Give outdoor ads a clickable moment — drivers and pedestrians scan to act on your message instantly.
Create your free QR codeNot every billboard location suits a QR code. Highway billboards seen at 100 km/h are a bad fit — nobody is pulling out their phone at speed. The sweet spots are pedestrian-level placements: bus shelters, train station platforms, shopping district walls, and intersection billboards where traffic stops at red lights.
These locations give people 15-60 seconds of idle time. That’s enough to notice the code, pull out a phone, and scan. The code needs to be large enough to scan from 5-10 metres, which means a minimum of 60 cm x 60 cm.
Outdoor QR codes deal with sunlight, glare, rain, and viewing angles that indoor codes never face. Stick to high-contrast combinations — black on white is the most reliable. Avoid coloured backgrounds that reduce contrast in direct sunlight.
The code should sit in the lower portion of the billboard, closer to the scanner’s eye level. Surround it with plenty of empty space so the phone camera can isolate the code from the rest of the design.
Someone scanning a billboard QR code is standing on a sidewalk or sitting at a bus stop. They’re on mobile data, not Wi-Fi. Your landing page needs to load in under three seconds on a 4G connection.
Keep the page to one screen. One headline that matches the billboard message, one action button. If the billboard says “Get 30% off your first order,” the landing page should repeat that exact offer above the fold with a clear button to claim it.
Build a mobile-first page with one action — download, sign up, or buy. The page should load in under 3 seconds. Billboard scanners are impatient; if it's slow, they're gone.
Use black on white or dark on very light colours. Billboards face sun, rain, and glare — high contrast handles all of those. Add your logo to the centre but keep it under 20% of the code area.
Place the QR code in the lower half of the billboard where it's closest to eye level. Size it based on the expected scanning distance. Print a test at full scale and scan it from the actual distance before installation.
Billboards have always been hard to measure. A QR code gives you a scan count for every location, so you know which billboard at which intersection drives the most engagement.
Pedestrians at bus stops and shopping districts have 30-60 seconds of idle time. A QR code with a clear offer turns that dead time into a lead capture opportunity.
Dynamic QR codes let you change the destination URL without replacing the physical billboard. Run an A/B test on landing pages mid-campaign to optimise conversion.
Yes, but placement matters. Billboards at intersections, bus stops, and pedestrian areas work best because people have time to stop and scan. Highway billboards at 100 km/h are too fast — save QR codes for locations where people pause.
At least 60 cm x 60 cm for pedestrian billboards viewed from 5-10 metres. For larger billboards viewed from 15-20 metres, go 1 metre x 1 metre or bigger. The rule of thumb is 1 cm of code per 10 cm of scanning distance.
They can, but the display rotation is a problem. If your ad only shows for 8 seconds in a 60-second loop, most people won't have time to pull out their phone and scan. Static digital displays or longer rotation slots work better.
A fast, mobile-optimised landing page with one clear action. Not your homepage. The person just interrupted their walk or drive to scan — give them something specific: a discount, a signup form, or a product page.
Use a dynamic QR code with a unique URL for each billboard location. Scan analytics show you total scans, unique visitors, and time of day. Compare locations to find your highest-performing spots.
Create your custom QR code in seconds. Free forever, no account needed.
Create your free QR code