Turn your audio into a QR code
Paste your audio's link (Google Drive, Dropbox, SoundCloud…) and get a crisp, scannable QR code back as a PNG. Scanning it plays the audio — that's how audio-to-QR actually works.
Talk to your files
Anything that used to take five menus and three export dialogs is now one sentence in the chat. Watch it work:
Built for how you actually work
One assistant instead of a dozen single-purpose converter sites.
Every format in one place
Images, documents, video, audio and data — 50+ formats handled by one chat, with a dedicated page for every conversion.
Private by design
Your files are used to run your conversion and nothing else. No sharing, no training, and everything auto-deletes within 24 hours.
Seconds, not minutes
Most conversions come back before you'd have found the right export menu.
Speaks your language
The whole product — pages, assistant and answers — works in seven languages.
Nothing to install
Runs entirely in your browser, on any device. No apps, no accounts to start, no updates.
Putting audio behind a QR code, in practice
Why the audio can't live inside the code
A QR code holds a few kilobytes of text at most; even a short MP3 is thousands of times larger. Every service that claims to "turn audio into a QR code" is really encoding a link to where the audio is hosted. The difference here: we say so, and help you do it right.
The workflow that works
Three steps: upload the audio to a place that gives a public link, copy that link, and paste it in the chat asking for a QR code. You get a high-resolution PNG that scans straight to the playing audio.
Before printing, open your link in a private/incognito window — if it plays there without asking you to sign in, it'll play for everyone who scans.
Where to host the audio
Google Drive or Dropbox work for a private share (set the link to "anyone with the link"). SoundCloud or a podcast host suit public audio and give a nice player. For a voice message, any file host with a direct link works.
Common uses: audio guides on museum plaques, a spoken message on a greeting card, pronunciation clips on flashcards, background on a product label.
Does the QR code expire?
The code itself never expires — it's just the link printed as squares. It keeps working as long as the audio stays hosted at that link. Delete or unshare the file and every printed code stops working, so host anything important somewhere permanent before printing.
Audio to QR Code, answered
Common questions about sharing audio with QR codes.
Upload your MP3 or voice recording to a sharing service (Google Drive, Dropbox, SoundCloud), copy the share link, and paste it here asking for a QR code. You get a high-resolution PNG; scanning it opens and plays the audio. A QR code can't hold the audio file itself — it holds a link, which is exactly what makes it scannable anywhere.
Yes. You can use it for free as a guest. Signing in raises your limits and lets you do more per day.
No — everything runs in your browser. There's nothing to download or set up.
Your file is only used for the task you asked for. We don't share it or use it for anything else, and it's automatically deleted from our servers within 24 hours.
No — no tool can, physically. A QR code stores only a few kilobytes; audio files are far bigger. The working approach is a QR code of the audio's link, which is exactly what this tool makes for you.
Google Drive or Dropbox for private sharing, SoundCloud or a podcast host for public audio. Copy the share link, paste it here, and get the QR code. Test the link in an incognito window first.
Yes — paste your audio link and download the QR code PNG, no account and no watermark on the code.
Turn your audio into a QR code
Drop your file above and get the result in seconds — free to try.
Audio to QR Code