myHandiQR myHandiQR
Inclusive tool · disability

Explaining a disability means repeating it. To every new person.
Not anymore.

You write three texts: the introduction, what helps, what to avoid. You get a unique QR code. The teacher, the AESH (a teaching assistant for students with disabilities, in France), the manager, the first responder simply scan it. You wrote it once. You'll never have to start over at every encounter.

3 months free per profile Then $2/month (that's $24/year) per profile No commitment Print it at home, or get it delivered ready to use.
Leo's QR
myHandiQR · Leo
Scanning
9:41

Leo

7 years old · Year 2

Leo has dyspraxia. He understands everything very quickly, but his hand tires when writing. Out loud, he is clear, funny and full of ideas.

How to help him
  • One instruction at a time
  • Photocopy the written notes
  • Cut his meat without asking
What to avoid
Forcing him to copy out his lessons. Making him button his clothes when you're in a hurry.
You are viewing as a teacher
Specifics , click to learn more
Learning differences
Adapted to the readerTeacher
Dyspraxia
Definition for the teacher
A difficulty with planning movement. The child understands what needs to be done, but coordinating the movements takes a lot of effort. Favor speaking out loud or a fill-in-the-blanks text.
The problem

At every encounter,
it all starts over.

A new teacher. A new classmate. A new colleague. A new neighbor. And once again you have to tell the story, explain, reassure, finding, every single time, the right words for the right person.

The profile you write today speaks for you tomorrow, next year, and the year after.

"My son has dyspraxia, so..."

"So here's the thing, it's ADHD, and..."



"Here's his QR. It's all there."
Written once, read by everyone
Sticker examples
The heart of the product

The same profile,
within reach of everyone.

You write the profile however you like, and you tick the relevant disabilities. Below the text, each disability opens on click to an explanation tailored to the reader's age and role. An 8-year-old child, a teacher, a first responder or a manager don't read the same version. To read or to listen to.

Profilewritten by you, read in 30 seconds

Leo

7 years old · Year 2

Leo has dyspraxia. He understands everything very quickly, but his hand tires when writing and buttoning his clothes takes him time. Out loud, he is clear, funny and full of ideas. He also has a touch of dysorthography, it isn't laziness.

How to help him
  • One instruction at a time
  • Photocopy the written notes rather than have him copy them
  • Give him time in the morning
  • Cut his meat without asking
What to avoid
Forcing him to copy out his lessons. Correcting every mistake during evening reading: it discourages and doesn't teach.
You are viewing as a teacher
Specifics , click to learn more
Learning differences
Dyspraxia Dysorthography
Neurodevelopmental differences
Autism
Click a disability to see the explanation modal, on the right.
Adapted to the readerFor Teacher
The reader doesn't pick their own role, their profile is detected from the age and the role they choose. Here's what the AI delivers depending on who scans, to read or to listen to.
Word:
For:

Dyspraxia

Definition for the teacher

A difficulty with planning movement. The child knows what needs to be done but coordinating the movements takes a lot of effort. When writing, his hand tires quickly, which lowers his marks in a way unrelated to his reasoning. Favor speaking out loud, a fill-in-the-blanks text, or photocopy the written notes.

No more long introductions at every encounter. Sharing is enough.Create my account
How it works

Four steps,
and never start over again.

01

You write your profile

In your own words. What helps your child, or what helps the way you work.

02🖨

Print the label

  • You print it
  • or
  • We ship it to you
03

A simple scan to read it

On a schoolbag, in an email signature, on a badge. When you scan it, you read it. Nothing left to explain.

04

The explanation adjusts to the reader.

Below the text, buttons for each disability. On click, a definition opens, within the reader's reach: educational for the teacher, simple for a classmate.

In everyday life

Wherever it makes a difference,
the QR does too.

The QR lands wherever you need it: on a schoolbag, in an email signature, on a desk, in a wallet. Every time, it saves the same thing: the conversation you no longer feel like having, the PDF you no longer feel like redoing.

School lifeNo. 01

At every new school year

"Leo has dyspraxia. Here's what helps him." Read in 30 seconds by the new teacher, without a late-afternoon meeting.

Work lifeNo. 16

In an email signature

A discreet line under your name. The new colleague clicks if they want, reads how you work in your own words, and closes the tab.

