Chip vs Chip

MIFARE Classic 1K vs FeliCa Standard

MIFARE Classic 1K offers 1024 bytes memory with Crypto-1 (broken) security, making it ideal for legacy transit cards, access control (legacy systems). FeliCa Standard provides variable with 3DES mutual authentication security, suited for Japan/HK transit (Suica, Octopus), e-money, ID systems.

MIFARE Classic 1K vs FeliCa Standard

MIFARE Classic 1K and FeliCa Standard are both legacy transit card technologies — but from different continents, operating on different RF command sets, with different security architectures and very different geographic footprints.


Overview

MIFARE Classic 1K (NXP Semiconductors, Netherlands) is the dominant contactless card chip in Europe and globally for legacy access and transit. It uses ISO 14443-3A (NFC-A), 106 kbps, and the broken Crypto-1 cipher.

FeliCa Standard (Sony Corporation, Japan) is the dominant contactless card chip in Japan and Hong Kong. It operates at 212 or 424 kbps using the NFC-F / JIS X 6319-4 protocol — a Sony-proprietary air interface that is faster than ISO 14443-A but not ISO-standardized at the card IC level. FeliCa uses 3DES authentication/" class="text-cyan-600 dark:text-cyan-400 underline decoration-dotted decoration-cyan-300 dark:decoration-cyan-700 underline-offset-2 hover:decoration-solid transition-colors">mutual authentication, making it cryptographically stronger than Classic, though 3DES is now considered legacy-strength by modern standards. Storage is variable (8 KB typical for Suica/PASMO transit cards).


Key Differences

  • Speed: FeliCa operates at 212/424 kbps — up to 4× faster than Classic 1K's 106 kbps. This speed advantage was critical for sub-200 ms gate throughput in Japan's dense transit system before tap times were commoditized.
  • Security: Both are legacy security. Crypto-1 (Classic) is fully broken. FeliCa's 3DES is still computationally secure but no longer recommended for new deployments.
  • Geography: Classic 1K dominates Europe, the Middle East, and much of Asia-Pacific. FeliCa dominates Japan (Suica, PASMO, iD, nanaco, WAON) and Hong Kong (Octopus).
  • Protocol: Classic 1K uses ISO 14443-A. FeliCa uses NFC-F (ISO 18092 / JIS X 6319-4). Readers must support NFC-F to read FeliCa cards; most modern NFC readers do.
  • Smartphone emulation: Android and iPhone both support FeliCa card emulation (HCE and Secure Element), enabling Suica on Apple Pay and Google Pay in Japan.

Technical Comparison

Parameter MIFARE Classic 1K FeliCa Standard
Protocol ISO 14443-3A (NFC-A) NFC-F (JIS X 6319-4)
Data rate 106 kbps 212 / 424 kbps
Memory 1,024 bytes Variable (~8 KB typical)
Security Crypto-1 (broken) 3DES (legacy, not broken)
Mutual authentication Weak (Crypto-1) Yes (3DES)
Read range 0–10 cm 0–10 cm
Geography Global (Europe dominant) Japan, Hong Kong
Transit deployments Oyster (legacy), OV-chip (legacy) Suica, PASMO, Octopus
Smartphone emulation Limited (proprietary) Yes (Suica on iPhone/Android)
Typical card cost (volume) $0.10–$0.25 $0.30–$0.80

Use Cases

Classic 1K remains in European legacy transit and access infrastructure. FeliCa Standard is the backbone of Japan's transit, e-money, and ID ecosystem. The two rarely compete in the same geography.


Verdict

Geographic deployment determines the choice. For Japan or Hong Kong transit, FeliCa Standard is the required platform. For any European or global legacy replacement, Classic 1K is the incumbent — though both platforms should be migrated to AES-based chips (DESFire EV3 for Classic infrastructure, FeliCa RC-S967 / EMV migration for FeliCa infrastructure) in any new issuance program.

Öneri

Choose MIFARE Classic 1K when you need massive installed base, widely available; choose FeliCa Standard when you need ultra-fast 212/424 kbps transaction speed.