Create a free QR code

In seconds, directly in your browser. For business cards, menus, Wi-Fi, weddings, social media and 600+ ideas.

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No watermarkClean result
Unlimited validityNever expires
Commercial useFor business too

Your QR code is created directly from your input. We do not replace your link with a tracking URL. Everything happens in your browser.

All generator features

Easy Free QR offers 10 content types (URL, text, email, phone, SMS, Wi-Fi, vCard, geo, WhatsApp, social media), 8 design styles, logo insertion, 5 download formats (PNG, SVG, PDF, JPG, WebP) and up to 4K resolution. All free, no signup.

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What can you use QR codes for in Pakistan?

From Empress Market stalls in Karachi to Liberty boutiques in Lahore and pakora vendors in Peshawar's Qissa Khwani, QR codes have become the new "JazzCash bhej do" shortcut. Customers expect to scan rather than dictate an eleven-digit account number while juggling a hot plate of biryani. Print one on your dukaan banner, mehndi invitation or chai dhaba menu, and you save everyone the masala of wrong references and "paisay aagaye?" calls.

Kirana stores, general stores and tandoors

Kirana owners in Saddar, general-store walay in Gulberg and tandoor walay along Tariq Road now paste QR codes beside the daal sacks and naan racks. One scan opens JazzCash, EasyPaisa or a Raast prompt with the merchant ID pre-filled — no more dictating a long number over the karahi noise, and far fewer "ghalat number par bhej diya" disasters at the end of the day.

Rickshaws, Careem, inDrive and Bykea

Careem captains, inDrive bikers and rickshaw walay across Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad keep a laminated QR on the dashboard or under the sun-visor. Passengers without change scan to settle the kiraya through JazzCash, EasyPaisa or HBL Konnect, which beats hunting for chillar after a 600-rupee ride at 2 a.m. on Shahrah-e-Faisal.

Biryani houses, nihari spots and chapli kebab stalls

Replace the laminated menu with a QR on every table. Customers at Karachi biryani joints in Burns Road, nihari spots in Lahore's Lakshmi Chowk and chapli kebab stalls along Peshawar's Namak Mandi scan to view the menu and pay through JazzCash, EasyPaisa or a Meezan bank-app link. Bumping the price of mutton karahi after a meat-rate hike takes a minute, not another trip to the printer at Urdu Bazaar.

Mehndi, mayoun and walima invitations

Wedding committees from Defence Karachi to Bahria Town Rawalpindi print a QR on the mehndi card and walima envelope. Cousins and chachus scan to send their salami or family-fund contribution through JazzCash, EasyPaisa or a Raast IBAN — and uncle in Dubai or Toronto chips in without the hawala headache. The mama running the salami register suddenly stops chasing screenshots on Monday morning.

Online sellers on Daraz, Instagram and WhatsApp

Daraz sellers, IG shops moving lawn suits from Anarkali and WhatsApp jewellers in Tariq Road slap a QR code on every parcel. One scan reopens the catalogue, the IG handle or the Daraz store so the customer always finds the way back — even after the page rebrands for Eid season. Returns and reviews stop drifting to competitors' DMs.

Beauty salons, barbers and mehndi artists

Beauticians in DHA Lahore, barbers along F-7 Islamabad and bridal mehndi artists in Karachi print QR codes on the mirror and salon window. Clients scan to book a slot, view a portfolio of recent bridal looks or fades, and pay deposits via JazzCash or EasyPaisa. Far tidier than scrolling fifty WhatsApp statuses for the latest Eid bridal rate list.

How QR codes work

The QR code was invented in 1994 in Japan by Masahiro Hara and his team at Denso Wave, a subsidiary of Toyota, to track car parts on the assembly line. "QR" stands for "Quick Response" — meaning the pattern can be read at speed, even on an angle or partly smudged with chai. Three decades later, that same little black-and-white square is what reads JazzCash payments at a Karachi paan-walla and a Murree petrol pump alike.

A pattern, not a server call

A QR is simply a 2D pattern that encodes text — a URL, a Raast IBAN, a vCard or your Wi-Fi password. When a phone reads it, the camera decodes the pattern directly. No internet round-trip required. That is why your QR on the dukaan window still scans even when K-Electric just announced load-shedding and Jazz 4G is crawling at the bazaar.

