Wedding QR Code — RSVP, Registry, and Photos in One Scan
A wedding QR code turns a printed invitation, save-the-date, or table sign into a direct link to your RSVP form, gift registry, wedding website, or a shared photo album. Instead of guests typing a long website address from memory, one scan takes them straight there. Couples increasingly print a single code that guests use throughout the event — RSVP before the big day, then upload candid photos during the reception.
Generate for free — no sign-upWhat is a wedding qr code — rsvp, registry, and photos in one scan?
A wedding QR code turns a printed invitation, save-the-date, or table sign into a direct link to your RSVP form, gift registry, wedding website, or a shared photo album. Instead of guests typing a long website address from memory, one scan takes them straight there. Couples increasingly print a single code that guests use throughout the event — RSVP before the big day, then upload candid photos during the reception.
How to make a wedding qr code
- 1
Build your wedding website or RSVP form (The Knot, Zola, Google Forms, or a custom site all work).
- 2
Open Scanmint, select the "URL" type, and paste the link.
- 3
Choose a foreground colour that matches your wedding palette — gold, sage, or blush all scan reliably against white.
- 4
Generate and download the SVG for crisp printing on invitations or signage of any size.
- 5
Place the code on save-the-dates, invitations, welcome signs, and table cards.
Popular use cases
- ✓Save-the-dates and invitations — link directly to the RSVP form
- ✓Welcome sign at the venue entrance — link to the full wedding website and schedule
- ✓Table cards — a code guests scan to upload photos to a shared album during the reception
- ✓Gift table signage — link straight to your registry so guests skip searching for it
- ✓Thank-you cards — link to a photo gallery or video recap after the big day
Ready to create yours?
Free forever for static codes. Dynamic QR with scan analytics from $3.13.
Frequently asked questions
Yes — point the code at your wedding website homepage, which can link out to RSVP, registry, and travel info from one landing page.
Yes, as long as the URL itself does not change. If you switch platforms and the address changes, use a dynamic QR code so you can update the destination without reprinting invitations.
A minimum of 2 × 2 cm on invitations viewed up close. For welcome signs viewed from a metre or more away, use 8 × 8 cm or larger.
Yes. Every modern iPhone and Android camera app reads QR codes natively — guests just point their camera and tap the link that appears.