NFC-A vs NFC-F
NFC-A (ISO 14443A) dominates globally with 106 kbps base speed and the widest chip ecosystem. NFC-F (Sony FeliCa) operates at 212/424 kbps with faster transaction times, dominating in Japan and Hong Kong for transit systems like Suica and Octopus.
NFC-A vs NFC-F: ISO 14443 Type A vs Sony FeliCa — The East-West NFC Divide
NFC-A and NFC-F are both recognized NFC communication technologies operating at 13.56 MHz, but they have historically dominated different geographies and application ecosystems. NFC-A, based on ISO 14443 Type A, is the global standard behind NTAG consumer tags, MIFARE transit cards, and EMV contactless payments. NFC-F, based on Sony's FeliCa specification (JIS X 6319-4, ISO 18092), dominates Japanese transit (Suica, PASMO, Icoca), mobile payments (Osaifu-Keitai), and other East Asian markets. Both technologies are supported by modern NFC Forum devices — but they are rarely interchangeable in practice.
Overview
NFC-A (ISO 14443ISO 14443Standard for contactless smart cards at 13.56 MHz (Types A and B)View full → Type A) uses 100% ASK modulationASK modulationSignal amplitude variation encodingencodingData writing to NFC tags during manufacturing productionView full → data on 13.56 MHz carrierView full → with Modified Miller bit coding on the downlink. The base data rate is 106 kbps. All NFC ForumNFC ForumIndustry body developing NFC standards, specifications, and certifications since 2004View full → Type 2 (NTAG 213/215/216) and most NFC Forum Type 4 tags (MIFARE DESFire, NTAG 424 DNA) are NFC-A. MIFARE Classic, MIFARE Ultralight, and virtually all Western access and payment card ICs are Type A.
NFC-F (FeliCa) uses Manchester-encoded FSK (Frequency Shift Keying) modulation — specifically, a 2.12 MHz subcarrier for uplink and a 2.1 MHz subcarrier for the field. FeliCa supports data rates of 212 kbps and 424 kbps natively (versus 106 kbps base for NFC-A). The FeliCa chip contains a system code and service code structure — a hierarchical memory addressing model distinct from ISO 14443's sector/block or file system approach. FeliCa chips (RC-S962, RC-S965 series from Sony) are used in IC cards issued by transit operators across Japan.
Key Differences
- Modulation: NFC-A uses 100% ASK/Modified Miller. NFC-F uses Manchester/FSK with 212 or 424 kbps — higher native data rate than NFC-A's 106 kbps base.
- Data rate: NFC-F transmits at 212 or 424 kbps by default. NFC-A starts at 106 kbps (though 212/424/848 kbps modes exist in ISO 14443).
- Memory model: NFC-A chips use block/sector addressing (MIFARE Classic, NTAG) or file-system APDUs (MIFARE DESFire, NTAG 424 DNA). FeliCa uses a service/system code hierarchy with area and service blocks.
- Security: Modern NFC-A chips (MIFARE DESFire EV3, NTAG 424 DNA) use AES-128. FeliCa Standard uses a proprietary DES/3DES-based cryptographic system; FeliCa Plug adds AES-128. MIFARE Classic's CRYPTO1 is broken; FeliCa's DES-based crypto has known theoretical weaknesses but no public large-scale breach.
- NDEF support: NFC-A chips (NTAG, Type 2 tags) ship NDEF-formatted. NFC-F as NFC Forum Type 3 tags require NDEF mapping via a defined wrapper — supported but less common in consumer deployments.
- Geographic deployment: NFC-A: globally dominant. NFC-F: Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong (Octopus card historically), South Korea (T-money transit uses a hybrid).
- Smartphone support: Both are supported natively by modern NFC controllers. Android has supported NFC-F via the HostApduService and IsoDep APIs since early versions. iOS supports NFC-F reading/writing via Core NFC (iPhone 7+, iOS 11+), though writing to FeliCa cards from iOS requires entitlement approval from Apple.
