RFID and NFC Wristbands for Events: Cashless Payments and Access Control

Attendee tapping a custom RFID event wristband on a reader for cashless payment at a festival bar
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Quick answer

An RFID wristband (or NFC wristband) is an event band with a small chip inside it. Attendees tap to pay at the bar, tap to enter a gate or zone, and the chip captures the data you need for crowd flow and stock. The chip can sit in a woven fabric band (tamper-evident, locked on at the gate) or a silicone band (reusable and comfortable, but not tamper-evident). The right chip depends on your payment or access platform — we break the chip types down below. Lead time depends on quantity and the chip — typically 10–14 business days, larger runs and some chips longer, quicker on application.

RFID and NFC wristbands turn an event band into a wallet and a key. Instead of cash, lanyards and ticket scanning at every point, each attendee wears one band that pays, opens gates and tells you what is happening across the site in real time.

This guide explains how RFID event wristbands work, the chip types and what each is for, the difference between RFID and NFC, whether to put the chip in silicone or fabric, and how to spec and order them for a festival, conference or activation in Australia.

How do RFID and NFC wristbands work?

An RFID wristband has a tiny chip and antenna sealed inside the band. When the wristband passes close to a reader — at a bar, a gate or a zone entrance — the reader powers the chip and reads its unique ID. That ID is linked to the attendee’s account, so a single tap can take a payment, check a ticket or log a movement. There is no battery in the band and nothing for the attendee to charge.

NFC (near-field communication) is a short-range form of RFID that works at a few centimetres, the same technology behind contactless cards and phone payments. UHF RFID can read at a longer range, which suits fast-moving gates and crowd scanning. Most event programmes use a mix — and which chip does which job is the question we get asked most.

Which chip do you need? RFID and NFC chip types explained.

There is no single “RFID chip” — there is a family of them, and the right one depends on what the band has to do and which platform you are running. The simplest rule: match the chip to your cashless or access platform. Most platforms specify the chip they support; tell us the platform and we match it. Here is what each common chip type is for.

Chip Type Best for
NTAG213 / 215 / 216NFC (phone-readable)Tap-to-link with a phone: web pages, social follows, promos, digital content, light check-ins. NTAG215 is the most widely compatible.
MIFARE Classic 1K / 4KNFC (HF)The festival workhorse — closed-loop cashless and access on most event platforms.
MIFARE Ultralight / EV1NFC (HF), low-costSingle-use or short-run entry tickets and gate access where cost-per-band matters.
MIFARE DESFire EV2 / EV3NFC (HF), encryptedSecure cashless payments and high-value or sensitive access; one chip can run several applications.
UHF (Impinj / UCODE)UHF, long-rangeReads up to about a metre and scans many bands fast — high-throughput gates, zone scanning, crowd-flow analytics. Not phone-readable, not for tap-to-pay.

Rule of thumb: NFC (NTAG or MIFARE) for tapping — payments, access and phone interactions; UHF for reading lots of bands quickly at distance — gates and crowd analytics. Unsure? Send your platform and we match the chip to it.

What can an RFID event wristband do?

Use What it does
Cashless paymentsAttendees top up a balance and tap to pay at bars, food and merch. Queues move faster and you cut cash handling.
Access controlTap to enter the gate, a VIP area, backstage or a multi-day re-entry lane. One band, the right permissions.
Zone scanningRead attendees in and out of stages or zones to manage capacity and crowd flow on the day.
Data captureSpend, dwell time and traffic by zone, so you can plan bars, staffing and next year’s site map from real numbers.
Phone interactionsWith an NFC tag, a tap opens a web page, social follow or promo — useful for sponsors and activations.

Silicone or fabric: which band carries the chip?

Custom woven fabric RFID festival wristbands with a barrel-lock closure and an embedded chip for cashless and access

The chip is an inlay, so it can go into more than one band type. The two we use most for events are woven fabric and silicone — and the choice matters, because they behave differently once they are on the wrist.

