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Kyubi System | RFID Solutions

Kyubi System | RFID Solutions

Kyubi System © is a business unit of Comercial Arqué S.A specialized in RFID technology.

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  • RFID: What It Is, How It Works and Why It Is the Key Technology for Business Optimisation in 2025 and Beyond
2 July, 2026

RFID: What It Is, How It Works and Why It Is the Key Technology for Business Optimisation in 2025 and Beyond

RFID: What It Is, How It Works and Why It Is the Key Technology for Business Optimisation in 2025 and Beyond

by KYUBI / Tuesday, 29 April 2025 / Published in RFID technology

What is RFID?: how it works, types and applications

RFID (radio-frequency identification) technology enables objects, assets and people to be identified and tracked automatically, without physical contact or line of sight. It is one of the cornerstones of Industry 4.0, helping to improve efficiency, accuracy and visibility. This guide explains what it is, how it works, the different types, its applications and its advantages.

RFID Technology · A Comprehensive Guide

What is RFID?: how it works, types and applications

RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology enables the automatic identification and tracking of objects, assets and people, without physical contact or line of sight. It is one of the cornerstones of Industry 4.0, helping to improve efficiency, accuracy and visibility. This guide explains what it is, how it works, the different types, its applications and its advantages.

By Kyubi System · RFID Technology · Reading time: ~11 mins

What is RFID?
How does it work?
Types of RFID
RFID tags
UHF RFID
Applications
Lector RFID identificando a distancia varias etiquetas adheridas a objetos sin línea de visión, símbolo de la identificación por radiofrecuencia

Basic definition

RFID ( Radio-Frequency Identification) is an automatic identification method that uses radio waves to identify and track electronic tags attached to objects, without contact or line of sight, and by reading multiple tags at once. Unlike barcodes, which require direct optical scanning, RFID reads from a distance and through obstacles.

In this article

  1. What exactly is RFID?
  2. How it works: components
  3. The communication process
  4. Types of RFID: frequencies and tags
  5. RFID versus barcodes
  6. Applications by sector
  7. Benefits for businesses
  8. The future: IoT and AI
  9. How Kyubi helps
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

Against the backdrop of digitalisation and Industry 4.0, RFID technology has established itself as a cornerstone for businesses seeking efficiency, accuracy and visibility. It represents a significant leap forward from traditional identification systems: it enables automatic identification and tracking, without the need for contact or line of sight. If your business wants to optimise logistics, improve inventory management, enhance security or boost traceability, understanding what RFID is and how it works is the first step towards digital transformation.

What exactly is RFID?

Essentially, RFID is an automatic identification method that uses electromagnetic fields or radio waves to identify and track electronic tags attached to objects. Unlike barcodes — which require a scanner to optically read the printed lines — RFID allows for remote reading, through obstacles and of multiple tags simultaneously. This capability makes a world of difference in terms of speed, efficiency and versatility.

Radio-frequency identification establishes a wireless communication link between an RFID tag and an RFID reader. The tag stores identification data, which can be simple (a unique serial number) or complex (maintenance history, date of manufacture, batch number). The reader, by emitting radio waves, ‘wakes up’ the tag — particularly passive tags — and receives the data it transmits.

How an RFID system works: the key components

A complete RFID system relies on the synergistic interaction of four elements. Each fulfils a specific function, and their correct combination determines the system’s performance:

01

RFID tag

The identifier at object level. It consists of a microchip that stores the data and an antenna that communicates with the reader. It can be passive, active or semi-passive.

02

RFID reader

The device that initiates and manages communication: it transmits radio waves, receives the response from the tags and decodes it. It can be fixed, portable or arch/tunnel-type.

03

RFID antenna

It transmits and receives radio signals between the reader and the tags. Its design, size and type determine the coverage area and the system’s performance.

04

Management software

The middleware and enterprise systems (ERP, WMS) that receive the data, filter it and convert it into useful information in real time.

Componentes de un sistema RFID: etiqueta con microchip y antena, lector, antena RFID y software de gestión ERP/WMS conectados entre sí
The four components of an RFID system and how they interact.

The communication process and anti-collision

The basic operation involves the reader transmitting a radio signal. When a tag enters the signal’s range, the energy picked up by its antenna activates the chip (in the case of passive tags). The chip responds by modulating the radio signal with the stored information. The reader receives this modulated signal, decodes it and extracts the data, which is sent to the management software or the business system for real-time processing.

