Rick Roll QR Code Generator

Create a free Rickroll QR code that sends people straight to the classic Rick Astley video for April Fools pranks, joke cards and meme merchandise.

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How Rickroll QR codes open the classic Astley video

A Rickroll QR code sends scanners to the classic Rick Astley music video for Never Gonna Give You Up, widely recognised as one of the internet’s best-known memes. The code stores the public YouTube URL ending in dQw4w9WgXcQ and works on iPhone, Android and any modern browser. One scan opens the video and delivers the joke instantly.

Add your logo, brand colours and AI-designed pixel styling to create a QR code for Rickroll campaigns, meme merchandise or escape room themes. Rick Astley has embraced the meme and keeps an official website with tour dates and artist news. Referenced in coverage of the March 2026 CBSE Maths exam Rickroll incident, the meme still appears in schools, universities and classrooms worldwide. Print it on prank cards, birthday card inserts, wedding place cards, backstage passes, scavenger hunt clues, classroom slides or viral campaign inserts.

Turn the classic video into a QR code in 3 steps

Choose the classic Rick Astley YouTube URL, customise the QR code with a logo and AI pixel styling, then download it as PNG, SVG or PDF for prank cards, April Fools handouts or meme merchandise.

  1. Step 1

    Choose the classic YouTube URL

    Use the classic Rick Astley URL ending in dQw4w9WgXcQ, the most-viewed matching YouTube result with 1.6B views. Full URL: youtu.be/dQw4w9WgXcQ. Test regional availability on iPhone and Android cameras.

  2. Step 2

    Customise the QR code

    Add your logo, brand colours and pixel patterns. Choose from 1200+ templates or generate AI-designed pixel styling to match your April Fools campaign, meme merchandise line, prank card insert, escape room theme or wedding place card design.

  3. Step 3

    Print and use it

    Export in PNG, SVG or PDF. Print on prank cards, birthday inserts, wedding place cards, scavenger hunt clues, classroom easter eggs or April Fools handouts. Test scanning on iPhone and Android.

Frequently asked questions about Rickroll QR codes

Sharing Rickroll pranks with QR codes

A Rickroll QR code stores the classic Rick Astley Never Gonna Give You Up URL, youtu.be/dQw4w9WgXcQ, so one scan opens the video on YouTube. Paste that link into QR Code AI, customise the design with playful pixel styling or innocent-looking branding, then download it as PNG, SVG or PDF. It works on iPhone, Android and modern browser cameras, making it suitable for April Fools handouts, prank greeting cards, stickers or event materials.

Prank QR codes work by storing a URL that opens an unexpected destination, while the QR design makes it look harmless or ordinary. When someone scans it expecting something genuine, their phone opens the surprise content instead. In a Rickroll example, that destination is the Rick Astley music video. Standard QR codes scan with built-in cameras on iPhone and Android, so the joke works without asking people to install a separate app.

Yes. Rickroll QR codes are free on QR Code AI. You can generate one, customise it with your logo, brand colours and AI-designed pixel templates, then download it as PNG, SVG or PDF without watermarks. Most Rickroll QR codes are dynamic by default, so you can edit the destination after printing and track each scan in your dashboard with country, device, browser and timestamp data.

Rickroll QR codes are commonly used in harmless placements such as April Fools handouts, prank greeting cards, birthday card inserts, wedding place cards, backstage passes, scavenger hunt clues, escape room hints, classroom slide easter eggs and viral campaign inserts. The 2022 Dallas drone swarm Rickroll also showed that the meme can work at outdoor advertising scale across a whole city.

No. QR Code AI supports the harmless cultural meme only. The platform does not allow codes that imitate official communications, hide phishing URLs or enable deceptive bait-and-switch attacks beyond the low-stakes Rick Astley joke. A harmless Rickroll points to a public YouTube URL that anyone can verify, while phishing QR codes lead to malicious copies and breach our terms of service immediately.

Use a Rickroll QR code when the joke itself is the destination, because it points to youtu.be/dQw4w9WgXcQ and always opens the classic Astley video. Use a plain URL QR code when you need a real campaign landing page, a reveal microsite or any non-meme destination. You can also combine both on April Fools cards, with the prank on the front and the real call to action on the back.