Most comparisons ask which technology is more advanced. That is the wrong question. The right question: which one matches what your operation needs, at your current process maturity, within your constraints?
A barcode encodes data in a printed pattern. A scanner reads it by shining light at it. Line of sight is required. One item, one scan, one moment. The label costs under ₹1. The reader costs from a few thousand to a few lakhs depending on the application.
2D barcodes — QR code, Data Matrix, PDF417 — encode far more data in a smaller space. A GS1 Data Matrix on a pharmaceutical pack can encode GTIN, lot number, expiry date, and serial number in the space of a fingernail. For pharma and medical devices, 2D barcode is the current compliance standard — not a legacy technology.
An RFID system has three parts: a tag (transponder), a reader (interrogator), and backend software. The reader emits radio frequency energy. The tag — chip + antenna — receives that energy and responds with its stored data. No line of sight. Multiple tags read simultaneously.
In passive UHF RFID — the dominant technology for supply chain in India — the tag has no battery. It harvests energy from the reader's signal. Read range in a well-configured environment: 3–8 metres. In a dock door portal: up to 10–12 metres.
| Cost Component | Barcode | RFID (UHF Passive) |
|---|---|---|
| Per-label / per-tag | Under ₹1 (printed label) | ₹3–₹15 standard · ₹20–₹60+ on-metal |
| Handheld reader | ₹8,000–₹60,000 | ₹40,000–₹2,50,000 |
| Fixed reader / portal | ₹20,000–₹1,50,000 | ₹1,00,000–₹5,00,000 per portal |
| Middleware / software | Usually bundled with WMS | ₹5L–₹25L+ depending on scope |
| Label/tag printer | ₹10,000–₹80,000 (thermal) | ₹40,000–₹2,00,000 (RFID-enabled) |
| Annual maintenance | Low — consumables mainly | Medium–High: reader infra + software |
| Tag encoding | At print — nearly free | ₹0.50–₹3 per tag at encoding station |
Market ranges based on Indian pricing 2026. Always request itemised proposals from vendors.
A chain with 20+ stores, accuracy below 80%, monthly manual cycle counts.
Answer: RFID — but source labelling must come first. If less than 80% of your vendors can source-label, the business case is not ready. Tagging at your dock defeats the accuracy and speed benefits.
Implementing track and trace for Schedule H and H1 drugs.
Answer: 2D Barcode (Data Matrix / GS1-128) — not RFID. CDSCO compliance runs on GS1 barcode standards. RFID adds cost with no regulatory benefit at this stage.
Tracking parts through 12+ assembly stages in a metal-intensive environment.
Answer: RFID with on-metal tags — but pilot one line first. Tag cost will be substantially higher than a standard warehouse business case. RF environment testing is non-negotiable.
Implementing BCMA for NABH accreditation.
Answer: Barcode on patient wristbands. The barcode wristband is the global clinical standard. NABH compliance for patient identification runs through barcode, not RFID.
Before you book a vendor demo or approve a budget — work through five questions that tell you whether your operation is ready for RFID, or whether process work comes first.
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↓ 5 Questions Before You Choose RFID or Barcode (PDF)
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