This exchange usually takes place in milliseconds and allows multiple tags to be read simultaneously thanks to a mechanism known as ‘anti-collision’, which coordinates the responses so that they do not overlap. It is precisely this capability that makes RFID a mass-capture technology, impossible to match with the individual optical scanning of barcodes.

Proceso de comunicación RFID: el lector emite la señal, la etiqueta se activa y responde con sus datos, y el lector los envía al software de gestión
The reader → tag → data → software cycle, in milliseconds.
A brief history

RFID dates back to the Second World War, when it was used to identify friendly aircraft ( the ‘friend or foe’ identification system, IFF). Its commercial development began in the 1970s and 1980s with electronic toll collection and livestock tracking. Standardisation — particularly the EPCglobal standards for UHF RFID — andthe reduction in the cost of tags have made it a mature technology that has seen widespread adoption.

Types of RFID: frequencies and tags

There is no single ‘RFID’. The technology is classified according to the frequency band in which it operates and the type of tag. Making the right choice is what makes the difference between a successful project and one that fails.

By frequency

RFID frequency bands and their applications
Band Frequency Typical range Applications
LF (low) 125–134 kHz A few centimetres Access control, animal identification, immobilisers
HF (high) 13.56 MHz Up to ~1 metre Smart cards, NFC, libraries, payments
UHF (ultra-high) 860–960 MHz Up to over 10 metres Logistics, stock control, retail, mass traceability

Depending on the type of tag

Passive

No battery: they are powered by the reader. They are cheap, lightweight and have an almost indefinite lifespan. This is the most widely used type in retail and logistics.

Active

With their own battery: they transmit their own signal, offer a long range and allow the use of sensors, but are more expensive and their lifespan depends on the battery.

Semi-passive

With a battery to power the chip or sensors, but they use energy from the reader to communicate. They offer a balance between range and cost.

Specialised

Designed for demanding environments: tags for metal, resistant to liquids, high temperatures or industrial washing.

Comparativa de las frecuencias RFID LF, HF y UHF según alcance y aplicaciones, con etiquetas pasivas y activas

RFID versus barcodes

The most common question when evaluating the technology is how it differs from the traditional barcode. This table summarises the points that really matter in an operation:

RFID versus barcodes
Criterion Barcode RFID
Line of sight Required, optical scanning Not required, reads through materials
Simultaneous reading Single (1-to-1) Hundreds of tags at once (anti-collision)
Distance Contact / very short From centimetres to several metres
Stored data Limited and static Greater capacity and rewritable
Durability Low: becomes damaged or soiled High: withstands demanding environments
Human error High: manual scanning Minimal: automatic capture

Applications of RFID technology by sector

The applications of RFID technology are vast and continue to grow as businesses discover new ways to harness its capabilities. Here are some of the most notable:

Logistics and supply chain

Automated goods receipt, warehouse control, order fulfilment and dispatch, with end-to-end visibility.

Retail

Accurate stock-taking, efficient restocking, loss prevention and true omnichannel capability (online stock matches physical stock).

Healthcare

Traceability of medical instruments and medication, tracking of critical assets and expiry date monitoring in hospitals.

Food and agriculture

Product traceability, cold chain monitoring and compliance with food safety regulations.

Security and access control

RFID credentials to authenticate individuals and securely restrict access to sensitive areas.

Asset management

Inventory and tracking of equipment, tools and assets throughout their entire lifecycle.

Aplicaciones del RFID por sector: logística, retail, salud, alimentación, control de acceso y gestión de activos

Benefits of RFID technology for businesses

The implementation of an RFID system offers strategic advantages that have a direct impact on profitability and operational efficiency:

Operational efficiency

Automating counting and identification drastically reduces manual labour; simultaneous reading speeds up goods-in and stock-taking.

Data accuracy

By eliminating human error, information on stock, assets and traceability becomes more reliable.

Real-time visibility

Data is fed into the system instantly, providing an up-to-date overview that facilitates decision-making.

Reduction in losses

Accurate stock levels and individual tracking help to reduce theft, dispatch errors and out-of-date products.

Optimised inventory

With accurate stock levels, you can avoid excess stock that ties up capital and stock-outs that lead to lost sales.

Full traceability

Tracking each item throughout its life cycle enhances quality, safety and regulatory compliance.

Long-term savings

Improved efficiency and reduced losses and errors more than justify and offset the initial investment.

Better customer experience

Greater actual product availability and faster, more reliable service across all channels.

