A practical comparison between two of the most popular UHF RAIN RFID chips
1. Overview: Impinj M700 Series in Context
Impinj’s M700 series – including the M730, M750 and newer variants – was designed to set a new benchmark for tag efficiency and read performance.
The question “Impinj M730 vs M750 – which chip should I choose?” comes up in almost every new UHF RAIN RFID project.
Both chips support EPC Gen 2 v2 / ISO 18000-6C protocols and are optimised for a wide range of UHF applications from retail and logistics to industrial tracking.
At first glance, the M730 and M750 look very similar – they share the same family architecture and pinout – but there are clear differences in memory size, functionality and price.
2. Impinj M730 vs M750: Quick Specification Comparison
| Feature | Impinj M730 | Impinj M750 |
|---|---|---|
| User Memory | 0 bits (user memory disabled) | 32 bits user memory available |
| EPC Memory | 128 bits | 96 bits (default), configurable |
| Access & Kill Password | Shared 32 bits each | Shared 32 bits each |
| TID Memory | 96-bit factory-locked | 96-bit factory-locked |
| Read Sensitivity | approx. -24 dBm | approx. -24 dBm |
| Write Sensitivity | -22 to -23 dBm | -22 to -23 dBm |
| FastID Support | Yes | Yes |
| Autotune Technology | Yes | Yes |
| Extended Features | Basic Gen2v2 set | Adds “Short Range Mode” and “Untraceable Mode” |
| Typical Applications | High-volume retail, supply-chain labels | Smart assets, IT equipment, apparel labels with custom data |
| Tag Cost | Lower | Slightly higher (due to extra memory) |
3. Key Differences Explained
(1) User Memory and Data Capacity
The most obvious difference is user memory.
- M730 has no user memory – it’s ideal for basic EPC encoding and high-volume one-time use tags.
- M750 adds 32 bits of user memory, allowing extra serial numbers, batch codes or status flags to be stored on the tag itself.
For projects that require only EPC IDs and database linkage (e.g., retail apparel labels), M730 is more cost-efficient.
For applications where the tag needs to carry small custom data (e.g., asset status, manufacture date), M750 is preferred. Find more about :
(2) Enhanced Privacy and Security Modes
The M750 adds support for “Untraceable Mode”, which can temporarily hide part of the EPC or user memory – useful for privacy in retail and consumer environments.
It also features a “Short Range Mode” to limit read distance for checkout or point-of-sale operations.
The M730 does not offer these modes.
(3) Memory Layout and Compatibility
Both chips share the same form-factor and interface pinout, meaning an existing M730-based antenna design can usually upgrade to M750 with minimal re-tuning.
However, because of the extra memory block, the M750 may require slightly more fine-tuning for resonance optimisation to achieve peak read range.
In short, for most EPC-only labels M730 is ideal, while projects that need extra data or privacy features should choose M750.
4. Performance in Real Applications
| Use Case | Recommended Chip | Why |
|---|---|---|
| High-volume retail labels | M730 | Lowest cost, fast encoding speed for mass production |
| Logistics / Parcel Tracking | M730 | Good read distance and bulk read performance |
| Industrial Asset Management | M750 | Extra user memory for status or maintenance data |
| Apparel & Brand Protection | M750 | Untraceable Mode and Short Range Mode add security |
| IT Equipment Tracking | M750 | Can embed extra device info on-tag without database lookup |
In Voyantic tests and third-party reports, both chips achieve similar read ranges (typically up to 10–15 metres with optimised antenna).
The difference is in data functionality rather than raw RF performance.
5. Cost and Design Considerations
For projects producing tens of millions of labels (such as retail or logistics), even a few cents per tag matters – M730 wins on price.
If the volumes are smaller but data requirements are richer, the extra features of M750 are worth it.
In ForNext RFID’s production experience, M730 is often used for standard white labels and on-metal applications, while M750 is chosen for custom apparel or asset management labels.
6. Verdict – Which One Should You Choose?
| Project Type | Recommended Chip |
|---|---|
| Cost-sensitive, mass logistics labelling | M730 |
| Retail and apparel requiring privacy features | M750 |
| Smart asset tracking with custom data fields | M750 |
| Basic EPC-only encoding tags | M730 |
Summary:
- Choose M730 when you need scale and speed.
- Choose M750 when you need extra data and security.
Conclusion
Both Impinj M730 and M750 belong to the same next-generation chip family offering excellent RF sensitivity and encoding speed.
The main difference is not in read range but in memory and feature set.
Understanding these details helps you balance cost and capability – and select the chip that truly fits your project.
At ForNext RFID, we manufacture Voyantic-tested labels using both M730 and M750 in various formats (laundry, on-metal, apparel, and logistics), and we can advise which chip performs best for your specific application.
Find more about Impinj M700 series Chip: https://support.impinj.com/hc/article_attachments/37364431080467
http://Impinj M700 Series Tag Chips Product Brief / Datasheet



