Privacy Policy

Last updated: August 2025

FreeQRHub lets you generate QR codes quickly and privately. The QR generator runs entirely in your browser. Your input text (URLs, Wi-Fi strings, etc.) is processed locally on your device and is not transmitted to our servers.

What we collect

  • Accounts: We don’t use accounts and don’t collect names or emails.
  • Input content: We do not receive or store the text you type to create a QR code.
  • Analytics: None by default. If we add privacy-friendly, cookie-less analytics later, we’ll update this page.

Advertising (Google AdSense)

We may show ads via Google AdSense to support this free tool. Google and its partners may use cookies or device identifiers to serve ads based on your visits to this and/or other sites.

Personalized vs. non-personalized ads

You can choose whether we may request personalized ads. If you opt out, we’ll attempt to show non-personalized ads (contextual). Your choice is stored in your browser and you can change it anytime below.

Cookies & local storage

  • Essential: We store your ad consent preference in localStorage so we don’t bother you every visit.
  • Advertising: Ad partners (like Google) may set cookies or use local storage to measure/serve ads.

EEA/UK consent

If you are in the EEA/UK, Google requires a Google-certified Consent Management Platform (CMP) for AdSense. We’re working toward CMP integration. Until then, we provide this preference control. When CMP is enabled, it will replace this simple control.

Your choices

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Children’s privacy

This site is not directed to children under 13. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children.

Changes

We may update this policy to reflect changes in features or regulations. We’ll update the “Last updated” date above.

Contact

Email: hello@freeqrhub.com

QR content privacy

The main QR generator is designed around browser-side creation. That means basic QR content can be converted into a QR image without requiring a FreeQRHub account or a database submission just to create the code.

Practical guide

FreeQRHub Privacy Policy: what this page helps you do

This page is written for people who need a QR code that works in the real world, not just a quick graphic that looks good on a screen. It focuses on browser-based QR generation, cookies, advertising, analytics, user privacy, and data handling.

A useful QR code should have a clear destination, a clear reason to scan, and a layout that works on the device and material where people will actually use it. The best QR code pages combine the generator with practical instructions, testing steps, and examples that help users avoid wasted prints or confusing scan experiences.

Before you create the QR code

Start by deciding exactly what the scanner should do after opening the code. A QR code should usually send people to one focused action: open a menu, leave a review, connect to WiFi, save a contact, read a PDF, pay an invoice, or visit a landing page. When the destination is too vague, the printed QR code is less useful.

Quality checklist

Good QR codes are simple, high contrast, and tested. Dark modules on a light background are usually the safest choice. Leave enough empty space around the code so scanners can separate the QR pattern from nearby text, borders, photos, or design elements.

For print, SVG is usually the best format because it stays crisp at different sizes. PNG is convenient for quick sharing, documents, mockups, and online use. If the QR code will appear on signage, packaging, menus, windows, or flyers, test a printed version before producing a large batch.

Common use cases

Businesses use QR codes to shorten the path between offline attention and online action. A person may see a card, counter sign, package, receipt, menu, flyer, table tent, or window decal. The QR code should make the next step obvious.

Testing steps before publishing

Scan the code with at least one iPhone and one Android device if possible. Test it in normal lighting, lower lighting, and from the expected viewing distance. Confirm the destination loads quickly and the page answers the user’s question without requiring extra searching.

If the QR code is going on a printed piece, test it after printing, not only on the screen. Glossy material, small sizes, curved surfaces, folds, glare, and low contrast can all make scanning harder.

Why this matters

A QR code is only valuable when people trust it and understand it. A clear label, reliable destination, readable size, and fast mobile page can improve scan rates and reduce confusion. FreeQRHub is designed to help users create QR codes quickly while still learning how to make them practical, safe, and useful.