Infografía de los beneficios del RFID: eficiencia, precisión, visibilidad en tiempo real, reducción de pérdidas, inventario optimizado, trazabilidad, ahorro y experiencia de cliente
Business perspective

RFID technology should not be viewed as a labelling cost, but as an investment in digital infrastructure with a measurable return: fewer hours of manual labour, stock-takes with over 99 per cent accuracy and fewer losses. Return on investment (ROI) is achieved through efficiency, not merely through regulatory compliance.

The future of RFID: IoT, AI and the circular economy

The future of RFID is linked to the evolution of the technological landscape. RFID is a key enabler of the Internet of Things (IoT): it provides a unique digital identity to millions of objects. By combining its data with IoT, Big Data and Artificial Intelligence platforms, businesses move beyond simple identification to predictive decision-making and intelligent automation.

Imagine automated warehouses where RFID- and AI-guided robots manage goods, or supply chains that adjust stock in real time according to forecast demand. RFID technology will become increasingly ubiquitous — in packaging, vehicles, infrastructure and individual products — driving the circular economy and sustainability through end-to-end traceability.

Kyubi System: your strategic partner in RFID

Successfully implementing an RFID solution requires the right technology and a deep understanding of each business’s needs. At Kyubi System, we specialise in the design and implementation of bespoke RFID solutions for a wide range of sectors, taking a comprehensive approach:

01

Consultancy and feasibility

We analyse your processes and assess technical feasibility before you invest, to design the right solution.

02

Hardware and tags

Readers, antennas, printers and a wide range of RFID tags tailored to each environment and application.

03

Software and integration

Flexible RFID software that integrates with your systems (ERP, WMS) so that every scan is turned into useful information.

04

Support and ROI

We support you at every stage of the project, ensuring a smooth implementation and maximising your return on investment.

Whether you need an access control system, an inventory management solution for the retail sector, or a traceability platform for logistics or healthcare, at Kyubi System we have the expertise and technology required to turn your operational challenges into competitive advantages.

Conclusion

Understanding what RFID technology is and how it works is the starting point for genuine operational transformation. Unlike barcodes, it offers line-of-sight-free reading, bulk capture, rewritable data and durability, which translates into efficiency, accuracy and real-time visibility. When properly implemented — with the right frequency, tags and infrastructure — it ceases to be an expense and becomes a measurable and profitable competitive advantage.

Frequently Asked Questions about RFID

What is RFID?
It is an automatic identification method that uses radio waves to identify and track electronic tags attached to objects, assets or people, without physical contact or line of sight. Each tag stores data that a reader scans remotely and sends to the management system.
What is the key difference between RFID and barcodes?
RFID does not require a line of sight and can read multiple tags simultaneously from a distance, whereas barcodes require direct, individual optical scanning. RFID also stores more data, can be rewritten and its tags are more durable.
What RFID frequencies are there and what are they used for?
There are three main bands: LF (125–134 kHz) for access control and animal identification; HF (13.56 MHz) for smart cards and NFC; and UHF (860–960 MHz) for logistics, stock-taking and large-scale traceability, due to its greater range and speed.
What factors affect a tag’s read range?
The frequency (LF, HF or UHF), whether the tag is passive or active, the reader’s power, the size and design of the antennas, and the environment (presence of metal, liquids or interference).
Is it expensive to implement an RFID system?
The initial investment is usually higher than that of a barcode system, but the savings resulting from improved efficiency, reduced errors and losses, and optimised stock levels tend to justify and exceed this cost in the medium to long term.
Is the information stored on RFID tags secure?
Yes. Measures such as encryption, authentication and password protection safeguard the data against unauthorised reading or cloning.
Do the tags work in challenging environments, such as in the presence of metal or liquids?
Yes, using specialised tags (for example, ‘on-metal’) and suitable antennas designed to operate reliably in the presence of metal, liquids or high temperatures.
What is the lifespan of an RFID tag?
Passive tags have no battery and can last practically indefinitely; active tags depend on their battery and usually last between several months and several years.

Kyubi System · RFID Solutions

Are you ready to optimise your business with RFID?

We design and implement bespoke RFID solutions — hardware, tags, software and integration — for logistics, retail, healthcare, access control and traceability. Turn your operational challenges into a competitive advantage.

Request information →

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RFID
What is RFID?
How does RFID work?
Types of RFID
RFID tags
RFID readers
RFID systems
UHF RFID
RFID applications
Traceability

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