Windows 11 Wi-Fi QR Code: Scan and Connect With Camera

How to connect with a Wi-Fi QR code​

Requirements: Windows 11 and a working built-in camera or connected webcam.
  1. Open Camera.
  2. Select Barcode mode.
  3. Place the complete Wi-Fi QR code inside the camera view.
  4. Select the link displayed by Camera.
  5. When Settings opens, verify the network name and approve the connection.
If Camera cannot access the webcam: Go to Start > Settings > Privacy & security > Camera. Turn on Camera access, allow apps to access the camera, and make sure Camera is permitted to use it.
If scanning works but connecting does not: Go to Settings > Network & internet > Wi-Fi > Manage known networks, select the affected network, choose Forget, and then try connecting again with the correct credentials.
Windows 11 can connect to a Wi-Fi network by using a built-in camera or connected webcam to scan a compatible Wi-Fi QR code in the Camera app’s Barcode mode. Camera displays a link for the recognized network information, and selecting it transfers the process to Settings, where the user can review and approve the connection.
The feature eliminates one of networking’s most frustrating routines: copying a long password from a router label, handwritten card, printed sign, or another screen. It is especially useful in homes, classrooms, help-desk sessions, temporary workspaces, and guest-network environments.
The security rule is equally simple: treat a Wi-Fi QR code as the password, verify the network name before approving the connection, and never publish a code for an internal network.

Microsoft Finally Gives the Laptop the Phone’s Easiest Wi-Fi Trick​

Connecting a phone to Wi-Fi by scanning a code has long felt natural. On a Windows laptop, the same task has often ended with someone crouching beside a router, confusing zeros with capital letters, or reading a complex password aloud one character at a time.
As described in Technobezz’s walkthrough, Windows 11 offers a built-in consumer route through the Camera app. Open Camera, select the mode labeled Barcode, place the Wi-Fi QR code within the camera view, and select the link that appears. Windows then opens Settings so the user can approve the connection.
The process is intentionally short, but each step has a distinct role. Camera captures and recognizes the code. Settings handles the connection request. The user remains responsible for checking that the displayed network is the expected one before proceeding.
A built-in laptop camera is not the only option. A connected webcam can also provide the image needed for scanning, which makes the method available to desktops and other computers without integrated cameras. What matters is that Windows Camera can access the device and obtain a clear view of the complete code.
The QR code must also contain compatible Wi-Fi connection information. QR codes can represent many types of data, including websites, payment requests, sign-in tokens, contact information, application pairing instructions, and plain text. The fact that Camera can see a square code does not guarantee that Windows will treat its contents as a wireless-network connection.
If Camera displays an action unrelated to Wi-Fi, the code may contain another type of information. That does not necessarily indicate a problem with the computer’s wireless adapter or network settings. It may simply be the wrong QR code for this workflow.

The Camera-to-Settings Handoff Is the Real Feature​

Calling the Windows 11 process a QR scanner understates its practical value. Decoding an image is only the first step. The useful part is the handoff from Camera to the operating system’s network interface.
Camera acts as the acquisition surface. It recognizes the Wi-Fi information and displays a link. When the user selects that link, Settings becomes the control point for reviewing and approving the connection.
That division also provides a useful troubleshooting boundary.
Scan problem: Camera cannot see, focus on, or recognize the code.
Connection problem: Camera recognizes the code, but Settings cannot complete the Wi-Fi connection.
If no link appears, concentrate on the camera view, Barcode mode, lighting, focus, permissions, and the code itself. If the link appears and Settings opens, the optical scan has already succeeded. At that stage, repeated scanning is unlikely to solve a bad credential, an unavailable network, or conflicting saved connection information.
The approval step is also the user’s opportunity to verify the network identity. A QR code can be copied, photographed, reposted, or placed over another sign. Before approving, check that the network name shown in Settings matches the home, office, classroom, hotel, or venue network you intended to join.
The code is a convenient representation of connection information, not proof that the network is safe. Windows removes the typing burden, but it cannot determine whether a code posted in a public place belongs to the organization that appears to have displayed it.

