Emoji Hunt

April 8, 2026 · 5 min read

QR Code Treasure Hunt: Plan One in 10 Minutes

You know that look kids get when they find something hidden? Eyes wide, jumping on their toes, screaming for everyone to come see? That's the whole point of a treasure hunt. And with QR codes, you can set one up in the time it takes to microwave popcorn.

No app downloads. No accounts. No craft supplies. Just your phone, a printer, and a pair of scissors.

Here's exactly how to do it.

What You'll Need

The 4-Step Setup

  1. Pick your clues. Open Emoji Hunt and choose an emoji for each hiding spot. The emoji is the clue — kids decode it to figure out where to go next. Think: a snowflake for the freezer, or a bathtub for the bathroom.
  2. Print and cut. The builder generates a printable sheet of QR codes. Cut them out. Each one is a single clue.
  3. Hide them in order. Clue 1 leads to the spot where Clue 2 is hidden, and so on. The last clue leads to the treasure — a small prize, a treat bag, or even just a silly confetti screen on the phone.
  4. Hand over the first clue and go. Give the kids the first QR code. They scan it, see the emoji clue, figure out the location, run there, find the next code… and the chaos begins (the good kind).

Emoji Clue Ideas by Room

Stuck on clue ideas? Here are some that work well:

🧊 Freezer
👕 Closet
🛁 Bathtub
📚 Bookshelf
ðŸŠī Plant pot
👟 Front door / shoes
ðŸģ Kitchen stove
🛏ïļ Under the bed

The beauty of emoji clues is that pre-readers can play too. They don't need to read words — they just need to recognize pictures. That makes it perfect for mixed-age groups at birthday parties or family gatherings.

When to Use a QR Treasure Hunt

Tips to Make It Great

  1. Start easy, end tricky. Put the first clue somewhere obvious so kids build confidence. Save the hard spots for later.
  2. Tape codes at kid height. Under tables, behind couch cushions, on the back of doors — anywhere their eyes naturally go.
  3. Make the finale special. The last scan triggers a confetti celebration on screen. Stack a small prize at that spot and the kids will lose their minds.
  4. Keep it short for little ones. 5 – 6 clues is the sweet spot for ages 3 – 6. Older kids can handle 10+.
  5. Do a test run. Scan each code yourself before the kids start. Printers occasionally cut off the edge of a QR code, and you don't want the hunt stalling at clue 3.

Pro tip for birthday parties

Print a copy of the first QR code for every child so nobody fights over who gets to scan first. After that, have them take turns — one kid scans, the next kid finds.

Why QR Codes Beat Paper Clues

Traditional treasure hunts with handwritten clues are great — if you have time to think of riddles and kids who can read them. QR codes solve both problems:

Ready to Build One?

Create your free emoji treasure hunt in minutes. No account, no app, no cost.

Start Building

What Parents Are Using It For

Since launching Emoji Hunt, we've seen parents get wildly creative:

The tool supports English, French, and Hebrew — so you can build hunts in whatever language your kids speak.

Start Your First Hunt

The whole thing takes 10 minutes. You pick emojis, print QR codes, hide them around the house, and hand kids the first clue. That's it.

No app. No sign-up. Just fun.

Build your free treasure hunt now →


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