# RFID for Agriculture — ISO 11784/11785 Livestock URL: https://proudtek.com/industries/agriculture/ Source URL: https://proudtek.com/industries/agriculture/ Generated: 2026-03-16T01:42:30.697Z Kind: article Publisher: Proud Tek Co., Limited Author: Proud Tek Editorial Team (RFID & NFC Technical Content Team) Published: 2026-04-22 Last Modified: 2026-06-10T18:00:00Z Last Reviewed: 2026-06-10T18:00:00Z Credentials: ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, RoHS Compliant, CE Marking, REACH Compliant Image: https://proudtek.com/landing-images/rfid-animal-ear-tag.png Image Alt: RFID livestock ear tag (LF 134.2 kHz ISO 11784/11785 FDX-B) on cattle for USDA APHIS 840-series Animal Disease Traceability + automated herd management at chute + feed bunk + UHF farm asset tag for tractor inventory ## Description Agriculture uses RFID for livestock identification + traceability under ISO 11784/11785 LF (134.2 kHz FDX-B / HDX), USDA APHIS Animal Disease... ## Summary - Agriculture uses RFID for livestock identification + traceability under ISO 11784/11785 LF (134.2 kHz FDX-B / HDX), USDA APHIS Animal Disease... ## Buyer Guidance - Best for: RFID for Agriculture — ISO 11784/11785 Livestock supports RFID and NFC evaluation, comparison, and sourcing decisions. - Compare first: Compare RFID for Agriculture — ISO 11784/11785 Livestock against reader compatibility, chip family, material, and deployment environment. - What to confirm: Confirm target application, compatibility requirements, customization needs, quantity, and sample expectations before quoting RFID for Agriculture — ISO 11784/11785 Livestock. ## FAQ - Q: Which frequency is standard for livestock RFID tags? A: Low Frequency (LF) at 134.2 kHz is the international standard for livestock identification per ISO 11784:1996 (code structure — 15-digit, 3-digit country code + 12-digit ID) + ISO 11785:1996 (air-interface). LF provides reliable reads at 30-50 cm through animal tissue, water and mud, with FDX-B (Full Duplex Type B) the dominant 2024-2026 protocol and HDX (Half Duplex) the legacy Texas Instruments base in Australia + New Zealand. National traceability programmes — USDA APHIS 840-series for US cattle, EU Reg 2016/429 + 21/2004 + 1760/2000 for EU livestock, Australia NLIS, Brazil SISBOV, Canada CCIA + agriTrace, New Zealand NAIT — all mandate ISO 11784/11785 compliant LF ear tags. UHF ear tags (860-960 MHz) are gaining use for supplementary long-range yard management, gate readers and tractor / chute integration where 1-2 m vs 30-50 cm read distance matters; UHF is supplementary to (not replacing) LF for compliance ID. - Q: How long do RFID ear tags last on livestock? A: Quality RFID ear tags from USDA AIN tag-manager-approved suppliers (Allflex, Datamars, Y-Tex, Caisley, Shearwell, Z-Tags) are designed to last the productive lifetime of the animal — typically 5-10+ years for cattle, 3-5 years for sheep + goats. Tags are made from UV-resistant polyurethane or TPU materials that withstand sun, rain, snow, mud and animal-to-animal contact. Retention rates above 97% per year are standard for properly applied tags using approved applicators (Allflex Universal Total Tagger, Y-Tex AllFlex, Datamars). Glass-capsule injectable microchips (12 mm + 32 mm) for horses + companion animals + small livestock have effectively unlimited retention once correctly placed. For aquaculture PIT tags inserted at fingerling stage, retention through harvest is 99%+ on salmon + trout. Replacement protocol — re-tag if visual / electronic verification fails at chute / handheld read. - Q: Are RFID ear tags mandatory for cattle? A: Requirements vary by jurisdiction + animal class. The US USDA APHIS final rule effective 11 Nov 2024 makes RFID-based 840-series ear tags the ONLY accepted official ID for sexually intact cattle ≥18 months and breeding bison crossing state lines (replacing the previous mix of metal brucellosis tags + visual ID + RFID); other classes still accept visual or RFID. EU Reg 2016/429 (Animal Health Law in force 21 Apr 2021) + Reg 21/2004 (sheep + goats since 2010) + Reg 1760/2000 (bovines) mandate electronic identification across EU member states. Australia NLIS requires RFID tags for all cattle. Brazil SISBOV, Canada CCIA + agriTrace, New Zealand NAIT, and Argentina + Uruguay + Chile + Mexico + South Africa + India + China bilateral programmes all have varying mandates. Check your national + state regulator for specific class + age requirements; the global trend since 2020 is toward universal mandatory electronic ID for all major livestock classes. - Q: How does EUDR (Reg 2023/1115) affect cattle and commodity RFID? A: EU Regulation 2023/1115 (Deforestation Regulation, EUDR) is in force 30 Dec 2025 and requires geo-located provenance proving no association with land deforested after 31 Dec 2020 for cattle, cocoa, coffee, palm oil, rubber, soy, timber and derived products imported into the EU market. Operators + traders must submit a due-diligence statement before placing the product on the EU market. The recommended carrier architecture is RFID + GS1 Digital Link 1.3 URI ('https://producer.com/01//21/') resolvable to the full due-diligence statement, fed via GS1 EPCIS 2.0 (ISO/IEC 19987:2021) Commission + ObjectEvent + AggregationEvent capture at every Critical Tracking Event from primary production through processing + distribution. For cattle, the ISO 11784/11785 ear-tag ID + farm-of-origin GPS + slaughter-house traceability + EU border-crossing event chain together satisfy the due-diligence statement. Cocoa + coffee + cattle programmes are the early-volume drivers; non-compliant imports face EU market access denial. - Q: How does cannabis seed-to-sale RFID compliance work? A: Cannabis seed-to-sale tracking is mandated by US state regulators including Florida + California + Maryland + Massachusetts + Michigan + Ohio + Oregon + Colorado + Nevada + Arizona under Metrc (Marijuana Enforcement Tracking Reporting Compliance), and Washington + Hawaii + Illinois + others under BioTrack THC, with Confident Cannabis serving multiple states. Canada Health Canada operates a federal cannabis tracking system; EU + Germany + Switzerland are emerging. The architecture combines RFID tag + barcode dual-encoding per state regulator format — typically GS1 SGTIN-96 EPC + state-assigned facility license number + plant / batch / package serial. Each Critical Tracking Event (planting, harvesting, processing, packaging, transfer, sale) is reported to the state regulator via API or portal upload. The NFC cannabis tracking label SKU supplies pre-encoded tags ready to drop into Metrc + BioTrack workflows; specify your state regulator + facility license and we route the matching encoding template. Adult-use + medical use programmes have separate tracking requirements under the same regulator. ## Machine Routes - JSON: https://proudtek.com/machine/industries/agriculture.json - Text: https://proudtek.com/machine/industries/agriculture.txt