This article walks through 10 real methods business owners use, from clean professional solutions to full DIY experiments. For the complete, evergreen version with visuals and examples, this is the canonical guide:
https://taprocard.com/blogs/article/how-to-make-a-google-review-tap-card-10-ways-you-can-do-it-and-1-way-you-ll-probably-end-up-choosing
Option 1: Buy a Professionally Made Google Review Tap Card
This is the route most businesses eventually choose. A professionally made tap card or stand is built for daily use, with proper NFC placement and clear instructions customers instantly understand.
Businesses using ready-made solutions often start here:
https://taprocard.com/collections/google-review-cards
https://taprocard.com/collections/google-review-stands
Setup is simple: get your Google review link, connect it once, and you’re done.
Option 2: Buy a Generic NFC Card and Program It Yourself
Some owners buy a blank NFC card online—no QR code, no branding—and program it manually.
To do this, you need your Google review link from Google Business Profile:
https://support.google.com/business/answer/7035772
Then you’ll need an NFC writing app. Some work well, some don’t, and compatibility varies by phone. When it works, it’s functional—but customers often need instructions every time.
Option 3: Use Only a Google Review Link
This is the simplest method: sending a link by text or email.
It costs nothing, but results are limited. By the time customers see the message, the moment is gone. This method removes immediacy, which is the entire advantage of tap-based tools.
Option 4: Create and Print a QR Code Yourself
Printing a QR code sounds easy until quality matters. Home printers struggle with contrast, paper warps, cutting isn’t straight, and adhesives ruin presentation.
It works briefly—but rarely looks professional.
You can generate QR codes using tools like Canva:
https://www.canva.com/qr-code-generator/
Option 5: Design a QR Card in Canva and Print It
Design tools make everything look perfect on screen. Printing exposes alignment issues, color shifts, and QR clarity problems. Reprinting becomes routine.
This is fine for testing—not ideal for long-term use.
Option 6: QR Code Stickers Around the Business
QR stickers peel, collect dirt, and add visual clutter. They also require scanning instead of tapping, adding friction that reduces review completion rates.
Option 7: NFC Stickers (Chip Quality Matters)
Not all NFC chips are equal. Cheap chips have weak antennas and short lifespans, especially through phone cases or thicker surfaces.
If you want a neutral explanation of how NFC works:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-field_communication
Option 8: Buy a Plain NFC Card and Try to Print on It
NFC cards are layered plastics, not paper. Regular printers don’t bond ink properly, and heat can damage chips. Many people ruin several cards before realizing professional NFC printing uses specialized equipment.
Option 9: Build a DIY Stand With a Hidden NFC Chip
Some owners cut holes in stands and glue NFC chips inside. It works—until the chip shifts, glue fails, or scan angles break. It usually looks homemade because it is.
Option 10: Email or Text Review Requests
This is the lowest-performing method. Out of 100 messages, getting 3–5 reviews is common. In-person tap methods regularly outperform this because timing and convenience matter more than reminders.
Final Thought
There are many ways to approach how to make a Google review tap card. Most DIY paths cost more time and effort than expected. That’s why many businesses ultimately choose a ready-made solution that works reliably in real-world conditions.
For the full breakdown, examples, and visuals, see the canonical guide:
https://taprocard.com/blogs/article/how-to-make-a-google-review-tap-card-10-ways-you-can-do-it-and-1-way-you-ll-probably-end-up-choosing



