Does this upload my location to a server?
The tool is designed to request your browser location locally and generate the QR on your device. The resulting QR simply points to a normal Google Maps link.
Create a Google Maps QR from your precise current location
Use your phone's precise location to generate a Google Maps QR code instantly. Great for wedding cards, party invites, event venues, deliveries, and meetups.
Android origin
This web version keeps the same idea: grab your live location, make a Google Maps link, and turn it into a QR code in one step.
This tool needs HTTPS and a browser with geolocation support. It works best on phones with GPS.
Use your phone's precise location to generate a Google Maps QR code instantly. Great for wedding cards, party invites, event venues, deliveries, and meetups.
Location QR Generator turns your current location into a Google Maps link and QR code in one step. It is useful when you need a scannable location for wedding invitations, birthday parties, deliveries, meetups, office visits, and event directions.
The tool asks for precise location access in the browser, checks the reported accuracy, and creates the QR locally on your device. That removes the usual friction of opening maps, copying coordinates, building a share link, and pasting it into a separate QR generator.
Open the page on a phone, allow precise location access, and wait for a strong GPS fix.
Generate the QR code once the page detects an accurate enough location.
Download or share the QR image, or copy and open the Google Maps link directly.
Wedding cards, birthday invites, and event handouts.
Sharing venue directions for meetups, offices, and deliveries.
Quick mobile workflows where you need a location QR without using multiple apps.
The tool is designed to request your browser location locally and generate the QR on your device. The resulting QR simply points to a normal Google Maps link.
It checks the reported accuracy and may ask you to try again if the location is too loose. That helps avoid printing or sharing a QR that points to the wrong place.