NFC Pet Tags and Animal ID

Smart Tags for Pet Identification and Safety

| 5 min read

NFC Pet Tags and Animal ID

NFC pet tags give lost animals a digital identity that any modern smartphone can read — no special scanner required, no app to install. This guide covers the technology choices, encoding strategies, regulatory considerations, and real-world deployment scenarios.

NFC vs RFID Microchip for Pet ID

Feature NFC Pet Tag (collar) RFID Microchip (implant)
Scan device Any NFC smartphone Dedicated ISO 11784/85 scanner
Registration required No (URL self-contained) Yes (chip registry lookup)
Data updatable Yes (re-encode tag) No (ID number only)
Range 0–4 cm 5–15 cm (handheld scanner)
Durability Depends on enclosure Permanent (implanted)
Information stored URL, phone, address, medical notes 15-digit ISO number only
Regulatory status Not regulated as ID Mandated in 30+ countries

Recommendation: Use both. The RFID microchip is the legal requirement and scanner-based recovery system. The NFC tag is the smartphone-friendly complement that enables anyone to help a lost animal without a scanner.

Choosing the Right NFC Chip

Pet tags face harsh environments: rain, UV, pet saliva, collar chemicals, physical impact. Chip selection must account for this.

Chip Memory Durability Concern Notes
NTAG213 144 B Adequate for epoxy enclosure Best cost/compatibility balance
NTAG215 496 B Adequate Use if storing medical notes
NTAG I2C Plus 1 KB Adequate Overkill for most pet use
nfc-v (ISO 15693) Varies Good Not supported by iOS Shortcuts

Avoid bare inlays — encapsulate in epoxy, silicone, or injection-moulded plastic rated for IP67 (dust-tight, 30-minute water immersion). Some commercial pet tag manufacturers use laser-etched stainless steel with an embedded NTAG inlay.

NDEF Payload Design for Pet Tags

Option A: Direct URL (simplest)

Encode a URL to a hosted pet profile page:

https://petid.yourname.com/fluffy

The profile page contains: pet name, owner name, phone number, home address, medical conditions, medication schedule, emergency vet contact. Update the profile anytime without re-encoding the tag.

Option B: Compact vCard

For offline situations (no internet), encode a minimal vCard:

BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:3.0
FN:Fluffy (Owner: Alice Smith)
TEL;TYPE=CELL:+1-555-0100
ADR:;;123 Main St;Springfield;IL;62701;USA
NOTE:Microchip: 982091047123456. Allergic to penicillin.
END:VCARD

This fits in ~250 bytes — within NTAG215's user-memory.

Option C: URL + vCard (recommended)

Use a multi-record NDEF message: - Record 1: URI → pet profile URL (for online access) - Record 2: MIME text/vcard → compact vCard (offline fallback)

iOS processes the URI first; Android Contacts processes the vCard. Both work.

Writing and Locking the Tag

  1. Encode the NDEF payload using NFC Tools Pro or a custom app
  2. Verify by scanning on both iPhone and Android
  3. Test the URL resolves correctly and loads quickly
  4. Set lock-bits to prevent re-encoding
  5. Optionally add password-protection (write-protect only) before locking

Do not password-protect in a way that blocks reads — a lost animal scenario requires any bystander to read the tag without any authentication.

Regulatory Considerations

In many countries, animal identification regulations specify: - Dogs (EU, UK, AUS): RFID microchip mandatory under ISO 11784/85 at 134.2 kHz (not NFC frequency) - Livestock: RFID ear tags at 125 kHz (LF) or 134.2 kHz under EU Regulation 2016/429 - Horses: RFID microchip + equine passport (EU) - NFC tags: Not regulated as primary ID in any major jurisdiction — always supplement, never replace, the mandated RFID microchip

The NFC operating-frequency of 13.56 MHz is completely different from the LF/HF animal microchip frequencies (125 kHz, 134.2 kHz). NFC and animal RFID are separate, non-interchangeable systems.

Commercial Pet Tag Services

Several services offer NFC + QR code pet tag subscriptions:

Service Technology Notable Feature
PetHub NFC + QR 24/7 found pet hotline
Tile (via app) BLE + NFC Community lost/found tracking
Fi Dog Collar GPS + optional NFC Real-time GPS tracking
Road ID NFC + QR Medical ID focus

For DIY deployments, encode your own tag and host a simple static HTML pet profile. A static page on GitHub Pages costs $0 and is highly reliable.

Medical Alert Tags

For animals with medical conditions, NFC tags can carry critical information for emergency vets:

Tag payload: https://petmedical.yourname.com/fluffy

Profile contains:
  - Allergies (medications, food)
  - Current medications + doses
  - Blood type (rare but relevant for surgery)
  - Primary vet name + emergency contact
  - Owner insurance details
  - Known conditions (diabetes, epilepsy, heart condition)

A vet scanner can read this in seconds during an emergency — faster than calling an owner who may not be reachable.

Form Factor Options

Form Factor Durability Weight Best For
Epoxy disc (circle) IP67 2–5 g Most pets
Silicone band IP68 3–8 g Active dogs, water dogs
Metal tag (etched) IP65 5–15 g Display + functional
Embedded collar inlay IP66 0 g (in collar) Small animals, cats

Cats and small dogs are sensitive to tag weight — keep below 5% of body weight. Use the thinnest viable form-factor.

See Also

Terms in This Guide