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QR Code Size Guide for Print
Printed QR codes fail when size decisions happen too late. Use this guide to match scan distance, artwork, contrast, and export format before the file goes to a printer, signage vendor, or packaging run.
Size depends on viewing distance, not one magic number
Small handouts and business cards can stay compact, but posters, windows, packaging shelves, and wayfinding signs need larger codes so camera framing still feels easy from the real-world distance.
Keep the quiet zone and surrounding layout clean
Leave clear empty space around the code and keep nearby text, borders, product photos, and logos from crowding it. The margin matters almost as much as the QR itself.
Choose the right export before handoff
Use SVG whenever the printer or designer supports it. If you must use PNG, increase the pixel dimensions early, avoid soft scaling in layout tools, and test a physical sample instead of trusting the screen preview.
How to set it up
Step 1
Start with the real scan distance
Estimate how close a person will stand when they scan. Business cards, menus, and retail shelves can stay smaller than posters, windows, and lobby signs.
Step 2
Print one physical sample
Test a real proof before the full run so you can catch quiet-zone problems, contrast issues, or artwork crowding while changes are still cheap.
Step 3
Approve the final export format
Use SVG where possible or a high-resolution PNG when you need raster output, then hand off the tested file instead of re-exporting late in the design process.
FAQ
What is the minimum printed QR size?
There is no universal minimum because content density and scan distance both matter, but small-format jobs usually start around 2 cm and scale upward from there.
How large should a QR code be on a poster or window sign?
Large-format placements should be sized for the real viewing distance, not just the available design space. If people scan from farther away, increase the code size and test from that distance.
Does a logo change the size requirement?
Yes. A logo removes usable data area, so you should keep the code larger, preserve strong contrast, and test the final print on real phones.
Should I test on the final paper or material?
Yes. Paper stock, lamination, glare, ink spread, and surface texture can all change scan reliability after production.
Related next steps
QR code contrast guide
Protect readability when brand colors, paper stock, and lighting get involved.
Wi-Fi QR best practices
Apply the same print checks to guest-network cards, lobby signs, and room placards.
QR templates
Browse rollout patterns for menus, cards, posters, and review stands.