Generate hundreds of QR codes at once. Same design, different data. Download as ZIP. Free, no signup.
Create Batch QR Codes →Batch mode lets you generate dozens or hundreds of QR codes in a single operation. You enter a list of data — URLs, text strings, WiFi credentials, or any other content — and the generator creates one QR code for each entry, all sharing the same visual design.
Instead of creating each code individually, adjusting the same style settings over and over, you design once and apply everywhere. The output is a ZIP file containing all your codes, ready to use.
This is the feature that turns a QR code designer into a production tool.
The workflow is straightforward:
Enter your data. Paste a list of entries, one per line. Each line becomes one QR code. For URLs, just paste the full links. For other content types, follow the format shown in the input area.
Design once. Choose your module style, colors, finder pattern, error correction level, and any other settings. This design applies to every code in the batch.
Preview. The designer shows a preview using the first entry in your list. Verify the design looks right and that the code scans correctly.
Generate. Hit the generate button. The browser processes all entries and creates the codes locally — nothing is uploaded to any server.
Download. A single ZIP file contains all your QR codes, named intelligently based on their content.
The entire process runs in your browser. Your data stays on your device, which matters when you are generating codes for sensitive information like internal URLs, employee IDs, or access credentials.
Attach unique QR codes to physical assets — laptops, tools, equipment, furniture. Each code links to an internal tracking page or asset management system. Generate all codes at once from a spreadsheet export, print them on label sheets, and you have a scannable inventory system.
Manufacturers and small businesses generating product labels can create unique QR codes for each serial number. Link each code to a product registration page, warranty claim form, or authenticity verification URL. Batch mode handles thousands of unique codes with consistent branding.
Conference organizers can generate personalized QR codes for every attendee — linking to their profile page, check-in system, or networking card. Print the codes on name badges or include them in confirmation emails. One batch run replaces hours of manual work.
HR departments can generate QR codes for every employee in one batch. Each code might link to a digital business card, internal directory entry, or building access system. The consistent design keeps the corporate look uniform across all cards.
Run campaigns where each flyer, postcard, or direct mail piece has a unique tracking URL. This lets you measure response rates per recipient or distribution channel. Prepare the URLs in a spreadsheet, paste them into batch mode, and generate all codes in seconds.
Teachers creating QR code scavenger hunts, interactive worksheets, or station-based activities can generate all codes at once. Each code links to a different question, resource, or task. Print them, cut them out, and distribute.
Agencies managing multiple properties can generate QR codes for every listing simultaneously. Each code links to the property page. Update the batch whenever new listings are added. Use the same branded style across all yard signs and brochures.
The quality of your batch output depends on well-prepared input data.
One entry per line. Each line in the input field becomes one QR code. Blank lines are ignored. Do not add headers, labels, or extra formatting.
Use complete URLs. Always include the full URL with https://. Do not rely on the generator to add the protocol — partial URLs may not scan correctly on all devices.
Keep URLs short. Shorter data produces simpler QR codes that scan faster and print smaller. If your URLs contain long tracking parameters, run them through a URL shortener before generating the batch.
Check for duplicates. Duplicate entries produce duplicate codes. If you are working from a spreadsheet, remove duplicates before pasting.
Export from spreadsheets. Most spreadsheet applications (Excel, Google Sheets) let you copy a single column and paste it directly into the batch input. Select the column with your URLs or data, copy, and paste.
Validate your data. The generator will create a QR code for whatever you give it — including typos. Double-check your list before generating, especially for large batches where a mistake in line 47 is easy to miss.
When you download a batch, the ZIP file contains one file per QR code. Files are named based on the encoded content to make identification easy:
For large batches, consider organizing your input data by category or purpose. You can run multiple smaller batches with different file naming patterns to keep things organized in your file system.
One of the main advantages of batch mode is visual consistency. When you place QR codes on a series of related materials — a product line, a set of event materials, or a multi-location campaign — having the same style, colors, and branding on every code creates a professional, cohesive look.
Design your QR code carefully using the first entry, then generate the full batch. Every code will share the same module style, color scheme, finder pattern, and layout. The only thing that changes is the encoded data.
Batch mode supports both formats:
SVG is the better choice for print. Vector files scale to any size without quality loss — from tiny labels to large banners. SVG files also tend to be smaller for QR codes, since the shapes are described mathematically rather than as pixel grids.
PNG works best for digital use — websites, emails, social media, and presentations. Choose a resolution that matches your display size. For most digital contexts, 500-1000 pixels is sufficient.
You choose the format before generating the batch. If you need both, run the batch twice — once for SVG, once for PNG.
Everything runs locally in your browser. No data is uploaded, stored, or processed on any server. This makes batch mode safe for generating codes that contain sensitive information — internal company URLs, employee identifiers, access tokens, or anything else you would not want a third party to see.
This is a significant differentiator. Most online batch generators require you to upload a CSV file to their server, which processes the data and returns the codes. That means your data passes through — and potentially stays on — someone else’s infrastructure. Our generator avoids this entirely.
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Yes, completely free. No signup, no watermark, no limit on the number of codes you can generate in a single batch.
There is no hard limit. Practical performance depends on your browser, but generating hundreds of codes in a single batch is no problem. For very large batches (thousands), consider splitting into multiple runs.
No. All QR code generation happens entirely in your browser. Your URLs, WiFi passwords, contact details, and other data never leave your device.
Batch mode applies the same design to all codes — that is the point. If you need different designs, generate separate batches or create codes individually.
You can download batch codes as SVG (vector, perfect for print) or PNG (raster, for digital use). The entire batch downloads as a single ZIP file.
Each file is named based on its content — for URLs, the domain name is used. This makes it easy to find specific codes in a large batch without opening every file.
45+ artistic styles, free SVG export, no signup needed.
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