Post Craft

NFC Tags Inside 3D Prints: Keychains, Pet Tags, Backpack Tags, and Poker Chips

NFC turns a simple 3D print into a tap-enabled object. Instead of printing only a name, logo, or shape, we can build a small NFC coin into the part so a phone can open a URL, show contact details, launch a profile, share WiFi information, or trigger a supported phone action.

The current tags we are testing are 25mm white PVC NFC coin tags using NTAG215 chips. The seller specs list 504 bytes of available NDEF memory, read/write support, optional read-only locking, and more than 100,000 write cycles. They are waterproof PVC coins, but they are not adhesive-backed and are not designed for direct use on metal surfaces.

How the tag gets built into the print

The practical workflow is a pause-at-layer print. The model includes a 25mm round pocket inside the part. The printer starts normally, builds the bottom shell and the sides of the pocket, then pauses at the correct layer. We place the NFC coin into the pocket, confirm it sits flat, and resume the print so the top layers seal it inside.

  1. Design a 25mm circular cavity with enough clearance for the token and top cover layers.
  2. Slice the model and add a pause before the pocket closes.
  3. Print the lower section and pause automatically.
  4. Drop in the NFC coin, keeping it flat and away from the nozzle path.
  5. Resume printing and encapsulate the tag inside the part.
  6. Test the tag after printing with an NFC-enabled phone.

What NFC can do inside a print

Printed itemNFC actionExample use
Dog or cat tagOpen a pet profile URLOwner contact, vet info, medication notes, or lost-pet page
Kids backpack tagOpen safe contact info or school pickup instructionsParent-managed emergency details without crowding the printed surface
Children's book tokenOpen audio, reading notes, or a companion webpageTap a character token to hear a read-aloud or launch bonus content
Poker chip tokenOpen a rules page, event page, playlist, or scoreboardGame night chips, tournament tokens, promo chips, or party favors
Business keychainOpen a contact card, website, or social profileTap-to-save contact info at markets, events, and vendor booths
Product authentication tokenOpen a verification URL or care instructionsBatch info, reorder link, instructions, or warranty page

Programming with NFC Tools

One simple way to write these tags is the Android app NFC Tools by wakdev. The app can read tag type and memory information, then write standard NDEF records such as a URL, plain text, phone number, contact information, email, location, social profile, app link, WiFi configuration, or Bluetooth configuration.

For a basic URL, the workflow is straightforward: open NFC Tools, go to Write, add a URL/URI record, enter the link, tap Write, then hold the NFC token against the phone until writing completes. Wakdev also documents this URL-writing workflow in its NFC Tools guide.

Why NTAG215 works well for small prints

NXP lists NTAG215 as part of the NTAG21x family, with NFC Forum Type 2 compliance and 504 bytes of user memory. That is not enough for a big file, but it is enough for the kinds of payloads that make sense inside a printed object: a URL, short text, contact record, or small configuration record. For most physical products, the best pattern is to store a link on the tag and keep the larger content online where it can be edited later.

Design constraints that matter

Good first products

Pet tags, backpack tags, poker chips, business keychains, care-instruction tokens, event badges, and custom gift tags are all strong starting points. The physical print gives the piece shape, durability, color, and branding. The NFC chip gives it a second layer of behavior.

For buyers, the important ordering details are simple: tell us the object type, whether the NFC should open a URL or store text, whether the tag should stay rewritable, and whether the print needs a visible NFC mark or a hidden embedded tag.

Want an NFC-enabled print? Use Custom Order and mention "embedded NFC" with the item type, link or payload, color, quantity, and deadline.