For Real Estate

Order the yard sign once. List, reduce, pend, and sell behind one QR.

Dynamic QR codes for yard signs, agent business cards, open house sign-ins, and listing flyers. Update the destination from "Available" to "Price Reduced" to "Sold" without reprinting anything — and see exactly which signs neighbors actually scan.

3 dynamic QR codes free. No credit card. Cancel any time.

What agents and brokers actually use it for

The brutal reality: the average listing flyer is wrong within two weeks of printing. These are the four patterns that fix that.

Yard sign lifecycle

One yard-sign QR. Available → Price Reduced → Pending → Sold.

The average yard sign sits in a front lawn for 47 days. The listing details change at least three times in that window — price, status, scheduled showings, the offer that fell through on Tuesday — and every change used to mean a new rider, a trip to the property, and a stapler. A dynamic QR on the rider points to your hosted listing page, and that page updates in real time from the dashboard.

Day one: 'Available — Open House Saturday 11-1.' Day twelve: 'Price Reduced to $679,000.' Day thirty-one: 'Pending — backups welcome.' Day forty-five: 'Sold. Looking to sell yours? Here's how I priced this one.' Same printed sign, same printed rider, four entirely different scan experiences. Neighbors who keep checking actually see useful information instead of a 6-week-old laminated sticker.

Agent vCard

A business card vCard QR that's always current

You order 500 business cards from Vistaprint and you change brokerages eight months later. Or you get a new direct line. Or you finally drop the AOL address. The traditional fix is throwing the cards out — but a vCard QR on the card means the printed asset never expires. The contact card downloaded by a buyer at last spring's open house still saves your current number, your current email, and your current brokerage logo when they scan it again in November.

Linkaroo's vCard QR also carries through to the small stuff agents always forget — Instagram handle, Spanish-speaking flag, lockbox-pickup phone vs. office line. Edit any of it from the dashboard and you've effectively reissued every business card you've ever handed out, without printing a single new one.

See all 9+ content types
Open house flow

Open house sign-in Saturday, follow-up email link Monday — same QR

Saturday at 12:40pm the QR on your sandwich board and entryway sign points to a sign-in form: name, email, are-you-working-with-an-agent, financing status. By Sunday night you've got 23 entries in your CRM. Monday at 8am, Linkaroo's scheduled change automatically swaps that exact same QR to a 'Thanks for visiting 14 Cypress on Saturday — here's the listing again plus three similar homes in the area' page that you send out in the follow-up email blast.

Three weeks later the listing goes pending. You re-aim the QR one more time — now it points to a buyer-side 'Missed this one? Here's what I'm working on next' nurture page. The handful of leads who saved your QR for any reason get pulled forward in your funnel instead of going cold. Set the schedule once, stop manually editing CRM blast links.

Post-close referrals

A post-close QR that rotates between Zillow, Google, and Realtor.com reviews

The 72 hours after a closing are the most valuable review-collection window of your year, and most agents waste it by sending a single Zillow link in an email that gets buried. Print a small thank-you card with one QR — handed over at the closing table next to the keys — and point it wherever review velocity matters most this month. Zillow for the algorithm push. Google for local SEO. Realtor.com when you're switching primary lead-gen pipes.

Pair it with analytics and you'll know precisely how many sellers actually scanned the closing-day card, when, and on what device. If the answer is 'nobody scanned on Friday closings,' that's data — try the card at signing on Thursday instead. None of this requires a new card design.

Real example

One listing, one QR, six lifecycle stages

A three-bed colonial on Cypress Lane, listed at $749k. Here is what the QR on the rider actually points to across the 47 days it took to close — and what it does after.

Day 1

Listed

You order one sign with a generic 'Scan for listing details' rider. The QR points to a clean listing page with photos, price, the next two open houses, and a 'request a private showing' button. Sticker Mule prints the rider in 48 hours.

Day 9

Showings ramp up

Saturday open house. The same QR is now also on the sandwich board at the corner and the entryway sign-in. 31 scans by 1pm. You see in analytics that scans cluster between 11:15 and 12:40 — the next open house, you'll staff for that window.

Day 22

Price reduction

Seller agrees to drop from $749k to $719k. You don't reprint the rider. You edit the listing page header to 'Price Reduced — $719,000' and push a Facebook/Instagram post that screenshots the new page. Yard-sign scans spike 4x in 48 hours.

