This automotive QR code is no longer active.

The code on the window sticker, service-bay placard, lot-sign rider, or owner's-manual insert you just scanned was created on GlyphIQ by a dealership or service shop that has since retired it. They chose to retire the code rather than leave it pointing at a stale offer.

Why this happened

Dealerships rotate inventory every model year. Lease offers update quarterly. A recall closes a service campaign. A trade-in promotion runs for a weekend. When a dealership retires the code, GlyphIQ routes scans here rather than to a stale lease portal or someone else's redirect.

QR codes in automotive

A modern dealership runs printed QR codes across the lot and the showroom — window stickers carry MSRP and lease-offer codes routing to the configurator, service-bay placards link to oil-change and tune-up scheduling, parts-counter signs carry recall lookup, lot sign-riders point at the trade-in valuation form, owner's-manual inserts route to the manufacturer's service portal. Most platforms stop responding the moment a dealership rotates DMS providers or stops paying for last year's lease-offer code, which strands every shopper who scanned a window sticker last summer. GlyphIQ keeps codes recognized after a dealership retires them so a service-bay placard from last quarter still routes somewhere intentional rather than a 404. Dealerships can update destinations between model years without reprinting the lot.

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For dealerships and service shops

If you manage a lot, run a service bay, or print collateral for a showroom and want window stickers and service placards that survive a model-year rotation, GlyphIQ keeps the same printed sticker live across years. Retire it when inventory truly turns; later scans land here.