Free Google Review Link Generator + QR code
Search your business, pick it from the list, and you get your direct Google review link plus a matching QR code. The link opens the leave-a-review box for your business on Google. Copy it, print the QR, and put both anywhere customers already look. Free, no account needed.
Last updated July 3, 2026
No account needed. We read only your public Google listing to find its Place ID.
How do I get my Google review link?
Search your business above and pick it from the list. The tool looks up your Google Place ID and attaches it to Google’s official write-a-review address. The result is https://search.google.com/local/writereview?placeid=YOUR_PLACE_ID, the direct link that opens the review box for your business, with no searching or scrolling for the customer.
Find your business
Type your business name and pick it from the list. We read your public Google listing to find its Place ID. No login, no Google connection.
Copy your review link
You get the official write-a-review URL with your Place ID attached. One tap for your customers, straight into the review box.
Download the QR code
A print-quality PNG (1024px), generated in your browser. Put it on receipts, counter cards, and invoices, and it opens the same link.
Where to put your review link and QR code
The link works anywhere you can paste text. The QR works anywhere you can print. The best spots share one thing: the customer just had a good experience seconds ago.
Receipts
Print the QR at the bottom of every receipt. The customer is holding proof of the visit; that is the easiest moment to ask.
Counter cards
A small card next to the register or on tables. "Happy with your visit? Scan to leave us a Google review." That one line is enough.
Follow-up texts and emails
Paste the link into your thank-you message or booking follow-up. A direct link beats "find us on Google" every time.
Invoices and job sheets
For contractors and service businesses: add the link or QR to the final invoice, while the finished work is still fresh.
One rule: never gate reviews
It is tempting to check who is happy first and send the link only to them. That is called review gating, and Google’s review policies prohibit it. Google has removed reviews and penalized profiles for it. Ask everyone, the same way, every time: same receipt, same follow-up, same QR on the counter. A handful of critical reviews makes your profile believable, and a calm public reply to a bad one usually earns more trust than one more 5-star.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find my Google review link?
Search your business name in the tool above and pick it from the list. We look up your Google Place ID and attach it to the official write-a-review URL (https://search.google.com/local/writereview?placeid=YOUR_PLACE_ID). You can also find the same link inside your Google Business Profile dashboard under "Ask for reviews", this tool just gets you there without logging in.
Does the link work for any business?
It works for any business with a live Google Business Profile, including service-area businesses without a storefront. If your business does not show up in the search, it usually is not listed on Google yet, or the listing is brand new. Create or claim your profile in Google first, then come back for the link.
How should I use the QR code?
Download the PNG (1024px, print quality) and put it where the goodwill happens: the bottom of receipts, a counter card, table tents, invoices, packaging, or a job-completion sheet. Keep it at least 2 x 2 cm in print, leave white space around it, and test one scan with your own phone before printing a batch.
Is asking customers for Google reviews allowed?
Yes. Google explicitly allows asking your customers for reviews. What is not allowed: paying or discounting in exchange for reviews, reviewing your own business, and review gating. A plain ask, on a receipt, in a follow-up text or email, is fine, and it is the single most reliable way to grow your review count.
What is review gating and why should I avoid it?
Review gating means screening customers first and only sending the review link to the happy ones. Google's review policies prohibit it, and Google has removed reviews and penalized profiles over it. Ask everyone, the same way, every time. A few critical reviews make the rest believable, and a thoughtful public reply to a bad one often wins more trust than another 5-star.
The reviews will start coming in. Then someone has to answer them.
A link on every receipt means a steady stream of new reviews, good and bad. RepliFast drafts a reply to each one in your voice, you approve it, and it posts to Google. Ask with this page, answer with RepliFast.
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