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














A YouTube QR code is a QR code that opens a video, channel, Shorts, playlist or live stream from any phone camera in a single tap. It converts a public youtube.com URL or youtu.be short link into a scannable format, so people can watch or subscribe straight away on iPhone, Android and modern browsers. You can also check creator guidance on YouTube Creator Academy.
Add your logo, brand colours and AI-generated designs so the code matches your creator identity, campaign or live event. Print it on creator visiting cards, conference speaker badges, podcast cover art, vinyl inserts, concert posters, trade show signage, classroom handouts, lab manuals, wedding live-stream invites or merch tags. Every YouTube QR code is a dynamic QR code by default, so you can update the destination later and track every scan across campaigns without printing again.
Copy the YouTube URL from the Share option or address bar, personalise the QR code with your logo and AI-generated designs, then download it in PNG, SVG or PDF for creator visiting cards, speaker badges or lesson handouts.
Open YouTube and find the video, channel, Shorts, playlist or live stream you want to share. Tap Share and copy the link. Add ?sub_confirmation=1 to a channel URL for a subscribe prompt, or ?t=<seconds> for a timestamp jump.
Add your logo, brand colours and pixel patterns. Choose from 1200+ templates or create QR Art that fits your creator identity, podcast cover art, album insert, concert poster, conference badge, lesson handout or merch tag.
Export in PNG, SVG or PDF for any printer or screen. Print it on creator visiting cards, speaker badges, podcast cover art, lesson handouts, merch tags or in-video end screens. Check the scan behaviour first so it matches your goal, such as subscribe prompt, timestamp jump or Shorts.
Turn any YouTube URL into a one-scan video or subscribe entry, add your logo for better recognition, track scan volume and timing across placements, and update the destination whenever needed.
See who scans your YouTube QR code, when they scan and from which placement. Real-time dashboards help creators, brands, teachers, event organisers and musicians measure performance.
Track scan counts
Convert long youtube.com URLs into custom short links with UTM parameters. Test subscribe-confirmation variants by placement and retire links safely after the campaign ends.
Shorten YouTube links
Add your logo, brand colours and AI-generated designs to every YouTube code. 1200+ templates are available for creators, brands, teachers, event organisers and musicians. Start with the ready YouTube video-logo template.
Customise your YouTube QRSharing YouTube videos, channels and Shorts 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 printing on visiting cards, badges, handouts or merch tags.
Yes. YouTube QR codes are free on QR Code AI. You can create them, customise them with your logo, brand colours and AI-designed templates, then download them 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 with country, device, browser and timestamp details.
Yes, a YouTube QR code can open a video at an exact timestamp when you add ?t=<seconds> to the youtube.com URL. For example, ?t=120 opens the video at the 2-minute mark. This is useful for tutorials, lesson chapters, product demos or event replay links where viewers should land on a specific moment instead of starting from the beginning.
A YouTube Shorts QR code opens the vertical full-screen Shorts experience, while a regular YouTube video QR code opens the standard video player with timeline controls. Shorts work well for youth-focused print campaigns and social cross-promotion. Regular video links are better for tutorials, educational content, interviews, product explainers and longer brand storytelling.
Use a YouTube QR code when you want people to watch long-form videos, tutorials, podcast replays or visit a channel with a subscribe prompt. Use a TikTok QR code when the goal is short-form vertical content, trend participation or hashtag discovery. Many creators place both together with a small label so viewers can choose the format they prefer.