
QR Code Analytics Guide: What to Track After Every Scan
Learn which QR code analytics matter, including total scans, unique visitors, location, device, repeat scans, landing page performance, and campaign attribution.
QR code analytics turn scans into business feedback. Without analytics, you only know that a QR code exists. With analytics, you can see whether people actually use it, where they scan it, and which placements deserve more investment.
Start with scan volume
Total scans answer the first question: is anyone using this code?
Track scan volume by day and campaign. A spike after an event, email, poster launch, or packaging shipment tells you that the placement is visible. A flat line means the code may be hidden, too small, poorly labeled, or attached to an offer nobody wants.
Separate total scans from unique scanners
One person may scan the same QR code more than once. Total scans show activity; unique scanners show reach.
Use both numbers:
- High scans and high unique scanners: broad reach.
- High scans and low unique scanners: repeat use, common for menus and WiFi.
- Low scans and high impressions elsewhere: likely placement or CTA problem.
Check device and browser signals
Device data helps you optimize the landing page. If most scans come from mobile Safari, the page should load fast on iPhone. If scans come from older Android devices, test performance and tap targets there too.
Do not use device data to identify individuals. Use it to improve the scanning experience.
Use location carefully
Approximate geography can show which store, city, event, or region is performing. It is not perfect because IP-based location can be noisy.
Use location data as a directional signal, not as exact proof. For local campaigns, pair it with placement-level QR codes so each flyer, table, or storefront has a separate code.
Track repeat scans
Repeat scans are not always bad. Restaurant menus, WiFi cards, equipment labels, and building notices should be scanned repeatedly.
For acquisition campaigns, heavy repeat scanning can mean users are returning to the same link because they did not complete the intended action. Check the landing page and CTA.
Connect QR scans to campaigns
Use one QR code per placement whenever possible. A single shared code across every flyer, poster, and social profile hides which source works.
For larger campaigns, combine QR codes with UTM parameters so the landing page and analytics tools can attribute traffic. Keep the QR code itself clean and make sure the final URL remains stable.
Measure the landing page, not only the scan
A scan is not the final goal. Track what happens next:
- Pricing page visit
- Sign-up
- Checkout start
- Form submission
- Menu view
- Contact save
- File download
For commercial campaigns, scan analytics and business events should work together. GetQRFree plans include different analytics retention and scan limits; compare them on the pricing page.
Keep scannability in the dataset
If scans are lower than expected, the problem may be physical rather than marketing. Check the QR size, contrast, printing material, and quiet zone. The quiet zone guide gives a practical print checklist.
Practical reporting template
For each campaign, review:
- Total scans
- Unique scanners
- Scan trend by day
- Top placements
- Device mix
- Approximate geography
- Landing page conversion rate
- Next action to test
Good QR analytics should lead to a decision: move the code, enlarge it, change the CTA, update the landing page, or scale the placement that works.
更多文章

二维码静区指南:边距标准、尺寸换算与印刷检查清单
了解二维码静区的作用、为什么 ISO/IEC 18004 要求至少 4 个模块边距,以及如何避免屏幕、标签、包装和印刷场景中的扫码失败。


How to Add a Custom Domain to Your QR Code?
This article explains how to add a custom domain to your QR code.


QR Code Marketing for Small Businesses: Practical Campaign Ideas
Use QR codes for small business marketing with menus, reviews, coupons, packaging, events, business cards, and measurable local campaigns.

邮件列表
加入我们的社区
订阅邮件列表,及时获取最新消息和更新