# RFID for Libraries — ISO 28560 Self-Service URL: https://proudtek.com/industries/libraries/ Source URL: https://proudtek.com/industries/libraries/ 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-library-book-tag.jpg Image Alt: Library RFID system — ICODE SLIX2 + ISO 28560 book tag bonded inside back cover + Bibliotheca self-checkout kiosk reading 5-10 books simultaneously + AMH return sorter routing books to bin + RFID security gate at exit ## Description Libraries worldwide use RFID + ISO 28560 (Parts 1-3 data model) + ISO/IEC 15693 HF (13.56 MHz) + NXP ICODE SLIX2 chip silicon to automate circulation,... ## Summary - Libraries worldwide use RFID + ISO 28560 (Parts 1-3 data model) + ISO/IEC 15693 HF (13.56 MHz) + NXP ICODE SLIX2 chip silicon to automate circulation,... ## Buyer Guidance - Best for: RFID for Libraries — ISO 28560 Self-Service supports RFID and NFC evaluation, comparison, and sourcing decisions. - Compare first: Compare RFID for Libraries — ISO 28560 Self-Service 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 Libraries — ISO 28560 Self-Service. ## FAQ - Q: How much does it cost to tag an entire library collection with RFID? A: RFID library book tags (NXP ICODE SLIX2 + ISO 28560 encoding) cost USD 0.10-0.18 per tag at volume (1,000+ MOQ). For a 100,000-item collection, the tag cost is USD 10,000-18,000. Including staff labour for applying tags + encoding (Bibliotheca recommend ~30 sec/item by trained tagger), total tagging project typically costs USD 0.20-0.35 per item, or USD 20,000-35,000 for a 100,000-item library. Pre-encoded tags (with customer's ISIL + barcode allocation range + EAS-armed) reduce labour cost by 60-70% — staff just apply the label without encoding equipment. ROI break-even is 3-5 years for medium public libraries (kiosk + AMH return + security gate), 5-7 years for large academic libraries with deeper backlog. For migration deployments, Bibliotheca Hybrid Gates (RFID + EM) allow tagging only new accessions during a 12-24 month conversion window. - Q: Are library RFID tags compatible with Bibliotheca and other system vendors? A: Yes — by design. The default chip (NXP ICODE SLIX2, ISO/IEC 15693 + NFC Forum Type 5) is the chip read by every modern library RFID middleware: Bibliotheca liber8 / WebService, FE Technologies, P.V. Supa, Tech Logic, Checkpoint ITG, RFID Library Solutions ScanPoint, 3M Detection retrofit kits, EnvisionWare, Mk Solutions / ITG, 2CQR. We also supply ICODE SLI / SLIX for backwards compatibility with pre-2014 installed base, plus EM4233 / EM4423 alternates for libraries that source dual-vendor. The ILS layer (SirsiDynix Symphony / BLUEcloud / Horizon, Innovative Sierra / Polaris, Ex Libris Alma + Primo, OCLC WorldShare Management Services, EBSCO FOLIO, Koha) talks to the kiosk + AMH over SIP2 or NCIP / Z39.83 — independent of the chip. Send us your kiosk vendor + ILS + ISIL + barcode allocation range and we sample-test the label on your stack before mass production. The ISO 28560 + AFI 0x07 + DSFID standardised encoding is the interoperability foundation. - Q: Can RFID tags damage books? A: No. Library RFID tags are ≤0.30 mm thick on PET face stock with library-grade acid-free permanent acrylic adhesive (peel ≥18 N/25 mm) that complies with ANSI/NISO Z39.48 archival paper standards for non-damage to paper, book boards and binding materials. The label is typically placed inside the back cover or on the title-page verso (avoid placing over text and avoid the spine for hardbound volumes that flex). Field-tested on archival collections where the label has remained in place for 10+ years without adhesive migration, page yellowing or board damage. Used in national libraries (US Library of Congress, British Library, BNF, Bibliothèque nationale de France) and rare-book collections worldwide. We do not recommend the label for rare-book + special-collections + rare-paperback where any reversible accession marker is required — those collections typically use removable bookplate inlays or shelf-mounted RFID. - Q: What is ISO 28560 and which encoding profile should I use? A: ISO 28560 is the international library RFID data model — 3 parts standardising the 26 data elements (Primary Item Identifier, Owner Institution ISIL per ISO 15511, Content Parameter Set, Set Information, Type of Usage, Shelf Location, Title, Author, ISBN, Subsidiary, Alternative Unique Item Identifier, Local Data A/B/C, etc.) that every library RFID stack reads. Part 1 covers general principles + data elements; Part 2 specifies variable-length encoded using ISO/IEC 15962 OID-based data syntax (default for North America, UK, Scandinavia); Part 3 specifies fixed-length 'Danish' encoding (still in use at some Northern European libraries). For new deployments we recommend ISO 28560-2 — it is the default profile in Bibliotheca liber8, FE Technologies, Tech Logic and current Ex Libris Alma + Innovative + SirsiDynix integrations. Send us your ISIL + barcode allocation range + ILS / middleware vendor and we match the exact encoding profile + DSFID byte + AFI 0x07 (libraries application family identifier reserved by ISO/IEC 15693) before mass encoding. - Q: How does RFID handle interlibrary loan (ILL) across multiple libraries? A: Each book's ISO 28560 RFID tag carries the Owner Institution ISIL code (ISO 15511:2019 — globally registered library prefix, e.g., US-DLC for Library of Congress, GB-Uk for British Library, DK-CV for Copenhagen Business School Library) in Data Element 3. When a book ships out on ILL, the receiving library's kiosk or AMH reads the ISIL directly from the label and resolves ownership without back-office lookup; OCLC WorldShare Management Services Resource Sharing + EBSCO FOLIO Resource Sharing + Ex Libris Alma Primo Resource Sharing all key off the ISIL on the RFID label. SIP2 + NCIP / Z39.83 transaction protocols handle the cross-library check-in/check-out workflow. For very large multi-library ILL networks (state-wide consortia, multi-country networks like the Nordic Union Catalog), the Primary Item Identifier (DE 1) + ISIL combination provides unique global identification across millions of items. We pre-encode the ISIL per library at order time so labels are ILL-ready on first deployment. ## Machine Routes - JSON: https://proudtek.com/machine/industries/libraries.json - Text: https://proudtek.com/machine/industries/libraries.txt