ActivitiesNo. 30

At training

The coach scans it before the first session. He knows why your child takes longer to take in instructions, and includes him instead of setting him aside.

FamilyNo. 37

If someone wanders off

A label sewn into the coat. If your loved one gets lost, the passerby who helps reaches the family contacts, without the person having to remember the numbers.

EmergencyNo. 50

After a stroke

The person can no longer speak, but understands everything. The laminated card tells the emergency doctor, who adjusts how they communicate instead of treating the person as unable.

FamilyNo. 44

At the childminder's

A card at the babysitter's for epilepsy. Recognizing a seizure. What to do. Without a panicked call to the parents.

See the real-life cases
One simple price

$2/month per profile.*
3 months free for each new profile.

One profile = one person, $2/month*. 3 months free for each new profile, one trial running at a time. You can host several profiles on the same account.

  • Unlimited scans, by any reader
  • Edits at any time, without changing the QR code
  • Disability definitions read aloud
  • Ready-to-print A4 sheets (sticker to apply, card to slip in, labels, poster), to print at home or via the printing service

* That's $24 billed once a year. 3 months free, no commitment.

Proof of use

At school, at work,
in an emergency.

At school
Home-school notebook
Use case
"

The QR is stuck in the home-school notebook. The teacher scans it, reads the introduction and the tips. On clicking dyspraxia, the AI offers an educational version, made for them.

At work
Team onboarding
Use case
"

An adult with ADHD shares their QR with a new colleague. On clicking ADHD, the AI delivers a professional version. The person didn't have to explain anything in a team meeting.

In an emergency
Card in the wallet
Use case
"

A person with epilepsy keeps a card in their wallet. During a seizure, the first responder scans it, reads How to help and What to avoid in 10 seconds, and can turn on audio playback if their hands are full.

In the family
Occasional childcare
Use case
"

The childminder or grandparent looking after the child scans the QR. They reach the tips written by the parents and, on clicking a disability, an explanation suited to their role.

In HR
RQTH (recognized disabled worker status, in France) accommodations
Use case
"

An employee with RQTH status slips their QR into their onboarding file. The disability officer reaches the useful accommodations from day one, without an explanatory interview.

Your questions

The answers that come up most often

What happens after the 3-month trial?

You decide. If you renew ($2/month, which is $24/year per profile), everything keeps working. If you don't renew, your account and your profiles are kept, only the QR codes stop working. You can reactivate at any time.

Is my data properly protected?

myHandiQR is an inclusive communication platform that meets European standards, hosted in Europe. You stay in control of the content: edit, suspend, or delete it at any time.

If I edit the profile, do I have to reprint?

No. The QR never changes: it is the address of your profile, not its content. You edit the profile, and the next readers see the updated version. You only reprint if the physical medium is damaged.

Can I create a profile for my child or for a loved one?

Yes. A myHandiQR account lets you create several profiles. A parent can manage their child's profile, a family caregiver that of a loved one. The profile stays editable at any time.

How can I be sure the profile will be read, without having to explain on top of it?

The QR code is scanned in a few seconds with any recent smartphone. The profile opens in the browser, with nothing to install for the person scanning. You place the QR wherever the other person will need it (home-school notebook, badge, email signature, sticker), and the profile does the work for you.

Is the profile the same for the first responder, the teacher and the employer?

Yes, exactly the same. You write the profile once, and it displays identically to anyone who scans it. If you don't want a piece of information to be read, you don't write it. What adapts to the reader's profile is the per-disability explanation (on a click), not the profile itself.

What if I don't want to explain my disability to the people I meet?

That is exactly what myHandiQR is for. You write the profile once, you share your QR with whoever you want, and you no longer have to tell the story at every encounter. The profile says things for you, in the words you chose.

First year

2026, our first year open a small circle of early users.

I built myHandiQR from what I couldn't find anywhere else. This year, I'm starting with a small circle of early users who will shape the tool through their feedback.

If you'd like to be part of it, the circle is open.

Jerome, founder

See the circle Create my account

Ready?

Once to write it.
A lifetime to be understood.

The from-scratch recap you dread at every encounter, you'll never do it again. The QR sets the context in your place, with your words, set once for all the times you'll need it. 3 months free for each new profile, no card required. One trial running at a time.