أنشئ رمز QR لشبكة الواي فاي
You have guests over. Someone asks for the WiFi password. You spell it out letter by letter. They type it wrong. You spell it again. They connect. Twenty minutes later, the next guest arrives and the cycle repeats. This ritual plays out in homes, cafés, hotels, and offices across the Arab world daily.
A WiFi QR code eliminates it entirely. The guest scans the code with their phone camera, taps "join," and they're connected. No spelling, no typing, no "is that a zero or an O?"
how it works
A WiFi QR code encodes three pieces of information: the network name (SSID), the password, and the security type (WPA/WPA2, WEP, or none). When a phone's camera recognizes this specific format, it offers to connect to that network automatically.
Both iOS (since iOS 11) and Android (since Android 10) support WiFi QR codes natively through the camera app. No special QR reader app is needed.
common uses
At home: Frame a small printed QR code near your router or on the fridge. Guests scan it instead of asking for the password. When you change the password, print a new code.
In cafés and restaurants: Print the QR code on table tents, menus, or wall signs. "Scan for WiFi" is cleaner than printing the password on a receipt and saves staff from answering the same question a hundred times a day.
At events and weddings: In Gulf weddings, it's common to set up a dedicated WiFi network for guests (for sharing photos and videos). A QR code on the welcome table or a digital display saves time and feels modern. Print it on the invitation card if you want guests to connect immediately on arrival.
In offices: Guest WiFi credentials printed as a QR code in the meeting room or reception area. No more IT tickets for "what's the WiFi password?"
For Airbnb / short-term rentals: Include the WiFi QR code in your welcome guide. Guests connect in seconds and rate your listing higher for the seamless experience.
security considerations
A WiFi QR code contains your password in plain text — it has to, because the phone needs the password to connect. This means anyone who scans the code gets your password. Don't put it in public-facing locations for a private network. For guest networks, this is fine by design — you want guests to connect.
If you're using the QR code for a guest network, make sure that network is isolated from your main network. Most modern routers support "guest network" mode, which gives internet access without access to your local devices.
creating one with bababa
Open the QR code tool, switch the type to "WiFi," enter your network name and password, select the security type, and generate. Download as PNG for digital sharing or SVG for print (SVG scales to any size without pixelation, perfect for posters and signage).
مولّد رمز QR
enter your network name and password, generate, download. takes 10 seconds and your guests will thank you.
افتح مولّد رمز QR ←