Day 34

Pending

Offer accepted. The listing page header switches to 'Pending — Backup offers welcome' and the scan destination still works for the lookie-loos. You get two backup offers via the link. The rider on the sign hasn't been touched.

Day 47

Sold

You add a 'SOLD' sign topper. The QR now resolves to a one-page 'Sold for $712,000 in 47 days by [your name] — here's how I'd price yours' page with a contact form. Neighbors walking the dog finally have a reason to scan.

Day 60+

Post-close referral asset

The brochure QR sitting in the buyer's kitchen drawer rotates from listing page to a review-request page (Zillow this month, Google next), then to a 'love your new home? I'd love a referral' page in month four. The original print run keeps earning.

Same rider. Same printed brochure. Six destinations across the listing's entire lifecycle and well beyond. See how to set up scheduled changes in Features.

Static vs dynamic on a listing

Static QR codes are basically expensive stickers. Here's the difference once you're mid-cycle on a listing that won't sit still.

ScenarioStatic QRLinkaroo
Price reduction on a listingOrder a new sign rider, install in personEdit the listing page header, scans resolve to new price
vCard on your business cardThrow out the box, reprint at VistaprintEdit phone/email/brokerage from dashboard
Status change Available → Pending → SoldThree rounds of new signs and stickersOne destination update per status change
Showing report analytics for the sellerNo data — you guess from foot trafficScan counts by day, time, and rough location
vCard QRs for business cardsPer-sign scan analyticsGeographic scan heatmapsNo app for buyers
FAQ

Questions agents ask before putting this on a sign

Can I update a yard sign's QR to show price reductions without reprinting?

Yes — that's the entire point. The QR printed on the sign rider never changes. You log into Linkaroo, edit the destination URL, and the next scan resolves to your new listing page with the reduced price. A $25k price drop on a $700k listing used to mean a new sign order and a Saturday install; now it's a 10-second edit from your phone in the car between showings.

How do I keep my business card vCard current when my phone or email changes?

Generate a vCard QR for your business card once and Linkaroo hosts the contact file as a dynamic destination. When you switch brokerages, change your phone, drop the @gmail in favor of an @yourname domain, or update your headshot, you edit the vCard fields in the dashboard. Every business card already in a buyer's wallet keeps working — the next scan saves your new info, not the old.

Can I capture open house sign-ins through the QR?

Yes. Point the open house yard-sign QR or the entryway tabletop QR at a sign-in form (Google Form, Typeform, your CRM's lead capture page, anything you control). Saturday afternoon visitors tap and submit; Monday morning you re-aim the same QR at a personalized 'Thanks for stopping by — here's the listing again plus three similar homes' page for the follow-up email. One QR, two distinct lifecycle moments, zero new print.

What happens to the QR after the house sells?

You keep using it. The most valuable thing a sold-home QR can do is rotate to a review request — Zillow this month, Realtor.com next month, Google after that — so the buyer who's still emotionally bought in actually leaves you a review. Later you can repoint that same QR to a 'Sold by [your name] — looking to sell yours?' lead-capture page. The yard sign comes down, but the brochure QR sitting in the buyer's kitchen drawer keeps earning.

Can I track which yard signs got the most scans?

Yes, per QR. Every scan is logged with timestamp, approximate geographic location, and device type. You can see the 14 Cypress Lane sign pulled 41 scans on Sunday between 11am and 3pm, while the 22 Elm flyer got 8 scans all weekend. Pro keeps 90 days; Business keeps a full year and adds geographic heatmaps that are genuinely useful for listing presentations — 'here's the scan map from the last comparable I sold on this block'.

Do my buyer leads see who else scanned the QR?

No. Scans are anonymous to the public — your buyers, sellers, and the curious neighbors walking the dog see nothing except the destination page you set. The scan log lives in your private Linkaroo dashboard. The only thing leads see is whatever you choose to show them at the destination.

Got a more specific scenario? Compare plans on the pricing page or check our help center.

One rider. Every listing stage you'll ever close.

Start free with 3 dynamic QR codes. Put one on a yard sign and one on your business card this week — upgrade when the showing reports sell themselves at your next listing presentation.

No credit card3 free dynamic QRs