QR Code for Google Forms: Share Your Form Instantly
Stop typing URLs on whiteboards or hoping attendees find your form. Turn any Google Form into a QR code — scan, fill, done. Works for events, surveys, lead capture, and more.
How to create a QR code for a Google Form
Best use cases
Event registration
Place a QR code at the venue entrance or on printed invitations. Attendees scan to register or check in without queues.
Feedback surveys
Put the QR on receipts, packaging, or conference badges. Collect real-time feedback while the experience is still fresh.
Lead capture
Print the QR on business cards or trade-show banners. Prospects scan and submit their details — straight into your Google Sheet.
Common questions
Can I put a Google Form on a QR code?
Yes. Open your Google Form, click the Send button, choose the link icon, copy the URL, and paste it into a QR generator like Dynamic QR. The QR code will open the form directly when scanned — no app required.
Does the QR code update if I edit the Google Form?
Yes. The QR code encodes the URL of the form, not the form content itself. As long as the form URL doesn't change, any edits you make to the form's questions will be reflected automatically when someone scans the code.
What's the best QR code size for a printed Google Form flyer?
For an A4 or Letter-size flyer, a QR code of at least 4 cm × 4 cm (roughly 1.5 inches) is recommended. The code should be scannable from a comfortable arm's length — about 20–30 cm away. Avoid placing it too close to the edge of the page.
Can respondents submit a Google Form anonymously via QR code?
That depends on your Google Form settings, not the QR code. If you disable 'Collect email addresses' in Form settings, respondents remain anonymous. The QR code simply opens the form URL — it doesn't change any form permissions.