LF vs UHF RFID
Frequency vs FrequencyLow frequency access control versus UHF supply chain RFID for range, cost, and deployment scenarios.
LF vs UHF RFID: Animal ID vs Supply-Chain Automation
Low Frequency (LF) RFID at 125–134.2 kHz and Ultra-High Frequency (UHF) RFID at 860–960 MHz are both passive RFID technologies, but they are optimised for completely different application domains with almost no overlap in commercial deployment.
Overview
LF RFID operates at 125 kHz (commercial/access) or 134.2 kHz (ISO 11784/11785 animal ID). The long wavelength enables penetration through tissue, soil, and non-metallic materials — which is why animal microchip implants, livestock ear tags, and underground pipe identification markers use LF. LF readers are simple, low-cost, and single-tag.
UHF RFID at 860–960 MHz uses far-field backscatter modulation and drives the global supply-chain and retail RFID ecosystem. EPC Gen 2 on UHF is the standard for retail apparel, pharmaceutical serialisation, logistics labels, and dock-door portal reads. UHF reads hundreds of tags simultaneously at 0.5–12 m.
Key Differences
- Read range: LF: 1–30 cm. UHF: 0.5–12 m (passive), further with specialised equipment.
- Throughput: LF reads one tag at a time (minimal anti-collision). UHF reads 200–1,000 tags per second.
- Material penetration: LF's long wavelength penetrates tissue and some non-metallic materials — enabling subcutaneous implants. UHF is absorbed by water-rich materials and reflected by metal.
- Tag cost: LF transponders cost $0.30–$2. UHF inlays cost $0.05–$0.30.
- Ecosystem: LF has a small, largely proprietary and stagnant ecosystem. UHF has the largest, most active RFID ecosystem — GS1, EPC Global, Impinj, Zebra, hundreds of tag manufacturers.
- Anti-collision: LF has minimal or no standardised anti-collision — reading multiple LF tags simultaneously is essentially impossible in standard deployments. UHF EPC Gen 2 EPC Gen2 adaptive anti-collision algorithm." data-category="Protocols & Communication">Q-algorithm resolves thousands of tags per second.
- Global harmonisation: Both LF (125/134 kHz ISM) and UHF (with regional band variation) are usable globally, but UHF requires region-specific equipment configuration.
Technical Comparison
| Attribute | LF RFID (125–134.2 kHz) | UHF RFID (860–960 MHz) |
|---|---|---|
| Read range (passive) | 1–30 cm | 0.5–12 m |
| Throughput | 1 tag at a time | 200–1,000 tags/s |
| Data rate | 1–10 kbps | 40–640 kbps |
| Anti-collision | Minimal | EPC Gen 2 Q-algorithm |
| Tissue penetration | Excellent | Poor |
| Liquid sensitivity | Low | High |
| Metal sensitivity | Moderate | High |
| Tag cost | $0.30–$2 | $0.05–$0.30 |
| GS1 ecosystem | None | Native (EPC, GTIN, SSCC) |
| NFC compatible | No | No |
| Primary applications | Animal ID, legacy access, implants | Retail, logistics, supply chain |
| Standards | ISO 11784/11785, HID Prox | EPC Gen 2, ISO 18000-63 |
Use Cases
LF excels when: - Subcutaneous animal microchip implants are required (pet ID, livestock, wildlife research) - Items are embedded in or surrounded by materials that would absorb UHF (soil, tissue) - Extremely short-range proximity detection in a single-tag scenario is acceptable - ISO 11784/11785 international animal identification database compliance is required
UHF excels when: - Supply-chain logistics, retail inventory, and pharmaceutical traceability are the application domains - High-throughput simultaneous reads of hundreds or thousands of items are needed - Per-tag cost must be minimised at millions of units per month - Long read range (0.5–12 m) enables hands-free automated identification at dock doors and conveyors
When to Choose Each
Choose LF only for animal microchip implants, underground object identification, or maintaining backward compatibility with existing 125 kHz access control systems. For new access control deployments, HF RFID (MIFARE DESFire) provides dramatically better security and data rates.
Choose UHF for all supply-chain, retail, logistics, and asset tracking applications. The GS1 EPC Gen 2 ecosystem, sub-$0.30 tag cost, and 12 m read range make UHF the dominant RFID technology by unit volume for commercial applications.
Conclusion
LF and UHF RFID are purpose-built for non-overlapping applications. LF's tissue and material penetration capabilities are irreplaceable for animal implants and underground identification. UHF's long read range, high throughput, and low tag cost are irreplaceable for supply-chain automation at scale. There is no overlap — select LF where tissue or material penetration is the requirement, and UHF for every commercial tracking and inventory application.
See also: LF vs HF RFID, UHF vs HF RFID, RFID Frequency Bands Explained
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Each comparison provides a side-by-side analysis of two RFID tag ICs or technologies, covering memory capacity, read sensitivity, read range, protocol features, pricing, and recommended applications. A summary recommendation helps you quickly decide which option fits your requirements.
Cross-technology comparisons evaluate RFID against other identification technologies such as barcodes, QR codes, NFC, BLE beacons, and GPS. These help you decide whether RFID is the right technology for your use case or if a combination approach would be more effective.