Band Tamper-evident? Best for
Woven fabric (barrel lock)Yes — locked on at the gate, cannot be removed and passed on.Paid entry, general admission, single-fit multi-day wear — anywhere the band must not transfer.
SiliconeNo — slips on and off, so it is reusable but transferable.Staff and crew, members, season passes, multi-event reuse, VIP keepsakes. Low minimum of 4 per design.

Use fabric where the band must stay put and can’t be passed on — that is most paid-entry events. Use silicone where you want a comfortable, reusable band and transfer is not a risk, such as staff access or a returning membership. Tyvek can also carry a low-cost inlay for short, disposable runs.

Choosing RFID wristbands for your event.

Once the chip and band are settled, a few decisions shape the rest of the spec: single-day or multi-day re-entry, whether you need VIP and artist tiers, whether the chip drives payments, access or both, and which payment or access platform you are running. Bring your platform and we will match the chip and encoding to it, then weave your event artwork and palette into the band.

View woven fabric event wristbands →

How much do RFID wristbands cost?

RFID event wristbands are priced per band and depend on the quantity, the band material and finish, and the chip your platform needs — a low-cost NFC tag costs less than a secure DESFire or a long-range UHF chip. They sit above a plain printed band because of the embedded chip, and the per-band price falls as the run gets larger, so festival-scale orders are the most cost-effective.

Fabric bands run at higher minimums than our silicone range, where the minimum is four per design — handy for a small reusable batch of RFID staff or VIP bands. The fastest way to a firm number is to send your quantity, dates, the platform and what you need the chip to do, and we will quote it. Lead time depends on quantity and the chip: a typical run is 10–14 business days, larger runs and certain chips take longer to source and encode, and quicker turnarounds are available on application.

Get a quote for RFID event wristbands →

RFID event wristband questions.

How do RFID wristbands work for events?
A chip and antenna are sealed inside the band. When the wristband passes a reader at a bar, gate or zone, the reader powers the chip and reads its unique ID, which is linked to the attendee’s account. A single tap can take a payment, check entry or log a movement. There is no battery in the band and nothing to charge.
What chip do I need for my event?
Match the chip to your platform. As a guide: NTAG213/215/216 for phone taps (links, social, promos); MIFARE Classic for standard closed-loop cashless and access; MIFARE Ultralight for low-cost single-use entry; MIFARE DESFire for secure cashless and high-value access; and UHF (Impinj or UCODE) for long-range, high-throughput gates and crowd-flow scanning. Most cashless and access platforms specify the chip they support — tell us the platform and we match it.
Can the chip go in a silicone wristband, or only fabric?
Both. The chip is an inlay, so it can sit in a woven fabric band, a silicone band or a Tyvek band. The trade-off is tamper-evidence: a fabric band has a barrel lock and cannot be removed once it is fitted, while a silicone band slips on and off, so it is reusable but transferable. Use fabric for paid entry, silicone for staff, members or reusable bands.
Are silicone RFID wristbands tamper-evident?
No. Silicone bands slip on and off, so they are not tamper-evident and can be passed between people — which is fine for staff, crew, members or reusable bands, but not for paid entry. Where the band must not transfer, use a woven fabric band with a barrel-lock closure, fitted at the gate.
How long do custom RFID wristbands take to make?
Lead time depends on quantity and the chip. A typical run is around 10–14 business days; larger runs and certain chips take longer to source and encode, and quicker turnarounds are available on application. Send your dates with the brief and we will confirm timing against your quantity and chip.

Related reading.

Run your event cashless on one band.

Custom RFID and NFC wristbands for payments, access and data — in fabric or silicone, with the chip matched to your platform. Send your quantity and dates for a quote.

22 years

Designed in Sydney since 2004

Fabric or silicone

The chip fits either band

Cashless & access

Tap to pay, tap to enter

Real-time data

Spend & crowd flow by zone