QRever
Use cases

Link in Bio QR Code: One Scan to All Your Links

Turn your link-in-bio into a QR code you can print on merch, cards, and posters. Buttons, a featured CTA, and social icons — pay once, editable forever.

July 16, 20266 min read

A link-in-bio QR code puts your whole list of links — latest video, shop, booking form, every social profile — behind a single code you can scan from the physical world. Instead of typing a handle, someone points a camera at your sticker, card, or poster and lands on a page with a button for everything you do. And because the page is editable, the printed code never goes stale.

Why put your link-in-bio on a QR code

Link-in-bio pages were built for the tap-through world of social apps. But the most valuable places to send people to your links are physical: merch, packaging, a market stall, the end card of a video, a business card. A QR code bridges that gap — it carries your entire link page onto anything you can print. One scan replaces “search my name, find the bio link, tap through.”

What goes on the page

A links page for creators works best when it’s ruthless about priority:

  • A featured link — the one thing you want most people to do right now (watch, buy, book). It sits at the top as a filled button.
  • Supporting links — your other current projects and destinations, in the order that matters this month.
  • A social-icon row — a compact strip of platform icons so the buttons stay focused on actions, not follows.

Because you edit all of this from your dashboard, the page can change as often as your priorities do without touching what you printed.

The pay-once alternative to a subscription

Most link-in-bio tools are monthly subscriptions. That’s a strange fit for something you’ve printed on physical items you can’t recall: if the bill lapses, the page — and the QR code pointing at it — can stop working. QRever is the opposite model. A links QR Pageis a one-time payment, the code is never deactivated for billing, and only you can take it down. That’s the QRever promise.

Where to use it

  • On merch, stickers, and product packaging.
  • On business cards, zines, and flyers.
  • On a market-stall or event banner.
  • As the end card of a video or livestream.

Keep the code high-contrast and well printed, per QR code best practices, and pair it with a short prompt like “Everything I make — one scan.” If you sell or create for a living, see the full creator QR toolkit.