# UHF RFID Pallet Label — Dock-Door Portal Reads URL: https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-pallet-label/ Source URL: https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-pallet-label/ Generated: 2026-03-16T01:42:30.697Z Kind: product Publisher: Proud Tek Co., Limited Author: Proud Tek Co., Limited Credentials: ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, RoHS Compliant, CE Marking, REACH Compliant Image: https://proudtek.com/landing-images/uhf-rfid-pallet-label.jpg Image Alt: UHF RFID pallet label on a warehouse pallet for automated logistics tracking ## Description UHF RFID pallet labels embed an Impinj M730 / NXP UCODE 8 chip on a large-format 100×150 mm reinforced PET label — automating pallet-level... ## Procurement Snapshot - Best fit: Best for asset tagging, packaging, authentication, access control, and smart-label projects. - Key options: Form Factor: Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging. - Customization: Confirm artwork, encoding, material, chip, and finish requirements before quoting. - Quote checklist: Confirm mounting surface, adhesive or on-metal requirements, and expected reading distance. Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging. Share target chip or protocol, quantity, format or size, print or encoding... ## Key Specs - Form Factor: Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging. ## FAQ - Q: Can the label be read through stretch wrap and shrink wrap? A: Yes. UHF RFID signals pass through plastic stretch wrap and shrink wrap with minimal attenuation. Our pallet labels are specifically designed and tested for reading through wrapped pallets at 5-10 m range using standard dock-door portal readers. Multiple layers of stretch wrap do not significantly affect read performance. - Q: What information is encoded on the pallet label? A: The EPC memory bank stores the SSCC (Serial Shipping Container Code) per GS1 standards. User memory can optionally store PO number, SKU, quantity, weight, origin / destination and handling instructions. The printed face includes a GS1-128 barcode and human-readable text for visual and barcode-scanner backup. - Q: Does the label work on wood pallets? A: Yes. Wood pallets absorb some RF energy, which can reduce read range by 10-20% compared to plastic pallets. Our pallet labels use a tuned antenna that compensates for wood pallet absorption, maintaining reliable reads at 4-8 m on standard wood pallets. For maximum range on wood, we recommend the label be placed on the corrugated case rather than directly on the wood surface. - Q: Are these labels compliant with the Walmart, Target, Kroger and Home Depot RFID supplier mandates, and what is the ARC certification? A: Yes — our pallet labels are engineered to meet the Auburn University RFID Lab ARC (Auburn RFID Certification) specification, which is the test protocol most North American retailers reference in their RFID supplier mandates. Specifically: ARC Category 6 (corrugated case / pallet label, general merchandise) and the Walmart 'T2' and 'T3' test criteria for read-rate and EPC encoding accuracy. Walmart began expanding RFID beyond apparel into home goods, electronics, toys and grocery through 2022-2024; Target added RFID mandates for food and consumables starting 2024; Kroger rolled out RFID for fresh departments in 2023-2024; Home Depot uses RFID for building materials. Compliance is SKU-by-SKU — we can provide ARC certificates and encoding test results for your specific pallet SKU configuration on request, and our factory provides pre-encoded labels matching each retailer's SSCC and GTIN encoding requirements. - Q: How does EPCIS 2.0 visibility data integrate with our WMS (SAP EWM, Manhattan Active WM, Blue Yonder, Oracle WMS, Körber) and what does the implementation actually look like? A: EPCIS 2.0 (ratified by GS1 and published as ISO/IEC 19987:2015) is a REST / JSON-LD visibility standard — it's a data standard, not a WMS feature. Integration is typically a middleware layer between your RFID edge (portal readers running Impinj Speedway or Zebra FX9600 via LLRP) and your WMS. Common patterns: (1) Impinj ItemSense or Zebra RFID Analytics receive raw reads, filter to unique SSCC, and publish EPCIS events to a visibility hub (Axway B2B Integration, OpenText B2B Managed Services, GS1 US OneConnect, or custom-built on Kafka / RabbitMQ); (2) the hub translates to the WMS-native API — SAP EWM (via IDoc or oData), Manhattan Active WM (via REST APIs), Blue Yonder (via Luminate integration framework), Oracle WMS Cloud (via REST), Körber K.Motion WMS (via web services); (3) exception events (missing pallet, unexpected pallet, quantity variance) trigger alerts in the WMS receiving dashboard before the trailer is released. Deployment typically takes 3-6 months for a mid-size DC with pilot on 2-4 dock doors before scaling to the full facility. We do not supply middleware; we supply the labels, encoding services and pilot-deployment RF consulting. ## Machine Routes - JSON: https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-pallet-label.json - Text: https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-pallet-label.txt