Contact QR Code Generator (vCard) — scan to save to contacts
Turn your name, phone, email, company and website into one vCard QR code, and a scan saves your full details straight into someone's phone contacts — no typing field by field. Printed on a card, standee or email signature, it's the fastest way to be saved. Local, no upload; the static code never expires.
A contact QR code (vCard) encodes a name, phone, email, company and website into the contact-standard vCard format. Scanning pops up a contact card; tapping 'Add to Contacts' saves every field at once, no typing. It's best printed on physical business cards, standees and email signatures. Fill in the details below to generate; your info is processed locally and never uploaded.
Style
Enter content to see your QR code
vCard code vs phone / email code
A phone code only gets people to 'call this number' and an email code only to 'email this address' — single actions. A vCard code bundles your whole set of details (name, phone, email, company, title, website), so one scan saves the lot into contacts and you're findable forever. So: to be remembered and contacted long-term, use a vCard code; to nudge a single immediate call or email, use a phone / email code. For a business card, vCard is the default.
Fill only the fields you want to share
Every vCard field is optional: fill only what you're happy to share publicly, and blanks won't appear on the card the other person receives — no empty lines. A common set is name, mobile, email, company and website. Download the code as vector SVG for the print shop (sharp at any size); PNG is fine for an email signature. Every field is encoded into the QR locally in your browser, never uploaded or logged.
Frequently asked questions
How does scanning save it to contacts?
vCard is the contacts standard. Scanning the code with a camera or scanner app pops up a contact card with your name, phone, email and so on; tapping 'Add to Contacts' saves it with every field filled in automatically.
Can I fill in only some of the info?
Yes. Every field is optional — fill only what you'll share publicly, and blanks won't appear on the other person's card. A common set is name, mobile, email, company and website.
How do I print the contact code on a real card?
Download the SVG vector and hand it to any print service; it stays sharp at card size. Use the preview to confirm it still scans with a logo on it before you print.
Updated · QR Cat team