 1.5 cm x 1.5 cm is the practical minimum. Too small and low-end phone cameras will struggle to read it reliably.
- Check your form access settings.If you have enabled “Restrict to users in my organization” in the form settings, only people with a Google account in your organization can submit responses. If you want public responses, make sure this restriction is turned off before sharing the QR code.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find my Google Form link?▾
Open your Google Form in the editor. Click the 'Send' button in the top-right corner. In the Send dialog, click the link icon (chain link symbol). You will see the full form URL. You can also check the 'Shorten URL' checkbox to get a shorter link. Copy that URL and paste it into the generator above to create your QR code.
Will the QR code still work if I edit my form?▾
Yes. The QR code stores the URL of your form, not the form content. As long as the form URL stays the same, the QR code will always open the latest version of your form. You can add, remove, or reorder questions without regenerating the QR code. The only case where you would need a new QR code is if you delete the form and create a new one with a different URL.
Can I share the QR code without sharing the edit link?▾
Yes. The link you copy from the 'Send' dialog in Google Forms is the respondent link — it only allows people to fill in and submit the form. It does not give access to responses or editing. Your form editor link (ending in /edit) is a completely separate URL and is never included in the QR code unless you specifically copy and paste it.
Is the QR code free to use?▾
Yes, completely free. This generator creates static QR codes with no account required, no watermark, and no expiry date. The QR code permanently encodes your Google Form link and will work as long as the form remains accessible at that URL. Download your QR code as PNG or SVG and use it on any printed or digital material.
What size should I print the QR code?▾
For printed materials, a minimum size of 2 cm x 2 cm (about 0.8 inches square) is required for reliable scanning at typical distances. For posters and banners meant to be scanned from further away, scale up proportionally — a poster viewed from 1 metre away should have a QR code at least 8 cm x 8 cm. Always test scanning before committing to a large print run.
Can I use the QR code on printed materials?▾
Yes. Download the QR code as SVG for the best print quality at any size, or as PNG for digital use. SVG is a vector format that scales without losing sharpness, making it ideal for business cards, flyers, posters, and signage. Avoid stretching the QR code — always scale it proportionally to ensure scanners can read it correctly.