QRCodeChimp released a GS1 QR Code Generator as retail and CPG brands prepare for Sunrise 2027, the industry-wide shift from legacy UPC barcodes to GS1 Digital Link QR codes, according to USA Today. The tool addresses a narrow but urgent problem: most packaging teams lack infrastructure to generate compliant codes that embed product data, URLs, and supply chain information into a single scannable mark.
The generator produces GS1 Digital Link codes that encode a Global Trade Item Number (GTIN) and allow brands to append variable data — batch numbers, expiration dates, destination URLs — without reprinting packaging. Retailers scan the code at checkout while consumers scan the same mark to reach product pages, instructions, or warranty registration. QRCodeChimp's tool runs in-browser, requires no API integration, and outputs print-ready files at no cost for standard use.
The urgency stems from GS1's 2027 deadline, when point-of-sale systems globally begin phasing out support for traditional 1D barcodes in favor of 2D codes that carry richer data. Brands printing packaging today face a choice: adopt the new standard now or face a costly reprint cycle in two years. Early adopters gain a second advantage — connected packaging infrastructure that links physical product to digital experience without adding a second code or NFC chip. The mechanism works because GS1 Digital Link embeds a web URL inside the barcode itself, turning every package into a trackable, updatable portal.
Small brands can run the same play without a procurement department. Open QRCodeChimp's GS1 generator, enter your product's GTIN (purchase one from GS1 US for $30 annually if you lack a company prefix), and append your destination URL. The tool outputs an EPS or SVG file. Send that file to your packaging printer with a note specifying minimum size (10mm square for reliable scans) and requesting placement where a customer naturally looks — near the product name or ingredient panel, not buried in legal copy. If you're printing in-house on labels, export at 300 DPI and run a test scan with three different phone cameras before committing to a run.
The operator play is tighter. Audit your current SKU catalog and identify products with existing QR codes that link to static URLs or marketing pages. Replace those with GS1 Digital Link codes that encode your GTIN and route through a redirect service you control. Use a platform like Branch or Bitly to manage the destination URL so you can update the landing page — swap in a recipe, a how-to video, a warranty claim form — without touching the package. Brief your logistics team that the new codes function as both POS barcodes and consumer touchpoints, eliminating the need for dual marking. Budget 15-20 minutes per SKU for setup, then template the workflow.
The connected packaging surface area extends further than customer engagement. Brands encoding batch and lot data into GS1 codes gain recall precision — a retailer scans a single unit and identifies every case from the same production run without opening a database. Supply chain partners read expiration dates at the scan, not from a printed line a human must parse. The same code a customer scans for a recipe is the code a distributor scans for inventory verification. You pay once for the mark and extract value at four points in the product's life.
The 2027 deadline is not a suggestion. Retailers installing new POS systems today are speccing for GS1 Digital Link as the primary input. Brands that wait will spend 2026 in a panic reprint cycle while competitors already occupy the connected packaging layer.