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Best Practice Beginner 1 min read 258 words

Dynamic QR Codes: When and How to Use Them

Understand dynamic QR codes that allow destination changes without reprinting the physical code.

Key Takeaways

  • Dynamic QR codes encode a short redirect URL instead of the final destination.
  • The primary benefit is flexibility — update destinations for seasonal campaigns, fix broken links, or A/B test landing pages.
  • Most dynamic QR code services charge monthly fees ranging from free (limited scans) to $50+/month for enterprise features.
  • Choose a reliable provider with strong uptime guarantees — a down redirect service means all your codes stop working.
  • Static codes are preferable when the destination never changes (product serial numbers, permanent URLs), when you need the code to work offline or without internet, or when you want to avoid ongoing subscription costs.

What Are Dynamic QR Codes

Dynamic QR codes encode a short redirect URL instead of the final destination. This allows you to change where the code points without reprinting it. The QR code itself contains a permanent short URL that redirects to your target, which you can update anytime through a management dashboard.

Advantages Over Static Codes

The primary benefit is flexibility — update destinations for seasonal campaigns, fix broken links, or A/B test landing pages. Dynamic codes are also physically smaller since they encode a short URL instead of a long one. Analytics tracking is built in, showing scan counts, locations, devices, and times.

Cost Considerations

Most dynamic QR code services charge monthly fees ranging from free (limited scans) to $50+/month for enterprise features. Compare this against the cost of reprinting static codes when changes are needed. For one-time-use codes, static is more cost-effective.

Implementation Best Practices

Choose a reliable provider with strong uptime guarantees — a down redirect service means all your codes stop working. Use your own domain for redirect URLs to maintain brand consistency and avoid dependency on a single provider. Always have a fallback plan if the redirect service becomes unavailable.

When to Choose Static Instead

Static codes are preferable when the destination never changes (product serial numbers, permanent URLs), when you need the code to work offline or without internet, or when you want to avoid ongoing subscription costs. Static codes also have no single point of failure — they work as long as the destination exists.

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