No-expiry QR code — one-time payment
You want a dynamic QR code that does not expire when a subscription lapses or a trial converts. KeepQR’s no-expiry tier is $19.99, paid once. No recurring billing. No auto-renew.
What no-expiry means here
The code has no expiry date. It stays active for as long as KeepQR operates. We do not promise more than we can honestly deliver — but there is no subscription charge that could lapse and kill the redirect, and no trial period that flips to paid without warning.
Pay once. No expiry. No recurring billing.
What you get
- A dynamic QR code with an editable destination — change the URL at any time from a private management link
- Print-ready PDF, PNG, and SVG download
- No account, no password, no card stored after purchase
- Your data is never sold, shared for ads, or used for AI training
- Self-serve refund within 30 days
How the market usually works — and why it matters for printed codes
Most dynamic QR services charge monthly. That model works fine for digital-only uses where you remember to renew. It becomes a problem the moment you print the code:
- A code on a restaurant menu stops working if you miss a month.
- A code on a sign or a banner keeps scanning the wrong URL — or nothing at all — after a trial converts.
- A code printed inside a book or on packaged goods cannot be swapped without a reprint.
A one-time no-expiry payment removes the billing-lapse risk from printed material.
Pricing comparison
| Tier | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3-month | $4.99 once | Covers a season, campaign, or short-run event flyer |
| No-expiry | $19.99 once | No expiry date, no renewal |
All tiers: one-time payment, no auto-renew, no account required.
Use cases
- Menus and signage that need to point to a current page without a monthly overhead
- Event programs printed in advance, with a destination that can change
- Fundraiser materials for schools, churches, scouts, and nonprofits
- Wedding invitations with a registry or RSVP link that can be repointed after the wedding
- Business cards and packaging where a reprint is expensive