Free Tool — Review Link & QR Code
Turn any link into a print-ready QR code.
Paste any link — your booking page, homepage, a UTM-tagged URL, or your Google review link — and get a downloadable QR code and printable counter card in seconds. Everything is generated in your browser; nothing expires, nothing to renew.
Where to find your link
1. The easy way — “Ask for reviews”
Sign in to the Google account that manages your business profile, then search your own business name on Google. In your profile panel, click Ask for reviews. Google shows your share link — copy it and paste it into the tool above.
2. The backup — your Place ID
Can't access the profile right now? Use Google's free Place ID Finder, type your business name, and copy the ID that appears. Switch the tool to “My Place ID” and it builds the direct review link for you.
3. No profile yet?
If your business isn't on Google Maps at all, that's the bigger problem — and the bigger opportunity. Start with why your business isn't showing up on Google Maps or get the profile set up properly.
Questions
Where do I find my Google review link?
Sign in to the Google account that manages your Google Business Profile, then search your own business name on Google. In the panel that appears, click "Ask for reviews" — Google shows a short share link (it usually starts with g.page). Paste that link into the tool.
What if I can’t find my review link? What’s a Place ID?
Every business on Google Maps has a Place ID — a unique code like ChIJpTvG15DL1IkRd8S0KlBVNTI. Look yours up free with Google’s Place ID Finder (search "Google Place ID Finder", type your business name, copy the ID). Paste the ID into the tool and it builds the direct review link for you.
Does the QR code expire or cost anything?
No. The QR code encodes your review link directly — there’s no middleman service, no account, and nothing to renew. It works for as long as your Google Business Profile exists, and you can print as many copies as you like.
Is it against Google’s rules to ask for reviews?
Asking is fine — Google encourages it. What’s against policy is offering incentives (discounts, draws, freebies) in exchange for reviews, or only showing the link to customers you think were happy. Ask everyone, right after the work, and let the reviews land where they land.
Where should I put the QR code?
Wherever the happy moment happens: the front counter, the bottom of invoices and receipts, a leave-behind card after a job, table tents, the service van, or your email signature. The closer the ask is to the finished work, the more reviews you get.