
SivaIot

Posted on Jan-2026
SivaIot
Across nurseries, greenhouses, and horticulture operations, managing thousands—or even millions—of plants is far from simple. Traditional identification methods such as handwritten labels, barcodes, or visual tagging are prone to wear, duplication, and human error. Exposure to soil, moisture, sunlight, and outdoor conditions often leads to damaged labels, lost data, and inaccurate records.
For operations that rely on precise plant identification, batch tracking, growth-stage monitoring, or inventory visibility, these challenges directly impact efficiency, traceability, and profitability, often solvable by plant RFID tags.
SIVA’s Stick-In Plant RFID Tag is designed specifically to solve these challenges. Engineered for soil-based deployment, this RFID plant tracking tag enables seamless identification and tracking of plants throughout their lifecycle—from propagation and growth to transport and sale.
Featuring the Impinj M830 chip, the tag delivers reliable read performance in outdoor and nursery environments where conventional labels often fail. Its stick-in form factor allows for easy insertion into soil or plant pots, ensuring consistent positioning and long-term usability without interfering with plant growth.
The contactless RFID tag remains securely positioned in soil, allowing readers to capture data without line-of-sight scanning. This enables faster audits, automated inventory counts, and real-time visibility across large growing areas.
The Stick-In Plant Tag transforms plant identification from a manual task into a digital, automated process. This contactless rfid tag enables fast, contactless data capture and reliable tracking in soil-based environments, helping organizations reduce errors, improve visibility, and scale operations efficiently.
As the agriculture and horticulture industries continue to adopt smart technologies, RFID-based plant identification is no longer optional—it’s a strategic advantage. The Stick-In Plant Tag delivers that advantage, right from the soil up.