Easy Free QR runs entirely in your browser

When you type a link or your Raast ID into Easy Free QR, the pattern is drawn right inside your phone or laptop. Your input never leaves the device, never lands on a foreign server, and never gets swapped for a tracking URL. The PNG or SVG file you download is exactly what your customers will scan — no middleman, no funny redirects.

Static vs dynamic QR codes

Two kinds of QR codes circulate in Pakistan, and the difference matters more than most dukaan owners realise. Easy Free QR creates static codes — the kind that keep working long after a fancy provider has shut their head office in Karachi.

Static QR codes (what we generate)

The data is encoded directly inside the pattern. No monthly bill, no expiry date, no surprise debit on your HBL or UBL card. Perfect for JazzCash and EasyPaisa merchant codes, Raast IBANs, mehndi invitation cards and Liberty Market shop banners. Once your printer in Urdu Bazaar has run the job, the code works for years — even if Easy Free QR closed down tomorrow, your banner still scans.

Dynamic QR codes (what others sell)

Dynamic codes route through someone else's server. They let you change the destination later, but they need an active dollar subscription. The moment that company shuts down or your card stops working, every banner you printed becomes dead weight. For most Pakistani SMEs, static is far safer — pay your printer once and stop worrying about renewals and SBP regulatory shifts.

Frequently asked questions

Is Easy Free QR really 100% free?

Yes, completely and forever — also for commercial use. No signup, no trial period, no watermark, and no "first month free" trick that suddenly debits your HBL card.

Does it work with JazzCash and EasyPaisa?

Yes. Copy your JazzCash merchant link, EasyPaisa QR string or your registered shop number, paste it into Easy Free QR as a URL or text input, and the generated image is read by both wallets through their built-in scanner. Customers tap, confirm the rupee amount, and your dukaan gets the SMS notification before they finish their chai.

Can I use it with Raast and bank apps?

Yes. Any Raast Person-to-Merchant link, IBAN payment URL, or a deep link from HBL, MCB, UBL, Meezan, Standard Chartered or Bank Alfalah can be encoded as a QR. You can also encode plain text like "Raast: 92300XXXXXXX — Shop Name" if you prefer customers to read it. The QR is just a faster way to deliver that string from your counter to their phone.

Can I use it for mehndi, mayoun and walima salami?

Yes — one of the most loved uses in Pakistan. Generate a QR pointing to your JazzCash merchant, EasyPaisa shop or Raast ID, and print it onto the mehndi card, mayoun invitation or walima envelope. Far-away cousins in Dubai, Riyadh, London and Toronto can scan and send salami without the hawala or wire-transfer hassle.

Is it compliant with FBR e-invoicing and PDPL?

Easy Free QR runs entirely in your browser, which keeps you in line with the upcoming Personal Data Protection Bill / PDPL and SBP's general guidance on QR-based payments. We never see what you encode, never store the link, and never log who scans the code. For an FBR POS-integrated invoice, you would still encode your FBR-generated invoice URL and we simply turn that text into a scannable pattern — no data leaves your device through us.

Do you track my links?

No. The QR contains exactly what you type. We do not redirect through our servers and we do not see who scans the code. What you encode is what gets printed — and what reaches your customer's JazzCash, EasyPaisa or Meezan app.

Does the QR code expire?

No, never. Easy Free QR generates static QR codes — the content lives inside the image itself. Your dukaan banner, walima card or biryani-house menu will keep scanning long after you have forgotten about us.

Will it still scan if my customer has no data?

The decoding works fully offline since the data is inside the pattern. If you encode a phone number, vCard or plain text, no internet is needed at all. If you encode a URL or payment page, the customer only needs a signal to load the destination — useful to know in interior Sindh or rural KP where Jazz, Telenor and Zong reception drops in and out.

Can I add my shop logo or Urdu wordmark?

Yes. You can drop a logo, an Urdu wordmark or your shop name in Nastaliq in the centre of the code, and pick brand colours to match. The built-in error correction keeps it scannable even when the logo covers up to about 30 percent of the surface — plenty of room for a green-and-white motif or a truck-art accent.

Can I use it for my business and commercial work?

Of course. Whether you run a kirana in Saddar, a biryani spot in Burns Road, or a lawn-suit IG page from Multan, every QR you generate is yours to use commercially with zero royalty and zero licensing fee. Print it on flex banners, packaging, rickshaw bumpers or your dispatch-rider's jacket.