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Balancing Brains and Brawn: How RFID is Reinventing Loss Prevention Without Replacing EAS Hard Tags

Steve Jacobs

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Retail shrink hit $112 billion in 2022, and the numbers continue to climb. As theft becomes more sophisticated, so too must the tools retailers use to protect inventory. Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) has emerged as a powerful force in retail loss prevention, offering more than just security alerts, it delivers intelligence. But as many retailers are now learning, intelligence alone isn’t enough. In-store loss prevention still requires a physical presence. That’s where the synergy between RFID and traditional Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS) hard tags comes into play.

RFID as a Smarter Security Tag

At its simplest, RFID tags function much like traditional AM or RF tags, sending a signal when a product passes an exit point. But the real power of RFID lies in its data. Each RFID tag can be programmed with product-specific information, SKU, size, color, category, making it uniquely identifiable. This allows loss prevention teams to know exactly what was stolen, even if a shoplifter slips away.

However, this functionality is only fully realized when RFID tags are “intelligent,” meaning they've been encoded with the relevant product data. This is typically accomplished through source tagging, where items are tagged and encoded at the point of manufacture. Once those items reach a store, the tags can be read instantly by fixed readers, handheld scanners, or exit pedestals, no line-of-sight required.

But here’s the challenge: in a retail setting, reprogramming RFID tags for individual items post-production is difficult, labor-intensive, and rarely scalable. That means RFID is incredibly powerful for inventory visibility and theft analytics, but only if the process is set up correctly from the start.

Why RFID Alone Isn't Enough

Some retailers, tempted by RFID’s promise, have experimented with removing physical deterrents, EAS tags, locks, even pedestals, from the floor entirely. The results? Shrinkage skyrocketed.

  • One retailer who removed hard tags saw shrink double within a year.

  • Another reported a 70% spike in just seven weeks in departments without EAS tagging.

  • Staff also reported decreased feelings of safety and more frequent confrontation with shoplifters.

Despite the backend data advantages RFID provides, the absence of visible deterrents sends the wrong message to would-be thieves. As with home security, visibility matters, alarms, signage, and cameras all reduce the likelihood of criminal behavior. In stores, hard tags and pedestals play that same role.

Smarter Together: RFID + EAS

Rather than replacing one with the other, the most successful loss prevention strategies combine RFID with traditional tagging systems. RFID offers insight; EAS provides deterrence.

Think of a retail environment like a football field: RFID is the coaching and play analysis, helping you understand the game better. But hard tags are your defensive line, blocking theft before it happens. Without them, you’re always playing from behind.

This hybrid approach has several key benefits:

  • Tag smarter, not harder: Use RFID data to identify which SKUs are most at risk and apply high security EAS tags to those products. Ink tags can elevate the protection offered by regular AM and RF tags.

  • Improve accuracy: RFID can verify that an item was purchased, cutting down on false alarms at exits.

  • Boost inventory intelligence: Real-time inventory visibility reduces internal theft and enhances omnichannel operations.

  • Maintain customer experience: By tagging intelligently, you avoid locked cases that drive customers away and replace them with open displays that still deter theft.

The Future is Layered

Modern loss prevention isn’t a matter of choosing RFID or EAS, it’s about knowing how and when to use both. RFID provides the data foundation for smarter security decisions, but the visible presence of hard tags, locks, and alarms remains essential for day-to-day deterrence.

Retailers who strike the right balance, layering RFID intelligence with physical security, will not only reduce shrink but also improve staff safety, shopper confidence, and operational efficiency. As retail continues to evolve, the best defense is a well-informed, well-equipped offense.