📱 iPhone & QR Code

How to Scan a QR Code on Your Own iPhone Screen

Yes, it's actually possible — here's the exact built-in trick (no extra app needed), plus every other method that works in 2026.

📝 By the DoItQR team 📅 June 16, 2026 ⏱ 8 min read

1. Why You Can't Just Point Your Camera at Your Own Screen

It happens to almost everyone sooner or later: an app, a website, or a message shows you a QR code right there on your iPhone's display, and your first instinct is to open the Camera app and point it at... the screen you're already looking at. It doesn't work, and there's a good reason why.

Your iPhone's camera is on the back of the device. It physically cannot see its own front screen, so it can never read a QR code displayed on that same screen. This trips up a huge number of people, especially the first time a boarding pass, a Wi-Fi code, or a payment QR shows up inside an app instead of on paper.

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Quick answer Yes, you can read a QR code that's on your own iPhone screen. The trick is Apple's Live Text feature inside the Photos app (iOS 15 and later) — no extra scanner app required. The full steps are in section 4 below.

2. Every Method, Compared

Which approach you need depends on where the QR code actually is. Here's a quick overview before diving into the steps.

SituationBest methodWhat it needsWorks on your own screen?
QR code inside an app or website on your iPhoneLive Text (Photos app)iOS 15+, a screenshot✅ Yes
QR code printed, on a poster, or on another deviceCamera app or Code ScannerAny iOS, line of sight➖ Not needed
QR code received as an image from someoneLive Text in Messages or PhotosiOS 15+✅ Yes
Older iPhone / Live Text unavailableThird-party scanner with photo importApp Store install✅ Yes
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Key fact Live Text isn't a separate app you have to download. It's a built-in iOS feature that reads text and QR codes directly inside photos, screenshots, and even the Camera viewfinder.

3. What You Need Before You Start

  • An iPhone XS, XR, or newer — the hardware Live Text was first introduced for
  • iOS 15 or later installed (check in Settings → General → About)
  • The QR code visible somewhere on your screen — in an app, a text message, a website, or a saved photo
  • Live Text turned on — it's enabled by default, but worth a quick check
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If Live Text seems to be missing Go to Settings → General → Language & Region and make sure the Live Text toggle is on. For the Camera app specifically, check Settings → Camera → Show Detected Text. Note that Live Text isn't available in every region or language.

4. Step-by-Step: Scan Your Own Screen with Live Text

  1. Take a screenshot of the screen showing the QR code (side button + volume up, then release). Skip this step if the code is already a saved photo.
  2. Open the Photos app and find that screenshot or image.
  3. Look at the bottom-right corner of the photo for the Live Text icon — three small horizontal lines inside a frame.
  4. Tap that icon. The QR code gets a yellow outline once it's detected.
  5. Tap directly on the QR code inside the photo.
  6. A banner appears at the bottom showing where the code leads — a website, a contact card, a Wi-Fi network, and so on.
  7. Tap the banner to open it, or tap and hold for more options like copying the link.
Even faster On recent versions of iOS, you often don't need to tap the Live Text icon first — pressing directly on a QR code inside a photo can trigger detection automatically.
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One catch Apps with content protection — some banking apps, ticket wallets, or DRM-protected video — block screenshots entirely. Live Text can't help on those specific screens; you'll need the sender to share the code as a regular image instead.

5. Scanning Codes That Aren't on Your Own Screen

If the QR code is printed, shown on a poster or product, or displayed on someone else's device, you don't need Live Text at all — the regular Camera app or Control Center's Code Scanner is faster.

  1. Open the Camera app from the Home Screen, Lock Screen, or Control Center — or add Code Scanner to Control Center via Settings → Control Center → Add a Control.
  2. Point your iPhone's rear camera at the code so it's fully inside the frame.
  3. Wait for the on-screen banner to appear, then tap it to open the link automatically.
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Why this method has a hard limit This only works when the camera can physically see the code from the outside. It can never read a code displayed on the very screen you're using to point the camera — that's exactly the situation Live Text was built to solve.

6. When It Doesn't Work — and How to Stay Safe

Most failed attempts come down to a handful of common causes.

  • No Live Text icon appears → check your iOS version and the Language & Region toggle from section 3
  • The screenshot is blurry, cropped, or too small → retake it, zoomed in closer on just the code
  • The code is split across two separate screenshots → capture the whole code in a single image
  • The app blocks screenshots entirely → ask the sender to forward the code as a separate image, or use AirDrop instead
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Before you tap that link Live Text — and any other scanner — will happily open whatever link is hidden inside a QR code, including a malicious one. A screenshot taken from a random text message, an ad, or a sketchy email can hide a phishing link just as easily as a legitimate destination. Always glance at where a link is actually taking you before tapping "Open."

7. DoItQR Diagnostic: Check Any Link Before You Open It

Whether you used Live Text, the Camera app, or a third-party scanner, what a QR code actually reveals is just a URL — and DoItQR's free Diagnostic tool analyzes that URL before you tap anything.

  • Checks domain reputation and how recently it was registered
  • Flags suspicious redirects and shortened links hiding the real destination
  • Detects known phishing and malware signals
  • Works with any link, regardless of which app or method revealed it

🛡️ Check that link right now

Instant analysis — free, no sign-up required.

Run the Diagnostic → 🔍 Scanner

8. DoItQR Scanner: A Safer Way to Read Any QR Code

If you'd rather skip Live Text altogether, DoItQR's online scanner lets you upload a screenshot or photo of a QR code straight from your browser and shows you the full destination link before you ever click it.

✅ A trustworthy link generally:

  • Starts with https:// and matches the brand or service you'd expect
  • Doesn't ask for a password immediately after opening
  • Doesn't bounce through two or three unrelated domains before landing
  • Never prompts you to download an APK or an unknown file
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Good habit Before scanning any QR code you didn't generate yourself — on a flyer, in an email, on a parking meter — take two seconds to check it with DoItQR's Scanner or Diagnostic first.

9. Conclusion: Yes, You Can Scan Your Own Screen

Apple's Live Text feature solves the "scan my own screen" problem completely, with no third-party app required, on any iPhone XS or later running iOS 15+. Screenshot the code, open it in Photos, tap on it, and the link appears.

And whichever method gets you to that link — Live Text, the Camera app, or a third-party scanner — take a moment to verify it's safe before opening it. DoItQR's free tools make that a five-second habit.

✅ All DoItQR tools are 100% free

Generator · Scanner · Diagnostic — no sign-up, no subscription.

Discover DoItQR →

📚 Sources

  1. Apple Support — Scan a QR code with your iPhone or iPadsupport.apple.com
  2. Apple Support — Scan a QR code with your iPhone camerasupport.apple.com
  3. Apple Support — Use Live Text with your iPhone camerasupport.apple.com
  4. Apple Support — Copy and translate text from photos on your iPhone or iPadsupport.apple.com
  5. MakeUseOf — How to Scan a QR Code in a Picture or Photo on Your iPhone's Screenmakeuseof.com
  6. QRCodeKit — How to Scan QR Code Inside iPhoneqrcodekit.com
  7. Apple Support Communities — Can I scan a QR code present on my own iPhone?discussions.apple.com
  8. DoItQR — QR Code Diagnostic Tooldoitqr.com/diagnostic