Invitation card
Use a small QR only if the card has enough white space and the backup URL remains visible.
Generate a print-ready QR code for your wedding RSVP link, or create an activation QR that turns into a SnapInvite RSVP page after you scan and claim it.
Free print-ready tool
Save a QR code for any existing link, or start a SnapInvite RSVP page from the details you enter here.
No duplicate setup: the label, wedding date, and RSVP deadline carry into event creation before template selection.
Put the QR anywhere guests naturally look for reply instructions. The safest setup is a QR code, a short backup URL, and one sentence telling guests to RSVP by the deadline.
Use a small QR only if the card has enough white space and the backup URL remains visible.
This is the safest print placement because guests expect reply instructions there.
Use a larger code at the venue for late replies, updates, or guests who missed the card.
QR codes are forgiving on screens but less forgiving on paper. Test the exact file before you send it to a printer or stationery designer.
A QR code only gets guests to the right place. The RSVP page does the operational work: attendance, plus-ones, meal questions, dietary notes, pending replies, and reminders stay together instead of splitting across texts and spreadsheets.
SnapInvite RSVP pages work from a phone browser, so guests do not need to install an app.
Use the QR on printed cards while the host dashboard keeps replies and reminders current.
Keep the QR simple, readable, and tied to one clear RSVP destination.
Related guides: wedding RSVP pages, RSVP questions, online vs paper RSVP, RSVP cards with invitations, and wedding meal planner.