A QR Code Points to One Place — So Make That Place a Link Page
A QR code itself opens a single destination. The trick to putting multiple links behind one code is to make that destination a link page: a clean, hosted page with your name, a short bio, and a list of buttons. Scan once, then choose where to go — your Instagram, your menu, your booking link, your shop. It's the "link in bio" hub you already know, except it comes with its own QR code, so the same page works on a poster, a business card, or a table tent.
Make One QR Code for All Your Links in Three Steps
- Create a link page. In your EZQR dashboard, start a new link page and give it a title — your name, brand, or business.
- Add your links. Drop in a row for each destination — socials, menu, booking, store, review link — then reorder them and add a logo, bio, and colors to match your brand.
- Download the QR code. EZQR generates a QR code for the page. Print it on signage, cards, and packaging. Update the links later and the same code keeps working.
Why a Link Page Beats a Single-Link QR Code
All your links in one scan
Socials, menu, booking, shop, reviews — one code opens a page that holds them all, instead of forcing you to pick just one.
Editable after printing
Add, remove, and reorder links anytime. The QR code never changes, so nothing you've already printed goes stale.
Per-link tap analytics
See the total scans for the code and how many taps each button gets, so you know which destinations earn their place.
On-brand styling
Add a logo or photo, a short bio, a hero banner, and a light, dark, or custom color theme. Buttons can show icons too.
Works in print and in bio
The same page is both a scannable QR destination and a link-in-bio hub you can drop into any social profile.
Social icon row
Show profiles as a compact strip of social icons beneath your bio, with the bigger calls to action as full-width buttons.
Who Uses a QR Code With Multiple Links
- Creators & influencers — one code for every platform, your latest drop, and your shop.
- Restaurants & cafés — link to your menu, reservations, delivery apps, and review pages from one table tent.
- Realtors — listing details, virtual tour, financing, and a contact card on one sign-rider code.
- Small businesses — website, online store, loyalty sign-up, and socials behind a single storefront code.
- Events — point guests to the lineup, your ticketing page, parking info, and a post-event survey.
- Musicians & venues — streaming links, merch, tour dates, and socials in one place.
One QR Code for All Your Social Media Profiles
Searching for "one QR code for all my social media profiles" usually ends in disappointment, because a plain QR code only points to one URL. A link page solves it cleanly: add a button or social icon for each profile — Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, X — and the single QR code opens a page linking to all of them. When you join a new platform, add a row; the printed code doesn't need to change.
It's the simplest way to make a single social media QR code that covers Facebook and Instagram together — or every channel you're on — instead of printing a separate code for each. One scan, and your audience picks the profile they want to follow.
Link Page vs. Single-Link QR Code
| Single-Link QR Code | Link Page | |
|---|---|---|
| Destinations | One URL | As many links as you want |
| Best for | A single, permanent link | Socials, menu, booking, shop — all at once |
| Editable after printing | Only with a dynamic code | Yes — edit links anytime |
| Branding | Just the code | Logo, bio, banner, colors |
| Analytics | Scan count (dynamic) | Scans plus per-link taps |
| Cost | Free forever (static) | Paid plan |
If you only ever need to send people to one place, a free static QR code is all you need. The moment you want a code that points to several destinations — and the freedom to change them — a link page is the upgrade.