The multilink QR is what Linktree was supposed to be before it became advertising real estate. A single landing page with curated links — your Instagram, your latest product, the Spotify playlist, the booking form, the press kit. One QR, one URL, no app. Updates propagate instantly to every printed surface.
What qrlia changes vs. the incumbent: your multilink page lives on your subdomain (a free slot, or your own custom domain on Pro at €12/mo). No linktr.ee/yourbrand URL where the platform brand outranks yours in autocomplete. Visitors see your domain, your colours, your typography. The QR scan and the click-through both stay on your brand.
The second thing we change: no third-party trackers. Linktree-grade competitors fire pixels at Meta, Google, and ad-tech aggregators by default. qrlia's multilink page ships with first-party analytics only — counts and country roll-ups live in your dashboard, never on someone else's ad-targeting infrastructure. For B2B brands, hospitality, and creators selling into privacy-conscious EU markets, this is the difference between "we track this internally" and "we share your scan data with three vendors you've never heard of."
For creators specifically: the multilink QR makes more sense than a Linktree URL on physical surfaces. Stickers, print magazines, conference signage, business cards — anywhere a click isn't possible. The QR scans, the page loads in under a second, and every link is editable from your phone.
For real estate: the yard-sign QR pointing at a per-listing multilink page beats the bare URL by far. Photos, virtual tour, agent vCard, "book a viewing" form — all on one page, all editable as the listing evolves. Each listing gets its own slug; you can mint 200 of them in a single CSV upload.
Pro tier ships email-capture blocks that pipe to webhooks (your CRM, Mailchimp, Listmonk, anything that takes a POST). Free tier renders the page without capture; you upgrade when conversion matters.