# QR Code Review Cards That Actually Get Scanned

> How to make a QR review card local customers actually scan: where to place it, the wording that earns a tap, and the one rule that keeps it compliant.

_Category: Playbooks · By ReviewGrowth Playbooks Desk, Reviews and review collection · Published Jun 10, 2026 · 8 min read. Canonical page: https://reviewgrowth.app/blog/qr-code-review-cards-that-get-scanned_

**In short:** A QR review card works because it removes the hardest step: finding your listing. Generate a code from your **direct Google review link** (or a compliant funnel), put it where the customer already is, give them a short and social reason to scan, and offer it to **everyone**. That last part matters: inviting only happy customers is review gating, which Google prohibits.

A happy customer is rarely unwilling to leave a review. They are just busy. By the time they could open Google, search your name, and scroll past the ads to find the review button, the moment has passed and the kettle is on. A QR code on a small card collapses all of that into one tap, which is why it is one of the most reliable ways a local business can turn goodwill into public proof.

This guide is about the humble review card done well. Not a generic sticker that nobody scans, but a card with the right link behind it, placed where people already are, worded so scanning feels like the natural next thing to do.

**Key takeaways**

- A QR card beats asking people to search for you, because searching is where most reviews quietly die.
- Build the code from your **direct Google review link** or a compliant review funnel, never a homepage.
- Place the card where the customer is already standing or holding paper: the counter, the invoice, the van.
- The wording earns the scan. Keep it short, make it social, and give one clear reason.
- Offer the card to **everyone**. Showing it only to customers you think are thrilled is review gating, which Google prohibits.

## Why a QR card beats asking people to search

Think about what you are really asking when you say "please leave us a Google review." You are asking someone to remember your exact business name, open an app, type it in, pick the correct listing out of a few similar ones, scroll past the photos and the call button, and finally tap the small five-star prompt. Every one of those steps is a place to give up. Not out of dislike, but because life got in the way.

A QR code removes the entire search. The customer points a camera, taps a link, and lands on the review box itself. You have replaced a six-step memory test with a single physical action, in a moment when they are right in front of you and feeling good about the work.

_A funnel QR sends the happy tap straight to Google and quietly routes anyone unhappy to you first. Everyone is invited; nobody is blocked from posting._

There is a second, quieter benefit. A card sitting on a counter or stapled to an invoice keeps asking long after you have left. It is a gentle, standing invitation that does not depend on a busy person remembering to send a text.

## How to make one (the right link behind the code)

A QR code is only as good as the page it opens. Point it at your homepage and you have rebuilt the very maze you were trying to avoid. There are two good options, depending on how much you want the card to do.

### Option one: Google's own review link and QR code

Google Business Profile gives you an official review link and a built-in QR code generator. Open your profile, find the option to ask for reviews, and you can copy a short link or download a ready-made code that opens straight to your review box. It is free, it is genuinely direct, and it is the simplest possible start. Print that code, and a scan lands the customer exactly where you want them.

### Option two: a compliant review funnel QR

A funnel adds one helpful layer. Instead of opening Google immediately, the scan opens a tiny page that invites the customer to share how things went. Anyone happy is sent straight to your Google review box; anyone less than thrilled is offered a private way to reach you so you can make it right before it becomes a public one-star. The key is that the public review is never blocked for anyone. We build this into [QR review cards](/features/qr-code-review-cards) and the [review funnel](/features/review-funnel), and we explain exactly where the compliant line sits in [Is this allowed?](/is-this-allowed).

> [!WARNING]
> **A funnel is not a filter** A compliant funnel invites _everyone_ to post publicly and simply offers an unhappy customer a private channel as well. The moment it stops an unhappy customer from reaching Google, it becomes review gating, which Google prohibits. Inviting is allowed; blocking is not.

## Where to place it so it actually gets scanned

The best card in the world does nothing in a drawer. Placement is half the battle. The rule of thumb: put the code where the customer is already standing, sitting, or holding something, at the moment they feel good about the work.