Technical Comparison
| Parameter | NFC-A (ISO 14443 Type A) | NFC-F (FeliCa, JIS X 6319-4) |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | ISO 14443 Type A | JIS X 6319-4 / ISO 18092 (NFC-F) |
| Operating frequency | 13.56 MHz | 13.56 MHz |
| Modulation (downlink) | 100% ASK / Modified Miller | Manchester / FSK |
| Native data rates | 106 / 212 / 424 / 848 kbps | 212 / 424 kbps |
| Anti-collisionAnti-collisionProtocol for selecting individual tags from multiple in RF fieldView full → | Bit-oriented binary search | SENSF_REQ/RES slot-based |
| NFC Forum tag type | Type 1, 2, 4 | Type 3 |
| NDEF support | Native (Types 1, 2, 4) | Via Type 3 NDEF mapping |
| Memory model | Block/sector (MIFARE) / NDEF / Files (DESFire) | System code / service code / block |
| Security | AES-128, ECC, password (chip-dependent) | DES/3DES (Standard), AES (Plug) |
| Key chip examples | NTAG, MIFARE, ST25TA | Sony RC-S962, RC-S965, RC-S300 |
| Primary geography | Global | Japan, East Asia |
| Transit deployments | London TfL, NYC MTA, Singapore EZ-Link | Suica, PASMO, Icoca, TOICA |
| Mobile payment | Apple Pay, Google Pay (worldwide NFC-A) | Osaifu-Keitai (NFC-F on Android, Japan) |
| iOS write support | Full (standard) | Restricted (entitlement required) |
Use Cases
NFC-A Dominant Scenarios
- Global consumer NFC tags: NTAG 213/215/216 and NTAG 424 DNA cover the entire consumer smart label, product authenticationauthenticationIdentity verification of NFC tags/readers via passwords or cryptographyView full →, and NFC business card market.
- International transit cards: London Oyster (MIFARE DESFire), New York MTA (MIFARE DESFire EV3), Singapore EZ-Link, and hundreds of other systems use Type A.
- EMV contactless payments: All global EMV contactless implementations are NFC-A (or NFC-B) — NFC-F is not used in the EMV payment ecosystem.
- NFC Forum certificationNFC Forum certificationInteroperabilityInteroperabilityCross-manufacturer device/tag compatibility guaranteeView full → testing program for NFC products and devicesView full →: The majority of NFC Forum-certified tag products are Type A. Certification testing infrastructure is overwhelmingly Type A-oriented.
- Building access and enterprise security: MIFARE DESFire EV3 and NTAG 424 DNA are Type A — the standard for enterprise building access globally.
NFC-F Dominant Scenarios
- Japanese transit: Suica (JR East), PASMO (Tokyo Metro), Icoca (JR West), and all 10 interoperable Japanese IC transit systems run on FeliCa. ~80 million Suica cards in circulation as of 2024.
- Japanese mobile payment (Osaifu-Keitai): Android handsets in Japan implement FeliCa Secure Element for mobile transit and payment, marketed as Osaifu-Keitai ("mobile wallet"). Available since 2004 on NTT Docomo devices.
- Apple Pay Suica: Apple implemented FeliCa support in the iPhone 8 and later (Japanese models) specifically to enable Apple Pay Suica — a significant engineering investment reflecting FeliCa's market importance.
- Electronic money (e-money): Edy (Rakuten Pay), nanaco (Seven-Eleven), and WAON (AEON) are Japanese e-money systems built on FeliCa chips.
- Student ID and corporate access in Japan: Some Japanese universities and corporations use FeliCa-based credentials for building access and cafeteria payments.
When to Choose Each
Choose NFC-A when:
- The deployment is outside Japan and East Asia
- EMV contactless paymentcontactless paymentNFC tap-to-pay via phones, cards, or wearables (EMV)View full → is part of the system
- NFC Forum certified NDEF tags (NTAG, MIFARE Ultralight) are required
- AES-128 security (NTAG 424 DNA, MIFARE DESFire EV3) is specified
- Maximum global smartphone read compatibility is required
Choose NFC-F when:
- The deployment is in Japan or integrating with Japanese transit infrastructure
- Osaifu-Keitai or Japanese e-money interoperability is required
- You are developing for the Japanese market where FeliCa handsets are dominant
- Integration with JR East Suica, Tokyo Metro PASMO, or other Japanese IC card networks
Conclusion
NFC-A and NFC-F represent the global vs Japanese NFC ecosystem divide. NFC-A dominates everywhere outside Japan and East Asia, backed by the MIFARE, NTAG, and EMV ecosystems. NFC-F owns Japan's transit and mobile payment infrastructure — a 20+ year lead embodied in 80 million+ Suica cards and the Osaifu-Keitai platform. Both are supported by modern NFC controllers in smartphones worldwide, meaning reading NFC-F tags is universally possible — but building NFC-F card applications requires FeliCa licensing from Sony and ecosystem integration unavailable outside Japan's infrastructure.
Recommendation
Use NFC-A for global deployments with maximum compatibility; NFC-F when targeting Japan or requiring the fastest transit transaction speeds.