For Weddings.
Replace the loose RSVP card, the directions insert, the hotel block flyer — all of it — with one scannable code on the back of your invitation. Match your palette, add a monogram, print it on the welcome sign too.
Make Your Wedding QR Code →Where a wedding QR earns its place
Invitations & Save-the-Dates
On the corner of the card. One scan opens your wedding website — RSVP, registry, hotel block, dress code.
Welcome Signs
At the venue entrance. Guests scan for seating chart, schedule, or the night's hashtag.
Menu Cards & Coasters
Scannable cocktail list, allergens, or a fun fact about you and your partner.
Thank-You Notes
Post-wedding cards with a QR to the photo gallery. Guests relive the day and you get one less email to send.
How to make a wedding QR code
- Set up your wedding website (The Knot, Zola, Squarespace, Notion). Copy the public URL.
- Paste it into QRKong. Pick a colour from your wedding palette for the dots and ivory or off-white for the background.
- Add your monogram or a small heart in the centre — keep it under a quarter of the code's area so the scan still works.
- Download the PNG and hand it to your stationer. Print 2–3 cm on invites, 8–12 cm on venue signs.
Common questions
Most couples point it at their wedding website (The Knot, Zola, Squarespace, a free Notion page). That single page can hold RSVPs, the registry, hotel blocks, dress code, and travel info.
For QRs that go on the invite itself, RSVP forms or the website are the two highest-impact links.
Yes — pick any custom colour for the dots and background. Just keep the contrast ratio above ~4:1 so smartphone cameras can still scan in low candlelight.
For a soirée with deep colours, set the dots to your accent and the background to ivory or off-white. Pure black-on-white always works as a backup.
Minimum 2 cm (0.8 inch) on the corner of an invite read at arm's length. 3-4 cm on a save-the-date or table sign.
For freestanding signs at the venue (RSVP, photo wall, seating chart), 8-12 cm scans cleanly from a metre away.
The QR code itself never expires — it's just an encoded URL. As long as the destination URL keeps working, the printed code keeps working.
To stay safe, point the QR at a URL you own and control — your own domain or a platform you plan to keep active. Avoid free-tier hosting that might disappear.
Yes — QRKong's editor lets you drop in any image (your monogram, a heart, the wedding logo). Error correction handles up to ~30% blockage so the scan keeps working.
Keep the logo to under a quarter of the code's area. Always test the final design with two or three phones before printing 150 invitations.
Questions? · hi@qrkong.com