- **The reception desk or counter.** A small table tent at eye level while they pay or wait is a natural pause to scan.
- **The invoice or receipt.** Print the code right on the paperwork the customer is already holding. They are looking at it anyway.
- **A leave-behind card.** Hand a small card to a tech to leave on the kitchen counter after a home visit, next to where they sign off the job.
- **A tech's clipboard or tablet.** Show the code on the screen used for the sign-off, so the ask and the scan happen in the same breath.
- **The side of the van or a window decal.** For an HVAC team parked in a driveway all afternoon, a clean code on the van is a standing invitation a neighbor can scan too.

Notice the pattern. Each spot catches the customer at a moment of relief or completion, with the code already in their line of sight. You are not asking them to go find anything. You are putting the easy next step exactly where their attention already is.

_Scans cluster around the moment a job feels finished. Put the code where that moment happens, not in a follow-up nobody opens._

## The wording that earns a scan

A bare code with no words gets ignored. People scan when they understand, in a glance, what will happen and why it is worth two seconds. Three things make wording work: keep it short, make it social, and give one clear reason.

1. **Lead with the reason, not the request.** "Most of our customers find us through Google." One short line that explains why a review helps does more than a polite "please review us." It makes the customer part of how a local business survives.
2. **Make the action obvious.** "Scan to leave a quick review" tells them precisely what the code does. No mystery, no app to download, no surprise form. Obvious beats clever every time.
3. **Keep it human and short.** A warm line like "It only takes a minute and it really helps our team" beats a wall of text. If they have to read a paragraph to decide, they have already moved on.

> Happy with the work? A quick Google review helps a small local team more than you know. Scan here, it takes about a minute.
>
> (A card line that works for almost any local business)

Swap in your own voice, but keep the shape: a reason, a clear action, and a friendly, low-pressure tone. No begging, no fine print, no asking for five stars specifically. You are inviting an honest review, and the honesty is the point.

> [!TIP]
> **Pair the card with a spoken ask** A card on the counter is good. A card plus a person saying "if you have a second, that code leaves us a quick review" is far better. The card removes the friction; the human moment supplies the prompt.

## The one rule: invite everyone

Here is where a good idea can quietly go wrong. It is tempting to only show the card to the customers you are sure loved the visit, and to skip it whenever you sense someone is lukewarm. That instinct feels harmless. It is not.

Selectively asking only happy customers for public reviews, while steering everyone else away, is review gating. Google explicitly prohibits it, and the practice undermines the trust the whole system runs on. The compliant approach is simple: offer the same card to every customer. If you use a funnel, it can still give an unhappy customer a private way to reach you, as long as it never blocks them from posting publicly.

The honest path is also the one that works. When you invite everyone right after good work, genuine positive reviews accumulate on their own, faster than gating would ever get you, and your listing stays safe while it grows.

> [!IMPORTANT]
> **Try this this week** Generate your code from your Google review link, print it on this week's invoices and one counter card, add a single human line, and hand it to every customer. Then read [Is this allowed?](/is-this-allowed) once, so you are confident the funnel stays on the right side of the line.

---

If you want the card to do more than open Google, including the compliant private-feedback path, that is exactly what our [QR review cards](/features/qr-code-review-cards) are built for. Same one-tap scan, same invite-everyone rule, none of the gating risk.

## Frequently asked questions

### Does a QR code help my SEO?

Not directly. A QR code is just a shortcut to a web link; the scan itself is not a ranking signal. What helps is the result it produces. By making it far easier to leave a review, a good card lifts your steady flow of genuine, recent reviews, and that flow is one of the signals Google weighs for local visibility. So the card helps indirectly, by removing the friction that was costing you reviews.

### What should the card say?

Keep it to three things: a short reason ("most customers find us through Google"), a clear action ("scan to leave a quick review"), and a warm, human tone. Avoid long paragraphs, fine print, and any wording that asks specifically for five stars or implies a reward. You are inviting an honest review, so let the wording sound like a person, not a policy.

### Is a QR review card against the rules?

No, as long as you offer it to everyone and never block an unhappy customer from posting publicly. A card that opens your Google review box is perfectly fine. The rule you must respect is no review gating: do not show the card only to happy customers, and do not use a funnel to divert unhappy customers away from Google. Inviting everyone is allowed and encouraged.