Google Forms are everywhere, for sign-ups, quizzes, RSVPs, and feedback, but sharing a long form link in the physical world is awkward. Turning that link into a QR code lets anyone open your form with a scan, which is ideal for classrooms, events, and printed materials.
Getting Your Form's Share Link
Start in Google Forms by opening the Send menu and choosing the link option. Copy the URL, and consider shortening it first, since the shortened form produces a simpler, more reliable code. This link is what your QR code will encode.
Turning the Link into a QR Code
Paste the form link into a QR code generator to produce a scannable code. For anything you'll print or update later, generate it as a dynamic code so you can repoint it to a new form without reprinting, which is handy when you reuse materials each term or event.
Where This Works Best
Printed worksheets, classroom walls, event signage, and product inserts all benefit. Teachers can post a quiz code on the board, event hosts can collect RSVPs from a poster, and businesses can gather feedback from a receipt, all pointing to a Google Form.
Controlling Access and Responses
Your Google Form's own settings govern who can respond and whether sign-in is required, and the QR code simply opens whatever you've configured. For school or internal use, set the appropriate restrictions in the form before sharing the code widely.
FAQ
Common questions are answered in the FAQ section below.