Email QR Code
Email QR Code Generator
Create a QR code that opens a pre-addressed email draft — with subject and message already filled in — ready for the scanner to review and send.
Colors
Style
Logo
Error correction is boosted automatically when a logo is added so your code stays scannable.
Live preview
1024pxFree forever. No watermark, no sign-up.
Ideas
Where to use email QR codes
Feedback & reviews
Print on receipts or tables so customers quickly email feedback without searching for your address.
Networking events
Add to your badge or handout so contacts email you directly from the event — no business card needed.
Event follow-up
Encode an inquiry address so attendees can reach out after a talk, workshop, or open house.
Support & inquiries
Place on products or documentation so customers reach your support team with one scan.
Tips
Tips for email QR codes
Add a subject line
A pre-filled subject helps you filter incoming emails and immediately signals to the sender what the message is for.
Body text is optional
Leave the body blank to let senders write freely, or pre-fill a template for specific requests like a feedback prompt.
Scanning opens a draft — it does not send
The email app opens with the address, subject, and body pre-filled. The sender still taps Send themselves — nothing is sent automatically.
Works with most native email apps
The mailto: link opens the default email app — Gmail, Apple Mail, Outlook, and others. Make sure the scanner has an email account set up on their device.
FAQ
Email QR code questions
No. Scanning opens the user's email app with the address, subject, and body pre-filled. The user reviews the draft and taps Send themselves — no email is sent without their action.
Most native email apps support mailto: links, including Apple Mail, Gmail, Outlook, and Samsung Email. The scanner needs to have an email account configured on their device.
Yes. Both are optional but fully supported. Fill in as little or as much as you want — the sender can always edit before sending.
Email QR codes use the standard mailto: URI format — for example, mailto:hello@example.com?subject=Hello&body=Message. This is a widely supported open standard.