Windows Can Help Share Known Wi-Fi Information​

Scanning is only one side of the Windows 11 workflow. A PC that already knows a network can also help another person obtain its connection information without forcing anyone to read and retype a long password.
For the current connection, Windows provides access to the Wi-Fi network password from the network’s Properties page. For a previously stored connection, the equivalent control is available from the known-networks list.
Connection scenarioWhere to start on the sharing PCWhat the connecting user does
Current Wi-Fi networkSettings > Network & internet > Properties, then select Show next to the Wi-Fi network passwordOpen Camera > Barcode, scan the available Wi-Fi code, select the displayed link, and approve in Settings
Previously saved networkSettings > Network & internet > Wi-Fi > Manage known networks, select the network, and then select Show next to its passwordOpen Camera > Barcode, scan the available Wi-Fi code, select the displayed link, and approve in Settings
Windows mobile hotspotSettings > Network & internet > Mobile hotspot; review Share my internet connection from, Share over, and PropertiesUse the hotspot name and connection information shown by Windows; do not assume that this page will present a QR code
The current-network route is the most obvious household use case. One computer is already connected, another person needs access, and nobody remembers the password. The connected PC can reveal the necessary information without requiring a router login or a search for the original label.
The saved-network route is useful when a computer has connected previously but is not using that network at the moment. The user can open Manage known networks, select the relevant entry, and use the Show control to retrieve the stored password information.
Mobile hotspot remains a related sharing feature, but it should not be confused with the verified Camera workflow. Windows 11 exposes hotspot controls and properties under Settings > Network & internet > Mobile hotspot, including the labels Share my internet connection from, Share over, and Properties. Users should follow the connection details actually displayed there rather than expecting an unverified QR-code option.

The Show Button Reveals a Credential​

The ability to display a current or saved Wi-Fi password solves a genuine support problem, but it has an obvious security consequence. An unlocked Windows session may provide access to network information that is normally hidden during everyday use.
A Wi-Fi QR code should be handled as credential-equivalent. Even when a person cannot read the underlying characters by looking at the image, a compatible scanner may be able to use the code to join the network.
For a home network, avoid casual screenshots, photographs, or permanent displays unless broad access is intended. A printed code on a noticeboard may be convenient for trusted visitors, but anyone who can photograph it may retain the ability to use or redistribute the connection information until the Wi-Fi credentials change.
For a business, keep guest access separate from internal access. A guest-network code at reception may reduce repetitive support requests. Publishing the internal-network code would expose operational credentials far more widely than necessary.
Security callout: Treat the QR code as the password. Verify the SSID—the Wi-Fi network name—before approving the connection, and do not publish internal-network codes.
That one rule covers the central risk without turning a convenience feature into a larger security theory. The code removes manual entry; it does not change who should receive the credential.

A Failed Scan Usually Starts With Camera, Not Wi-Fi​

The most immediate point of failure is the Camera app. The correct mode must be active, which means selecting the icon labeled Barcode rather than leaving Camera in its normal photo or video mode.
The complete QR code should be visible inside the frame. If recognition does not occur:
  1. Move the code slightly farther from the camera.
  2. Keep all four corners visible.
  3. Hold the code steady.
  4. Reduce reflections from glossy paper or a bright screen.
  5. Improve the lighting without shining glare directly at the code.
  6. Clean the webcam lens if the picture looks hazy.
  7. Confirm that Barcode mode is selected.
A code displayed on another screen may scan more reliably after adjusting that screen’s brightness. Maximum brightness can produce glare or wash out parts of the pattern, while very low brightness may reduce contrast. A moderate setting and a straight viewing angle are usually better.
Do not assume that any action displayed by Camera will create a Wi-Fi connection. If the code represents a website or another kind of data, Camera may present an action appropriate to that content. That result suggests that the code may not contain usable Wi-Fi connection information.
When Camera recognizes the Wi-Fi code, select the displayed link. Settings should then open for approval. If the connection fails after that handoff, move to network troubleshooting instead of continuing to adjust the webcam.

Quick diagnosis​

What happensLikely area to investigateFirst action
Camera shows no live imageCamera access or webcam availabilityCheck Privacy & security > Camera
Camera shows an image but no scan resultBarcode mode, focus, lighting, framing, or code qualitySelect Barcode and place the complete code in view
Camera displays a non-Wi-Fi actionThe QR code may contain another type of dataObtain the correct Wi-Fi QR code
Camera displays the Wi-Fi link, but Settings does not connectSaved profile, credential, signal, or network availabilityVerify the SSID and consider forgetting the existing profile
The network connects after the old profile is removedPreviously stored connection information was likely conflictingKeep the new profile and test reconnection
This scan-versus-connect split prevents wasted effort. Camera troubleshooting will not repair an incorrect password, and deleting a Wi-Fi profile will not help a webcam that cannot see the code.

Check Camera Privacy Permissions​

Windows 11 Camera privacy settings with camera access controls.

