This real-estate QR code is no longer active.
The code on the yard sign, sign rider, brochure box flyer, or open-house handout you just scanned was created on GlyphIQ for a listing that has since closed. The agent or broker chose to retire the code rather than leave it pointing at a stale listing. Nothing is wrong on your end.
Why this happened
A listing has a clear life — on the MLS, an open house weekend, a tour schedule, an offer, then closing. Once the property closes, the listing comes down. When an agent retires the listing code, GlyphIQ routes scans here instead of to someone else's redirect.
QR codes in real estate
A modern agent runs a small fleet of printed QR codes on every active listing — yard signs and sign riders pointing at the MLS listing or the property tour, brochure boxes carrying square footage and lot details, open-house handouts linking to the showing schedule, business cards routing to the agent's full portfolio, postcard mailers driving neighborhood prospecting. Each printed sign rider stays in circulation long after the listing it serves closes. Most QR platforms stop responding the instant the listing closes and the agent stops paying for that property's code, which strands every prospective buyer who scanned a yard sign a week before closing. GlyphIQ keeps codes recognized after a listing closes so a printed brochure-box flyer still routes somewhere intentional. Agents can update destinations between listings without reprinting.
For agents and brokers
If you list properties and want yard signs, sign riders, and brochure handouts that route somewhere clean after a sale closes, GlyphIQ keeps the same printed sign live across the listing's full arc. Retire it when the property closes; later scans land here, not nowhere.