Skip the "Search for Us on Facebook"

When you ask someone to "look us up on Facebook," a lot of them never do. They forget the exact name, tap the wrong page, or just give up. A QR code for your Facebook page saves them all that — they scan, they tap, and they're on your page following you.

Easy QR makes a crisp, easy-to-scan code for any social link you've got: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, YouTube, X — you name it. Grab a free static code from our home page, or create an editable QR code you can point somewhere new whenever your socials change.

Making the Facebook QR Code, Step by Step

  1. Open your Facebook page in a browser. Make sure you're looking at the page people see, not your admin view. The web address should read something like facebook.com/YourPageName or facebook.com/profile.php?id=...
  2. Copy the address from the top of the browser. If you have the short version — facebook.com/YourPageName — use that. It's tidier and makes a cleaner-looking code.
  3. Paste it into Easy QR. Your code shows up right away. Save it as a PNG, JPG, or SVG and it's ready for the printer.
  4. Give it a quick test with your own phone. Point your camera at it and check it opens your Facebook page — in the app if you've got it, or in the browser if not.

Doing the Same for an Instagram Profile

  1. Find your Instagram link. It's simply instagram.com/yourhandle. Copy it from the browser on a computer, or in the app tap the share icon on your profile and pick "Copy Link."
  2. Drop it into Easy QR. Just like Facebook — paste it in, see the code, save it.
  3. Think you'll switch it later? If you might feature a different profile down the line — a new TikTok, a changed handle — make it a dynamic code. Then the same printed code can point somewhere new, and you never have to reprint.

And the Same Trick for LinkedIn

  1. Copy your LinkedIn link. For yourself it's linkedin.com/in/yourname; for a business it's linkedin.com/company/yourcompany. If your personal link is a jumble of letters and numbers, tidy it up first under "Edit public profile & URL."
  2. Paste it into Easy QR. A LinkedIn link works exactly like any other link here.
  3. Put it on your card or a handout. A LinkedIn code is brilliant at events and trade shows — someone scans it and connecting with you is one tap away.

Handy Places to Put a Social QR Code

On the Shop Counter

A little card or window sticker saying "Follow us on Instagram" with a code — no typing, no searching, just a quick scan.

In a Café or Restaurant

Pop one on a table card or the receipt so happy customers can find you and give you a tag.

For Real Estate Agents

Yard signs, cards, open-house handouts — send people to your Facebook or Instagram for a look at past listings.

Promoting an Event

On posters and flyers for shows, markets, and pop-ups, so people can follow the event page and stay in the loop.

On Your Business Card

Swap a stack of "@handle" lines for one code that takes people straight to your LinkedIn or Instagram.

At a Trade Show Booth

A poster that says "Follow us for the demo recording" turns curious passers-by into followers.

Static or Editable — Which One Suits You?

Static (Free, No Account) Editable Dynamic
What it costs Free forever Part of a paid plan
Change where it goes later No Yes — point it at a new profile anytime
See who's scanning No How many, when, where, and on what device
Best when Your handle won't change — cards, stickers, signs Running campaigns or switching between profiles

A Few Questions People Ask

Does it open the Facebook app or the browser?

If someone has the Facebook app, scanning usually opens your page right inside it. If they don't, it opens Facebook in their browser instead. Either way it works, and either way they can follow.

Can one code link to all my profiles at once?

Not on its own — a single code goes to one place. The trick is to point it at a simple "all my links" page on your own site that lists everything. Or use an editable QR code and switch which profile it features whenever you like.

Instagram already has a QR code — why use this?

Instagram's built-in code is handy if you only need it inside the Instagram app. An Easy QR code works anywhere — any camera, any phone — and you get a file you can print at any size, with no watermark and nothing tying it to one app.

What if my Facebook page name changes later?

A free static code is locked to the link you used, so if that web address changes, the old code stops working. An editable code gets around this: you just update where it goes, and the same printed code carries on as normal.

How big should I print it?

On a business card, aim for about 1.5–2cm. On a poster or window, go bigger — 4–8cm — so people can scan it from a step or two away. Whatever the size, print one and test it before you order a whole batch.