Free Google Maps QR Code Generator

Create a QR code that opens Google Maps directly to your address, business location, or specific coordinates. Scan, tap directions, drive. No address-typing, no spelling out cross streets.

Find your place on maps.google.com, click Share → Copy link, and paste it below. Short links like goo.gl/maps/... and full URLs both work.

Tip: search for your business name in Google Maps and use the Share button to get the short link.

Customize Colors

Add Logo (Optional)

Why Use a Google Maps QR Code?

Addresses are clunky on phones. You type, autocorrect mangles "St" into "Street," you forget the unit number, you end up half a block away. A Maps QR removes the typing entirely — one scan and the user is in turn-by-turn navigation.

Retail stores and restaurants put them on windows, takeout bags, and printed ads. Wedding and event planners include them on invitations so guests get directions instead of just an address. Real-estate agents stick them on yard signs so curious passers-by can pull up listings and directions in one motion.

Service businesses (locksmiths, plumbers, mobile mechanics) put them on vehicle wraps so customers can save the location of a job site or get directions back to the shop without having to find the website first.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get the right Google Maps URL?

Open Google Maps in a browser, search for the place, click Share, then Copy link. That URL is what to paste here. The link works whether the recipient has the Maps app installed (it'll open the app) or only a browser (it'll open maps.google.com).

Will it work for both iPhone Apple Maps users and Android?

The QR opens whatever default maps app the user has. On iPhones with Google Maps installed it opens Google Maps; without it, it opens Apple Maps via the address. The route still works either way.

Can I use this for a specific pin, not just an address?

Yes. Drop a pin in Google Maps, hit Share, and use that link. The QR will open exactly to that pin, even if it doesn't correspond to a numbered address.

What about coordinates instead of an address?

You can use a URL like https://maps.google.com/?q=40.7128,-74.0060 — replace the numbers with your latitude and longitude. Useful for trailheads, parking spots, and remote locations without a postal address.

Do I need to keep updating the QR if I move locations?

Yes — the QR encodes the specific URL. If you anticipate moving, encode a short link you control (Bitly, your own domain) and point that link to the current map URL. Then you can change the destination without reprinting.