# QR Code Scams at Furniture Stores and Home Goods Retailers: What to Check Before You Scan

> Furniture showrooms and home goods stores use QR codes on price tags, display models, and packaging — and scammers know it. Here are the three most common ways those codes get weaponized, and how to spot the difference before you hand over a dollar.

URL: https://www.qrsafer.com/blog/furniture-store-qr-code-scams
Published: 2026-05-14

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Furniture stores and home goods retailers have embraced QR codes as a natural part of the shopping experience. You scan a tag to see dimensions in augmented reality, scan an assembly sheet to watch a video tutorial, or scan a display card to add a sofa to your online wishlist. At IKEA, Wayfair, Ashley Furniture, and thousands of independent showrooms, the habit is normalized.

That routine is exactly what makes **furniture store QR code scams** worth understanding. Here are the three main vectors scammers use — and how to check before you tap.

## 1. Tampered price-tag QR codes redirecting to fake payment portals

Price tags in furniture showrooms frequently carry QR codes linking to product detail pages, finish options, or "buy online" shortcuts. The problem: a small fraudulent sticker can be pressed over the original code in seconds by anyone browsing the floor.

When you scan the replaced code, you land on a convincing fake of the retailer's website. The page prompts you to "start your order," "check current availability," or "confirm your size preference" — all of which require creating an account or entering payment details. No furniture is ever reserved; your card number goes straight to the scammer.

**What to check:** Run your thumbnail around the edge of the QR code before scanning. A slightly raised, slightly misaligned, or visibly different label is a sign something has been placed on top. Once the page loads, read the URL. A phishing clone of a well-known furniture brand will often swap a letter, add a hyphen, or use a different top-level domain — "ashleyfurnature.com" instead of "ashleyfurniture.com."

## 2. Delivery and assembly instruction codes on packaging

Assembly instruction sheets and product packaging routinely include QR codes that link to video tutorials, parts replacement pages, or brand warranty registration. These codes reach the buyer only after the product has been unboxed — well away from any store staff who might notice tampering.

Scammers target high-turnover warehouse and shipping environments where products move quickly and inspection is light. A fraudulent sticker over the assembly QR on a flat-pack carton leads to a fake product registration page that asks for your name, email, address, and credit card to "activate your warranty."

**Simple rule:** Legitimate warranty registration never requires a credit card upfront. If a warranty page asks for payment at registration, close it. Verify the manufacturer's real warranty portal by searching for the brand name directly — don't follow the QR code to find it.

## 3. Fake "extended warranty" QR codes on display models

Showroom floor models often carry printed cards or hang tags explaining available protection plans. These displays sit untouched for weeks, and the foot traffic around them is high — ideal conditions for a scammer to swap or layer a fraudulent code with minimal risk of detection.

The scam page mimics a familiar extended warranty provider (SquareTrade, Asurion, or the retailer's own in-house plan) and collects credit card details for a plan that doesn't exist. Victims often don't discover the fraud until a charge appears on their statement, by which point the legitimate purchase is long done.

**Red flag:** Extended warranties at furniture stores are offered by sales associates at the point of sale or through the retailer's official website — not through standalone QR codes on display cards. If a card next to a Wayfair or IKEA floor model has a QR linking to a third-party warranty page you've never heard of, treat it as a warning sign and speak with a salesperson instead.

## Keeping it in perspective

The vast majority of QR codes in furniture showrooms are legitimate. The risk isn't widespread enough to justify scanning anxiety — but it's real enough to justify a two-second URL check before entering any personal or financial information. For a broader look at how these attacks work across retail environments, see our guide to [grocery store QR code scams](/blog/grocery-store-qr-code-scams) and [clothing store QR code scams](/blog/clothing-store-qr-code-scams).

## How QRsafer helps

Before scanning any QR code at a furniture showroom or home goods retailer, open QRsafer and point it at the code. It checks the URL destination against threat intelligence databases and returns a clear verdict — Safe, Risky, or Dangerous — before your browser loads a single pixel. A tampered price tag, a swapped assembly sheet sticker, or a fresh phishing domain posing as IKEA will be flagged before you tap through.

Download QRsafer for [iOS](https://apps.apple.com/app/qrsafer/id6743708403) or [Android](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bedrockdigitalsolutions20.qrsafer) and scan with confidence on your next furniture run.