In1.

vCard QR code generator

Create a QR code that adds your contact details to someone's phone when they scan it. Fill in your name, phone, email and more, and download a PNG for your business card, email signature or badge.

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How to use vCard QR Code Generator

  1. 1

    Fill in your details

    Enter your name, phone, email and any other contact fields you want to share.

  2. 2

    Watch the code build

    The vCard QR code updates instantly as you type.

  3. 3

    Download the PNG

    Download the image once your details are complete.

  4. 4

    Add it anywhere

    Put it on a business card, email signature, badge or website.

Share your contact details with one scan

Exchanging contact details is still surprisingly clumsy: you spell out an email address, dictate a phone number, or hope a paper business card does not get lost. A vCard QR code makes it effortless. It encodes your details in the standard vCard format that phones understand, so when someone scans it, their device offers to save a new contact with your name, number, email and everything else already filled in — no typing, no transcription errors, no missed digits. You create the code once and it works for everyone you meet. This is the modern, frictionless way to hand over your details, and because it uses the universal vCard standard rather than a proprietary system, it works across iPhones and Android phones alike with the built-in camera. Whether you are networking at an event, meeting a new client, or simply want people to be able to save your details reliably, a single scan replaces a whole awkward exchange and ensures your information lands in their contacts exactly as you intended.

Everything that belongs on a business card

A good contact entry is more than a name and number, so the generator lets you include the full set of details that make up a professional identity. Add your first and last name, your mobile number, your email address, your organization, your job title and your website. Each field you fill in becomes part of the vCard, and the ones you leave blank are simply omitted, so the saved contact contains exactly what you choose to share and nothing extra. This means the same tool works for a complete professional profile and for a minimal name-and-number card, depending on what you want to give out. Because the details are encoded directly into the QR code, the recipient gets a properly structured contact — with the phone in the phone field and the email in the email field — rather than a blob of text they have to sort out themselves. It is the digital equivalent of a complete, correctly formatted business card that saves itself.

Put it anywhere people will see it

Once generated, the QR code is a plain PNG image, which means you can place it wherever it is useful. Print it on your physical business card so a scan saves your details instantly alongside the printed version. Add it to your email signature so every message gives recipients a one-tap way to save your contact. Put it on a conference badge, a name tag, a slide at the end of a talk, a poster, or a storefront. Include it in a digital resume or a personal website. Because it is an ordinary image, it drops into any design or print workflow without special tools. And if your details change — a new number, a new role, a new company — you generate a fresh code in seconds and update wherever it appears. This flexibility is what makes a vCard QR code so practical: a single small graphic that turns any surface, physical or digital, into a way for people to capture your contact information correctly and instantly.

Private by design — your details stay on your device

Your contact information is personal, and how a generator handles it matters. In1 builds the vCard QR code entirely in your browser. The name, number, email and other details you enter are assembled into the QR code on your own device and are never uploaded, transmitted or stored on any server. There is no account, no tracking and nothing retained after you close the tab. This local-only approach means you are not registering your personal details with a third-party service or trusting them to keep your information safe — the code is yours, generated privately, and the only people who ever receive your details are the ones you choose to show the code to. Because everything runs locally, generation is instant and works offline too. You get the convenience of a polished, scannable contact card with the assurance that creating it did not involve handing your personal information to anyone, which is exactly the standard a tool that handles your identity should meet.

Who uses a vCard QR code?

It has become a staple of modern networking and professional presence. Salespeople, founders and freelancers add it to business cards and email signatures so prospects and contacts can save their details in a tap. Conference and event attendees wear it on badges to make exchanging contacts painless. Speakers put it on a closing slide so the audience can connect. Real estate agents, consultants and tradespeople include it on signage and marketing material. Job seekers add it to a resume or portfolio. Small businesses place it at the point of sale or on storefronts so customers can save their contact and find them again. Anyone who regularly hands out their details — and wants them saved accurately rather than mistyped — benefits from a code that encodes a full, standard contact and works with any modern phone's camera. Because the generator is free, private and produces a printable image, it fits a printed card, a digital signature and everything in between, without an account or any upload of personal data.

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