"Convert a PDF into a QR code" sounds like you'd feed in a document and get a code with the file packed inside. The honest reality is different, and worth understanding, because the method that actually works is simple and arguably better than what people imagine.
Why You Can't Pack a PDF Into a Code
A QR code holds only a tiny amount of data, enough for a web link or a short bit of text. A PDF, even a one-pager, is far too large to fit. So no tool can literally embed your document inside the squares of a code; there simply isn't room.
What "Converting" Really Means
When a tool says it converts a PDF to a QR code, it's hosting your PDF online and creating a code that links to it. The conversion is really: upload the file, get a link, encode the link. The result behaves exactly as people hope, scan, and the PDF opens.
How to Do It Yourself
Upload your PDF to a host with public sharing, then paste the link into a PDF QR generator. Or use a tool that hosts the file and makes the code in one step. Either way, the code carries a link, not the document.
Why Linking Is Actually Better
Because the code only holds a link, your PDF can be any size, and with a dynamic code you can update or replace it later without remaking the code. A file truly locked inside a code could never offer that flexibility.
FAQ
Common questions are answered in the FAQ section below.