YouTube QR Code Generator

Make a QR code for YouTube videos, Shorts, channel subscriptions and live premieres with tracking included.

COMPANIES OF ALL SIZES TRUST US

What is a YouTube QR code and how does it work

A YouTube QR code is a QR code that opens a video, channel, Shorts, playlist or live stream from any phone camera with a single tap. The code stores the public youtube.com URL or a youtu.be short link, so people land straight on the content in iOS, Android or any modern browser. Creator guidance is available from YouTube Creator Academy.

Add your logo, brand colours and AI-generated designs so the code fits your creator identity, campaign or live event. Print it on business cards, speaker badges, podcast artwork, vinyl inserts, concert posters, exhibition stands, classroom handouts, lab guides, wedding live-stream invites or merch tags. Every YouTube QR code is dynamic by default, so you can change the destination in your dashboard and track every scan across campaigns or test different subscribe-confirmation variants without reprinting.

Turn a YouTube URL into a QR code in 3 steps

Copy the YouTube link from the Share menu or address bar, personalise the QR code with your logo and AI-generated designs, then download it in PNG, SVG or PDF for business cards, speaker badges or lesson handouts.

  1. Step 1

    Copy your YouTube URL

    Open YouTube and find the video, channel, Shorts, playlist or live stream you want to share. Tap Share and Copy Link. Add ?sub_confirmation=1 to channel URLs for a subscribe prompt, or ?t=<seconds> for a jump to a specific timestamp.

  2. Step 2

    Personalise the QR code

    Add your logo, brand colours and pixel patterns. Choose from 1200+ templates or generate QR Art to match your creator identity, podcast artwork, album insert, concert poster, conference badge, lesson handout or merch tag.

  3. Step 3

    Print and share

    Export in PNG, SVG or PDF for any printer or screen. Print on business cards, speaker badges, podcast artwork, lesson handouts, merch tags or video end screens. Check that the scan behaviour matches your goal first, whether that is subscribe, timestamp jump or Shorts.

Frequently asked questions about YouTube QR codes

Sharing YouTube videos and channels with QR codes.

A YouTube QR code turns any youtube.com or youtu.be link into a scannable code that opens a video, channel, Shorts, playlist or live stream. Open YouTube, go to the content you want to share, tap Share and copy the link. Paste it into QR Code AI, customise it with your logo and brand colours, then download it in PNG, SVG or PDF for business cards, speaker badges, lesson handouts or merch tags.

Yes. You can create a free QR code for a YouTube link with QR Code AI. Generate it, customise it with your logo, brand colours and AI-designed templates, then download it in PNG, SVG or PDF without watermarks. Most YouTube QR codes are dynamic by default, so you can edit the destination after printing and track scans in your dashboard by country, device, browser and time.

Yes. Add ?t=<seconds> to the youtube.com URL and the QR code will open the video at that exact point. For example, ?t=120 starts playback at 2 minutes. This is useful for tutorial QR codes, lesson materials that point to a specific section, or replay links for live events where viewers need to skip the countdown.

A YouTube Shorts URL opens a full-screen vertical viewing experience designed for short-form content, while a standard video URL opens the regular player with timeline controls. Shorts QR codes are often better for print campaigns aimed at younger audiences and social promotion. Standard video QR codes are usually a better fit for tutorials, education and brand campaigns.

Use a YouTube QR code when you want to send people to long-form videos, tutorials, podcast replays or a channel subscription page with ?sub_confirmation=1. Use a TikTok QR code when the destination is short-form vertical content, sound remixes or hashtag challenges. Creators who publish on both platforms often print both together with a short label so people can choose the format they prefer.