WiFi QR code generator
Create a QR code that connects phones to your WiFi automatically when scanned — no spelling out the password. Enter your network details, choose the security type, and download a PNG to print or share.
How to use WiFi QR Code Generator
- 1
Enter your network name
Type the exact SSID of your WiFi network.
- 2
Add the password and security
Enter the password and choose WPA, WEP or no password; mark it hidden if needed.
- 3
Generate the code
A scannable WiFi QR code appears instantly.
- 4
Download and print
Download the PNG to print or share so guests can scan to connect.
Let guests connect by scanning, not typing
Sharing WiFi the usual way is a small but constant annoyance: you read out a long, cryptic password, your guest mistypes it, and you both try again. A WiFi QR code solves this completely. When someone points their phone's camera at the code, the device reads the network name and password and offers to connect with a single tap — no typing, no spelling out characters, no mistakes. This is the same standard built into modern phones, so it just works without any special app. You generate the code once and anyone can use it. It is perfect for a home where visitors come and go, and it transforms the experience from a fiddly exchange into an instant, effortless connection. Because the QR code encodes the credentials directly, even a complicated, secure password — exactly the kind you should be using — becomes trivial to share, which means you never have to weaken your WiFi security just to make it easier for guests to get online.
Perfect for cafes, offices and guest networks
WiFi QR codes are especially valuable anywhere people regularly need to get online. Cafes and restaurants print the code on table cards or receipts so customers connect in seconds without bothering staff. Offices and co-working spaces put it in meeting rooms and reception areas for visitors. Holiday rentals and hotels include it in the welcome pack so every guest can join without a support call. Shops, clinics and waiting rooms offer it to customers. Even at home, a printed code by the door or on the fridge saves you from reciting the password to every visitor. Anywhere a guest network exists, a QR code is the cleanest way to share it: it works for everyone, it does not require handing out the raw password verbally, and it can be reprinted or replaced whenever the password changes. A single small printout removes a recurring point of friction for both the people offering the WiFi and the people trying to use it.
Supports WPA, WEP and open networks
For the QR code to work, it has to describe your network's security correctly, so In1 lets you choose the encryption type. WPA and WPA2 cover virtually all modern secured networks and are the default. WEP is available for older equipment that still uses it. And for open networks with no password — common on genuinely public guest WiFi — you can select the no-password option, and the code is built accordingly without a password field. You can also mark the network as hidden if it does not broadcast its name, so the scanning device knows to look for it. Getting these details right matters, because a QR code that specifies the wrong security type may fail to connect even when the name and password are correct. By giving you the options explicitly and building the standard WiFi payload behind the scenes, the generator ensures the code matches how your network is actually configured, which is what makes it reliably connect across the wide range of phones people will scan it with.
Private by design — your password stays with you
A WiFi QR code contains your network password in plain form, so where that password is handled matters enormously. In1 generates the code entirely in your browser. The network name and password you enter are used to build the QR code right on your own device and are never uploaded, transmitted or stored anywhere. There is no account, no logging and nothing left behind when you close the tab. This is the only safe way to build such a tool: a WiFi generator that sent your password to a server would be handing over the keys to your network, which is exactly what you must avoid. Because everything is local, generation is also instant and works offline, and the resulting PNG is yours alone to print or share as you see fit. You get the convenience of an instant, scannable code with the assurance that your actual WiFi password never travelled across the internet to a stranger's machine just to be turned into an image.
Download, print and share
Once your code is ready, you download it as a standard PNG image, which you can use however suits your space. Print it on a card for the coffee table, add it to a framed sign for reception, include it in a digital welcome document, drop it into a poster, or simply stick it on the fridge. Because it is an ordinary image, it fits into any design or print workflow without special handling. If your password changes, you generate a fresh code in seconds and reprint it — far easier than re-explaining a new password to everyone. The code works with the built-in camera on modern phones, so guests need nothing beyond the device already in their pocket. This combination of an instant, private generator and a plain, printable output is what makes WiFi QR codes so practical: a one-time bit of setup that quietly removes the password hassle for everyone who visits, for as long as the code is up.
Higher limits, batch processing and an API are on the way. Want early access?
Frequently asked questions
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