If Camera cannot access the webcam, it cannot scan the code regardless of whether Wi-Fi itself is functioning correctly.
Open:
Start > Settings > Privacy & security > Camera
Then review the controls relevant to the built-in Camera app:
  • Turn on Camera access.
  • Turn on the option that allows apps to access the camera.
  • Make sure the Camera app is permitted to use the device if an individual Camera control is shown.
After changing the permission, close and reopen Camera. Return to Barcode mode and try the scan again.
These permissions only allow the app to obtain an image from the webcam. They do not approve a Wi-Fi connection, validate the QR code, change the network password, or guarantee that the network is available.
A useful diagnostic sequence is therefore:
  1. Confirm that Camera opens.
  2. Confirm that the live camera view appears.
  3. Select Barcode mode.
  4. Confirm that Camera recognizes the code and displays a link.
  5. Select the link.
  6. Verify the SSID in Settings.
  7. Approve the connection.
The first four steps concern image capture and recognition. The last three concern network identity and connection. Identifying the step where the process stops is more useful than describing the entire feature as “not working.”

Forget a Conflicting Network Profile​

If Camera reads the code and Settings opens but Windows still cannot connect, an existing saved network profile may be involved.
Technobezz recommends this fallback:
  1. Open Settings.
  2. Select Network & internet.
  3. Select Wi-Fi.
  4. Open Manage known networks.
  5. Find the affected network.
  6. Select Forget.
  7. Try the connection again with the correct credentials.
Forgetting a network removes its stored connection information from that PC. Use the step selectively, after confirming that you still have a valid way to reconnect.
This is particularly important when the QR code is the only available copy of the credential. Make sure the code remains accessible and belongs to the intended network before removing the existing profile.
Forgetting the profile is not a remedy for every failure. It will not fix a disabled wireless adapter, a router outage, a network that is out of range, a damaged QR image, or a webcam-permission problem. It is most relevant when Windows already knows the same SSID but may have older or conflicting connection information saved for it.

Use the Built-In Scanner First​

Technobezz identifies WiFi QR Code Scanner as a possible fallback. The Store application is presented as a tool that can use a webcam to scan a Wi-Fi QR code and provide a connection action.
The important distinction is that this is a third-party application, not the built-in Windows Camera workflow. Its interface, maintenance, privacy practices, and availability are controlled by its publisher.
Built-in-first callout: Try Camera > Barcode before installing another scanner. Use a third-party app only when the native Windows 11 route is unavailable or does not meet the specific need.
That order minimizes the number of applications handling credential-equivalent information. It also keeps the normal process simple: Camera reads the code, Windows opens Settings, and the user approves the network after verifying its name.
If a third-party scanner is necessary, review its publisher, requested camera access, listing details, and privacy information before installation. Microsoft Store distribution should not be mistaken for Microsoft authorship.
The same safety rule continues to apply. A different scanner may change how the image is decoded, but it does not prove that the resulting network is legitimate. Check the SSID before connecting.

Keep Managed-Device Questions Separate​

The Camera workflow is primarily a consumer and small-office convenience feature. A managed work or school PC may follow different connection procedures set by its organization.
If the device does not permit camera use, Store applications, or user-added networks, contact the organization’s help desk rather than installing random scanner utilities or attempting to bypass the restriction. IT may provide the approved network through its standard device-management process or direct users to another onboarding method.
For administrators, the relevant checklist can remain short:

Admin checklist​

  • Decide whether the network is intended for employee devices, guests, or unmanaged equipment.
  • Use QR sharing primarily for guest access, temporary setups, or devices outside normal management.
  • Do not publish an internal-network QR code.
  • Tell users the exact SSID they should expect before they scan.
  • If a managed PC cannot use Camera or cannot add the network, verify the organization’s intended onboarding process.
  • Keep managed-device deployment guidance in separate internal documentation rather than mixing it into a consumer scanning tutorial.
This preserves the value of the feature without treating a photographed credential as a substitute for managed configuration.

QR Sharing Removes Typing, Not Network Judgment​

Wi-Fi QR support in Windows 11 is valuable because it turns a tedious manual task into a short sequence: open Camera, choose Barcode mode, scan the code, select the displayed link, verify the SSID, and approve the connection in Settings.
When it fails, divide the problem cleanly. If Camera cannot recognize the code, investigate Barcode mode, framing, focus, lighting, and camera permissions. If Camera recognizes the code but Settings cannot connect, investigate the network name, saved profile, credential, signal, and network availability.
Use the built-in Camera route before adding third-party software. Treat every Wi-Fi QR code as the password it represents. Share guest access where appropriate, but keep internal-network codes private.
The strongest case for Wi-Fi QR codes is not that they make networking more advanced. It is that they remove error-prone typing while preserving a clear moment for the user to verify and approve the network.

References​

  1. Primary source: Technobezz
    Published: 2026-07-10T17:10:12.850858
  2. Official source: learn.microsoft.com
  3. Official source: support.microsoft.com
 

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