Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Apple
  5. Mobile
  6. How tos

How to scan a QR code on Android and iPhone

Add as a preferred source on Google
QR code scanning shortcut on an iPhone.
Joe Maring/Digital Trends

As smartphones have become more and more ubiquitous, so have QR codes. These maze-looking squares are a type of matrix bar code that contains data — usually, QR codes point to a website or open a designated application.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • iPhone or Android smartphone

  • QR code scanning app (optional)

Although they may look confusing, QR codes are really easy to use. Follow the steps below to turn your iPhone or Android phone into an instant QR code scanner using nothing more than your default camera app.

QR code scanning shortcut on an iPhone.
Joe Maring/Digital Trends

How to scan a QR code on an iPhone

Apple's iPhones have built-in QR code scanning capabilities right in the camera app itself, so there's no need to download a separate scanning app unless you really want to. Ever since iOS 12, there's even a direct QR code reader in the Control Center, so you can launch it even faster. In other words, if you have one of the best iPhones, this should work.

Step 1: Open the Camera app, or open the dedicated QR code reader from your Control Center by swiping up from the home page and selecting the QR code button.

Screenshot showing the QR Code button in the iPhone Control Center.
Digital Trends

Step 2: Point your camera at the QR code. If you're using the QR code scanner, make sure the QR code is inside the box on the screen. It will either open immediately (on the scanner), or a link will appear at the top of your screen (in the camera); just select it to go to the link in your browser.

Screenshot showing the iPhone Camera app zeroing in on a QR code.
Digital Trends

How to add the QR code shortcut to your iPhone

The dedicated QR code scanner is a handy way to quickly open a QR code, largely because it has a built-in button to help scan the code, unlike the Camera app. As such, it's often more useful if scanning a QR code on a physical sheet. If you don't see this QR code shortcut on your iPhone, here's how to add it.

Step 1: If you don't see the QR code icon in your Control Center on iOS, you can start adding it by going to the Settings app.

Step 2: Tap Control Center.

Step 3: Find Code reader under the More controls section.

Step 4: Tap the green Plus icon to add it.

How to scan a QR code on an Android phone

QR codes aren't solely the domain of iPhones. The best Android phones can scan through the camera app or, that failing, Google Assistant.

If you have an older Android phone and the following steps don't work for you, we recommend QR Code Reader, which is a simple and highly effective alternative (albeit one that comes with ads).

Step 1: Open the Camera app on your phone.

Screenshot showing apps on an Android-based smartphone.
Digital Trends

Step 2: Point your camera's viewfinder at the QR code. There will often be a slight pause as it works out the code.

Step 3: If successful, a link should appear in a small pop-up window. Select it to go to the address.

Screenshot showing QR code on an Android-based device.
Digital Trends

Make sure to be careful with QR codes

Just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should. QR codes, while extremely useful, can also be used maliciously. While the QR codes themselves aren't to blame, the content they give you can harm your device.

While rare, this sort of QR code-based malware is possible, so we recommend always being careful about which QR codes you scan. Make sure you trust the person or organization you're scanning the code from and make sure to cancel any downloads if you're not expecting one. Like with anything on the internet, approach QR codes with a bit of common sense.

Mark Jansen
Former Mobile Evergreen Editor
Mark Jansen is an avid follower of everything that beeps, bloops, or makes pretty lights. He has a degree in Ancient &…
Android 17 has a cool new trick to keep AI assistants from screaming in your ears
A new separate slider means Gemini won’t automatically get louder when you crank up music or video.
Android 17 on a phone.

Android 17 has a cool new trick to keep AI assistants from screaming in your ears, and it fixes a problem that becomes obvious the moment it happens. You turn up your music on headphones, then a voice reply hits at the same level and cuts through everything.

The latest beta changes that behavior. Assistant audio no longer rises and falls with your media, so increasing volume for a song or video won’t suddenly make Gemini or another assistant louder too.

Read more
Vivaldi browser’s tab stacks are a lovely solution that I want on Chrome and Safari
Vivaldi's take on tab management highlights just how clunky Chrome and Safari still feel on mobile.
Vivaldi browser tab stacking featured.

While most Chromium-based browsers treat tab management as an afterthought, Vivaldi takes a smarter approach. Its latest iOS update doubles down on one of its best ideas: two-level tab stacks. It's not a new feature, but it's one of the few that actually makes juggling dozens of tabs on a phone feel manageable.

A small but genuinely useful feature

Read more
Android 17 makes your internet controls way less frustrating
Google is splitting Wi-Fi and mobile data in Quick Settings, and it should save you extra taps.
Nature, Night, Outdoors

Android 17 is fixing one of the most irritating parts of using your phone, its internet controls. If you’ve ever tried to switch off Wi-Fi quickly and got pulled into an extra menu instead, this update is aimed right at that moment.

In Android 17 Beta 3, Google is changing how those toggles work in Quick Settings. Instead of grouping everything under a single tile, the system now separates Wi-Fi and mobile data, so you can manage each one without going through another screen.

Read more