How to Use QR Codes on Business Cards in 2026
Business cards are still alive in 2026 — but the smart ones now come with QR codes. Instead of hoping someone manually types your website URL or email, a QR code lets them save your info with a single scan.
What Should Your Business Card QR Code Link To?
The most common options include your website, a vCard (digital contact card), your LinkedIn profile, a portfolio, or a landing page specifically designed for new contacts. The best choice depends on your industry and what action you want people to take after meeting you.
Option 1: Your Website URL
The simplest approach. Encode your website URL and anyone who scans gets taken directly to your site. This works well if your website clearly communicates who you are and what you do.
Option 2: A Digital Contact Card (vCard)
A vCard QR code lets the scanner save your name, phone, email, company, and title directly to their phone contacts. This is the most practical option for networking events.
Option 3: LinkedIn Profile
For professionals who network primarily through LinkedIn, linking to your profile lets people connect with you immediately.
Option 4: A Custom Landing Page
Create a simple page with all your links — website, social media, portfolio, booking page. This gives the scanner multiple options and tracks how many people actually scan your card.
Design Best Practices
- Size: Keep the QR code at least 1.5 cm × 1.5 cm (0.6 × 0.6 inches). Smaller codes may not scan reliably.
- Placement: The back of the card is the most common spot. Make sure there's enough white space (quiet zone) around the code.
- Colors: Match your brand colors but keep high contrast. Dark code on light background is safest.
- Logo: Adding your logo to the center of the QR code makes it look professional and branded. Use Error Correction H.
- Format: Always use SVG for print. It scales perfectly to any size without pixelation.
💡 Tip: Add a small call-to-action near the QR code like "Scan to connect" or "Scan for my portfolio." People are more likely to scan when they know what to expect.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Making the QR code too small — test it on your phone before printing
- Using low contrast colors that scanners can't read
- Encoding a URL that's too long (shorter URLs create simpler, more scannable codes)
- Not testing the final printed card with multiple phone models
- Forgetting the quiet zone — the blank border around the code is essential
QR Code vs NFC: Which Is Better for Business Cards?
NFC (tap-to-share) business cards are trendy but require special cards and don't work with all phones. QR codes work universally with any smartphone camera, cost nothing to add, and can be printed on standard card stock. For most people, QR codes are the practical choice.
Create Your Business Card QR Code
Choose your colors, add your logo, download as SVG for perfect print quality.
Create QR Code →