
NETUM Bluetooth QR Barcode Scanner Review
4.4 / 5
Overall Rating
Handheld barcode scanners used to mean clunky USB-tethered units. NETUM's Bluetooth model reads 1D and 2D codes, pairs with phones, and doesn't cost $300.
NETUM Bluetooth Barcode/QR Scanner — Review
Small retailers and inventory-managing businesses routinely need to scan barcodes and QR codes. The traditional options have been USB-tethered scanners (clunky, tied to a register) or $300+ enterprise models. The NETUM C750 hits a new sweet spot: Bluetooth, handles 1D and 2D codes, pairs with iPhones/iPads directly, and costs a fraction of the alternatives.
Specs
- Decode: 1D (UPC, Code 128, etc.) + 2D (QR, Data Matrix, PDF417)
- Wireless: Bluetooth 5.0 + 2.4GHz USB dongle (both modes supported)
- Battery: ~20 hours continuous use
- Trigger: manual trigger + auto-trigger mode
- Compatible: iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows, Mac
Real-World Performance
Tested across scenarios:
Retail checkout scanning. Paired to Square POS on an iPad, scan speed is effectively instant for standard UPC barcodes. QR code from phone screens decodes in <0.5 seconds.
Inventory intake. Scanning 100+ items in a batch (warehouse receiving), the scanner keeps up with operator pace. Auto-trigger mode helps — point, the scanner fires automatically, no manual trigger fatigue.
Phone-screen QR scanning. 2D codes on customer phone screens decode reliably, even in standard retail lighting. Poor lighting slows decode by 1-2 seconds but still works.
Range. ~30 feet line-of-sight Bluetooth, ~100 feet with the 2.4GHz dongle. Fine for typical retail floors.
Pairing And Mode Switching
One quirk: the scanner has multiple keyboard input modes (HID, SPP) that you switch via scanning specific configuration barcodes in the manual. First setup takes 2-3 minutes of reading. After that, pairing is seamless.
Battery
20 hours of continuous use is accurate. We drained it in ~3 days of retail use (8-hour shifts). Charges in ~2 hours via USB-C.
Where It Falls Short
Durability isn't enterprise-grade. Drop-rated to ~5 feet. For industrial warehouse use, upgrade to a Honeywell or Zebra.
Manual is cryptic. Configuration barcodes for different modes are arcane. Plan to spend 10 minutes reading on first use.
No display. Some premium scanners have small screens for inventory-count confirmation. This one doesn't.
Who Should Buy
Small retailers on Square/Clover/Shopify POS. Inventory-managing SMBs. Warehouses doing moderate-volume receiving.
Who Should Skip
Industrial environments (go Honeywell/Zebra). Networked enterprise inventory (need managed device).
Verdict
Excellent value 1D/2D Bluetooth scanner for SMB retail and inventory. Pairs cleanly with the major POS apps, battery lasts through shifts, decode speed matches enterprise tier.
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