Chip vs Chip

NTAG213 vs MIFARE Ultralight EV1

NTAG213 offers 144 bytes memory with 32-bit password security, making it ideal for NFC business cards, URL tags, small data records. MIFARE Ultralight EV1 provides 128 bytes with 32-bit password security, suited for limited-use transit tickets, loyalty tokens.

NTAG213 vs MIFARE Ultralight EV1: Consumer Tag vs. Transit Workhorse

NTAG213 and MIFARE Ultralight EV1 are both NXP NFC-A tags designed for low-cost, high-volume applications. They share a common lineage but diverge in memory architecture and the presence of hardware counters — features that matter enormously for transit ticketing and access control.


Overview

NTAG213 targets the consumer NDEF ecosystem: URL tags, vCards, and smart packaging. Its 144 bytes of memory are formatted as standard NDEF, readable by any smartphone without a dedicated app. It supports an OTP area and simple password protection.

MIFARE Ultralight EV1 is designed for single-use and limited-use ticketing. Available in 48-byte and 128-byte variants, it adds three independent 24-bit one-way counters that can be incremented but never decremented — a hardware mechanism that makes it intrinsically suitable for counting remaining ticket rides or access attempts. It also supports a stronger 3-pass authentication with a 32-bit password, and an optional originality signature for NXP chip verification.


Key Differences

  • Hardware counters: MIFARE Ultralight EV1 has three 24-bit one-way counters. NTAG213 has no equivalent dedicated counter — a counter would need to be emulated in NDEF data and is insecure without authentication.
  • Memory: NTAG213 — 144 bytes user memory. Ultralight EV1 — 48 or 128 bytes (config dependent).
  • NDEF readability: NTAG213 is natively NDEF-formatted and smartphone-readable. Ultralight EV1 can carry NDEF but is primarily used with reader applications that access raw memory pages.
  • Originality signature: Ultralight EV1 supports an ECC-based originality check against NXP's public key, providing chip-level authenticity verification (distinct from SUN).
  • Security level: Both use 32-bit password protection. Neither provides symmetric-key cryptographic authentication equivalent to DESFire.
  • Application domain: NTAG213 is a consumer data tag. Ultralight EV1 is a transit and limited-access-control ticket.

Use Cases

Choose NTAG213 when: - The deployment is smartphone-centric and native NDEF readability is required - Payload is a URL, contact, or informational text - No hardware counter or ticket logic is needed

Choose MIFARE Ultralight EV1 when: - The application counts use events (transit rides, parking entries, event admissions) - A dedicated reader infrastructure already exists (transit gates, vending machines) - The originality signature is needed to verify NXP chip provenance


Verdict

NTAG213 is the right chip when the goal is smartphone interoperability and NDEF simplicity. MIFARE Ultralight EV1 is the right chip when a hardware counter is a functional requirement — particularly in transit ticketing or any scenario where the chip itself must enforce a usage limit. For higher security in transit or access control, consider MIFARE DESFire EV3.

Öneri

Choose NTAG213 when you need lowest cost NFC Forum Type 2 tag; choose MIFARE Ultralight EV1 when you need improved Ultralight with password protection.