Anonymous wrote:A QR code is unlikely to speed contact with the pet's owners. It can be hard enough to read what's on a pet's tag, especially if they're skittish, and plenty of people don't deal with QR codes. (I'm old, don't at me, I reunite a lot of lost pets and I know a lot of conscientious lost-pet helpers who are older and less tech-savvy than I.)
The microchip companies generally send you tags with an ID specific to your pet and offer a service that lets a finder submit a found report. That's lower overhead than a separate service that provides a QR code.
But in any case, if I have a lost pet close enough to read a tag, I want a number I can see clearly to call or text—one step, not a redirect to a website.
Even better, get a collar with their number embroidered on it in large, clear print—much easier to read if the dog will not let you handle them.
We’ve found and returned dogs by scanning the Apple tag. Once we had to replace the battery. With a mean dog we got the collar off to look a chip is important but needs a reader.