Sometimes the QR code in an image is scratched, blurry, or partly cut off, and you still need what's inside it. Whether you can recover it depends on how damaged it is, thanks to a clever feature called error correction. Here's what's realistically possible.
How Error Correction Helps
Every QR code is built with redundancy, extra data that lets readers reconstruct the content even when part of the code is missing or obscured. Depending on the level used when the code was made, a meaningful portion can be damaged and the code will still decode.
Trying to Read a Partial Code
First, just try a normal reader, an online uploader or your phone's image detection. Error correction often quietly does its job, and the code reads despite the damage. This succeeds more often than people expect for light scratches or small obstructions.
Improving Your Odds
Use the clearest, highest-resolution copy of the image you have. Crop tightly around the code, and if it's skewed, straighten it. Reducing glare and increasing contrast can also help a borderline code cross the threshold and decode.
When It Can't Be Recovered
If too much of the pattern, especially the corner finder squares, is destroyed, no tool can reconstruct it; the data is simply gone. In that case the only fix is to obtain the original. Going forward, generating codes with higher error correction from an image QR generator makes them far more resilient.
FAQ
Common questions are answered in the FAQ section below.