QRCodeChimp released a GS1 QR Code Generator targeting retail brands and CPG companies facing the Sunrise 2027 deadline, according to a USA Today press release. The tool creates GS1 Digital Link QR codes that function as both point-of-sale scanners for retail checkout and consumer engagement portals—solving the dual-use requirement that trips up most packaging teams working under the industry mandate.
Sunrise 2027 is the global retail industry's agreement to accept 2D barcodes at point of sale by December 31, 2027, effectively retiring the one-dimensional UPC barcode that has dominated packaging since the 1970s. Retailers including Walmart, Target, and Kroger are installing scanners that read GS1 Digital Link codes, which encode product identifiers and can redirect consumers to product detail pages, ingredient lists, or registration flows. QRCodeChimp's generator allows brands to input a GTIN, add optional attributes like lot number or expiration date, and output a print-ready code that meets GS1 standards.
The tool works because it automates the encoding structure that GS1 requires but most design teams do not understand. A legacy UPC encodes a single identifier. A GS1 Digital Link code encodes a web URL structured around that identifier, allowing the same code to serve as a retail scanner input and a mobile redirect. When a Zebra scanner at a checkout counter reads the code, it extracts the GTIN. When a consumer scans the same code with a phone camera, the embedded URL resolves to a brand-controlled landing page. The generator handles the syntax so packaging designers do not need to parse GS1 specifications or hire a developer.
A small physical-product brand can run this play today even if Sunrise 2027 feels distant. First, obtain a GTIN from a GS1 member organization—cost is roughly $250 annually for a company prefix that yields 10 product codes, enough for most early catalogs. Second, use QRCodeChimp's generator to create a Digital Link code for each SKU, pointing the URL to a simple landing page on your existing domain. Third, replace or supplement the legacy barcode on your next packaging print run. Most commercial printers handle 2D codes without a surcharge; the file export is identical to a UPC file.
The landing page does not need to be elaborate. A product shot, ingredient panel, and email capture form converts passive packaging into a owned-media funnel. Brands selling through independent retailers gain a direct line to the end customer without fighting for shelf talker space or relying on the retailer's email list. One founder running a regional hot sauce line could swap barcodes on the next label proof, direct each code to a Shopify product page, and measure scan-through rates by SKU—zero marginal cost beyond the GTIN license.
The compliance deadline creates permission to ask retailers for packaging updates without waiting for a full rebrand. Buyers expect code changes in 2025 and 2026; a small brand mentioning Sunrise 2027 in a line review signals operational maturity rather than vanity redesign. The QR infrastructure also stacks with other post-purchase plays: a scan could trigger a replenishment reminder, a loyalty point deposit, or a recipe insert, all tracked server-side without altering the physical package.