N-Mark
The official NFC Forum trademark (a stylized 'N' in a circle) that identifies products certified as NFC Forum compliant. Products displaying the N-Mark have passed interoperability testing.
What Is the N-Mark?
The N-MarkN-MarkOfficial NFC Forum certification mark for compliant productsView full → is the official NFC Forum trademark, a stylized letter "N" enclosed in a circle, that identifies products certified as NFC ForumNFC ForumIndustry body developing NFC standards, specifications, and certifications since 2004View full → compliant. When consumers see the N-Mark on a device, terminal, or tag, it signifies that the product has passed rigorous interoperability testing and is guaranteed to work with other N-Mark-certified products. The N-Mark serves as the universal visual indicator that tells users exactly where to tap.
Purpose and Function
The N-Mark addresses two critical needs in the NFC ecosystem:
InteroperabilityInteroperabilityCross-manufacturer device/tag compatibility guaranteeView full → assurance. Products displaying the N-Mark have passed the NFC Forum Certification program, verifying compliance with NFC Forum specifications across analog, digital, and application layers. This ensures a certified tag will work with a certified reader, regardless of manufacturer.
Tap point identification. Beyond certification, the N-Mark serves a practical user experience function. Consumers may not know exactly where the NFC antennaNFC antennaCoil antenna creating electromagnetic field for NFC communicationView full → is located in their phone or where to tap on a payment terminal. The N-Mark physically marks the optimal tap location, reducing failed transactions and user frustration.
Design Specifications
The NFC Forum provides detailed guidelines for N-Mark usage:
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Minimum size | 10 mm height |
| Colors | Official NFC Forum blue or monochrome |
| Clear space | Equal to the height of the "N" character |
| Placement | On or adjacent to the NFC antenna location |
| Background | Must maintain sufficient contrast for visibility |
The N-Mark must be clearly visible and positioned at the point where the user should tap their device. On POS terminals, it is typically printed on the display or on a sticker near the contactless reader area. On NFC tags and smart posters, the N-Mark indicates the tag's location within the surface.
Certification Requirements
To display the N-Mark, a product must pass the NFC Forum CertificationNFC Forum CertificationInteroperability testing program for NFC products and devicesView full → program, which includes:
- Analog testing. Verification of RF field characteristics, load modulation amplitude, and timing parameters.
- Digital protocol testing. Compliance with NFC-A, NFC-B, NFC-F, or NFC-V protocol specifications.
- NDEF testing. Correct implementation of NDEF message reading and writing.
- LLCP/SNEP testing. For devices supporting peer-to-peer mode.
Products that have not completed certification may not display the N-Mark. Unauthorized use of the N-Mark trademark is subject to legal action by the NFC Forum.
N-Mark in Practice
The N-Mark appears on billions of devices worldwide, including smartphones from Apple, Samsung, Google, and other manufacturers, as well as on payment terminals, transit gates, and access control readers. For developers deploying NFC solutions, placing the N-Mark at the tap point significantly improves first-time success rates by guiding users to the correct position for reliable coupling between the reader and tag antennas.
Related Terms
Related Guides
Frequently Asked Questions
The NFC glossary is a comprehensive reference of technical terms, acronyms, and concepts used in Near Field Communication technology. It is designed for developers, product managers, and engineers who work with NFC and need clear definitions of terms like NDEF, APDU, anti-collision, and ISO 14443.
Each glossary term is cross-referenced with related NFC chips, standards, and other terms. For example, the term 'AES-128' links to chips that support AES encryption (NTAG 424 DNA, DESFire EV2/EV3), and the term 'ISO 14443' links to all chips compliant with that standard.
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