AnalogQR

QR Code for PDF

Share any document with a single scan. Menus, brochures, manuals, catalogs. Link to your PDF and update it anytime.

Free to start · No credit card required

Printing a document and printing a QR code are two different things. With AnalogQR, your QR code points to your hosted PDF. When you update the document, you just swap the link. No reprinting, no new QR code, no hassle.

Why AnalogQR?

Share any hosted PDF with a single scan

Update the document without reprinting the QR code

Track how many people open your PDF and when

Works with Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive, or your website

Perfect for menus, brochures, manuals, and catalogs

Branded QR with your logo and colors

How it works

1

Upload and host your PDF

Upload your PDF to Google Drive, Dropbox, or any file host and copy the shareable link.

2

Generate your PDF QR code

Paste the link into AnalogQR. Customize and download your QR code for print.

3

Print and update anytime

Add the QR to your materials. When the document changes, update the link, no new QR code needed.

Ready to get started?

It takes less than 60 seconds.

Create My PDF QR Code

Frequently asked questions

Can I update the PDF without changing the QR code?

Yes. With a dynamic QR code, you update the destination URL in your dashboard. Upload the new PDF to any hosting service, paste the new link, and the printed QR code instantly points to the updated document.

Where should I host the PDF?

Any publicly accessible file hosting works: Google Drive (with sharing set to 'Anyone with the link'), Dropbox, OneDrive, Notion, or your own website.

Can I track how many people open my PDF via QR?

Yes. Every scan of the QR code is tracked: total opens, device types, locations, and timing. See exactly how many people access your document.

Does the PDF open on mobile?

Yes. Modern iOS and Android devices open PDFs natively in the browser or a PDF viewer app. No extra app is required for most users.

Can I use a QR code for a confidential document?

Only host confidential documents behind a login or with a password-protected link. The QR code itself is public. Anyone who scans it can access the destination URL.