Google Form QR Code Generator

Paste your Google Form link, get a QR code in a second. Download as PNG or SVG. Free, no sign-up.

Your QR code will appear here as you type

Generation runs entirely in your browser — the URL never leaves your device. PNG is best for slides and social; SVG is best for posters and anything you might resize later.

Instant

QR code appears as you type — no waiting

PNG & SVG

Vector for posters, raster for slides and social

Private

Runs in your browser — your link never hits our servers

Unlimited

No sign-up, no watermark, no rate limits

How to make a QR code for a Google Form

  1. 1

    Copy your Google Form link

    In your Google Form, click "Send" at the top-right, pick the link icon, and copy the URL (tick "Shorten URL" for a forms.gle link if you want).

  2. 2

    Paste the link into the generator

    Paste your Google Form URL into the input above. The QR code appears instantly — no sign-up required.

  3. 3

    Download as PNG or SVG

    Use PNG for printed materials (posters, flyers). Use SVG if you need to scale it to any size without losing quality.

Google Form QR Code FAQ

How do I make a QR code for a Google Form?

Open your Google Form, click "Send" at the top-right, copy the link, and paste it into the tool above. You'll see a QR code instantly that you can download as PNG or SVG. No sign-up.

Does this work with forms.gle short links?

Yes. Both forms.gle short URLs and the full docs.google.com/forms edit or response links are supported. Short links produce denser, scannable-at-smaller-size QR codes — use them for posters, badges, and business cards.

Is there a limit on how many QR codes I can generate?

No. The generator runs entirely in your browser — there's no server round-trip, no rate limit, and no sign-up.

Will the QR code keep working if I edit the Google Form?

Yes. The QR code encodes the form's URL, which doesn't change when you edit the form's questions. If you delete the form or restrict access, the QR code will stop working.

What's the difference between PNG and SVG?

PNG is a fixed-resolution image — good for pasting into posters, flyers, and social images. SVG is vector — it scales to any size without blurring, so pick it for large-format print or when you need to resize the QR later.

Can I use the QR code commercially?

Yes. QR codes themselves aren't copyrightable, so the generated image is free to use anywhere — flyers, packaging, billboards, business cards, slides.