QR code scams (quishing): how to stay safe
A QR code is just a link you cannot read with your eyes. Scammers exploit that gap. Here is how "quishing" works and how to scan safely.
What is "quishing"?
Quishing is phishing that uses a QR code instead of a clickable link. Because a QR code is just a pattern of squares, you cannot tell where it leads until you scan it - and by then your phone may already be opening a fake website. Scammers love this: it slips past the "hover to check the link" habit that protects you in email.
Where QR scams show up
- Stickers placed over real codes - on parking meters, EV chargers, restaurant menus, and posters. The scammer's code sits on top of the legitimate one.
- Fake invoices and letters - a "missed delivery" or "unpaid toll" notice with a QR code to "resolve" it.
- Emails - a QR code in an attachment or image, used to dodge the link scanners that protect your inbox.
- Too-good deals - a flyer promising a prize or discount if you "scan to claim."
How to scan safely
- Preview the link before opening it. Most phone cameras show the URL first - read it. Does the domain match the company you expect?
- Watch for look-alike domains.
paypa1.comorcanadapost-delivery.infoare not the real thing. - Be suspicious of physical codes in public. Check for a sticker placed over another code. When in doubt, type the address yourself instead.
- Never enter passwords or payment details on a page you reached by scanning a code you did not expect.
- Check the link first. If you are unsure where a code leads, decode it and run the address through our QR Code Checker before you trust it.
If you already scanned and entered details
Treat it like any phishing: change the password you entered (and anywhere you reused it), turn on two-factor authentication, and if you shared card details, call your bank. A QR code is just a link - the same caution applies.