Code-barres vs RFID : Quand utiliser chaque technologie
A practical comparison of barcode and RFID identification technologies — cost, read range, speed, and hybrid deployment strategies.
Barcode vs RFID: When to Use Each Technology
Barcodes and Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) are both automatic identification technologies, but they work on fundamentally different principles. This guide compares their capabilities to help you choose the right technology, or determine when to use both.
How They Differ
Barcodes use optical patterns (bars, spaces, or cells) read by light-based scanners. They require line-of-sight between the scanner and the symbol, and read one item at a time.
RFID uses radio waves to communicate between a tag (containing a microchip and antenna) and a reader. RFID does not require line-of-sight, can read through packaging, and can scan hundreds of tags simultaneously.
Cost Comparison
| Component | Barcode | RFID (UHF Passive) |
|---|---|---|
| Label/Tag cost | $0.01-0.05 | $0.05-0.30 |
| Scanner/Reader | $50-500 | $500-5,000 |
| Infrastructure | Minimal | Antennas, middleware |
| Per-item total cost | Very low | Low to moderate |
Performance Comparison
| Capability | Barcode | RFID |
|---|---|---|
| Read range | 0-3m (handheld) | 0-15m (passive UHF) |
| Line of sight | Required | Not required |
| Bulk reading | One at a time | Hundreds simultaneously |
| Read speed | ~0.5 seconds | ~0.1 seconds per tag |
| Environmental sensitivity | Needs clean, visible label | Works through boxes/pallets |
| Data capacity | Up to 7,000 chars (2D) | 96-512 bits typical |
| Write capability | None (printed) | Read/write supported |
When Barcodes Win
- Cost-sensitive, high-volume labeling: Product packaging, retail items
- Consumer-facing: Shoppers and patients can scan barcodes with phones
- Proven infrastructure: Every retail store has barcode scanners
- Simplicity: No specialized middleware or antenna planning needed
- GS1 compliance: Regulatory requirements often specify barcodes
When RFID Wins
- Inventory visibility: Real-time cycle counts without opening boxes
- Speed: Counting a warehouse aisle in seconds vs minutes
- No line-of-sight: Reading through packaging materials
- Reusable assets: Tracking pallets, containers, tools
- High-value items: Apparel, electronics, pharmaceuticals
Hybrid Strategies
Many organizations deploy both technologies. A typical approach:
- Item level: Barcode (EAN-13 on the product)
- Case level: Barcode (GS1-128 on the shipping case)
- Pallet level: RFID tag + barcode (for receiving automation)
- Asset tracking: RFID tag (for reusable containers and equipment)
The barcode serves as the universal fallback when RFID reads fail, and it satisfies regulatory and trading-partner requirements that mandate optical barcodes.