United Parcel Service said Tuesday it has completed the second-phase deployment of radio frequency identification package sensing technology across its small package network, boosting productivity by eliminating the need for handheld scans and giving shippers better ability to closely track the status of parcels from drop-off to delivery.
RFID sensors are now installed in all UPS (NYSE: UPS) package delivery vehicles in the United States, in delivery stations and on every package shipped through more than 5,500 UPS Store locations, including on customer returns, according to a news release. Technology to print RFID labels was deployed to all UPS Stores by the end of 2025, the company previously said.
UPS has been using RFID for certain high-value products and pharmaceutical shipments for several years, but has now become the first major logistics provider to roll out RFID technology at scale across an integrated network.
The Atlanta-based logistics provider has invested more than $100 million to develop and implement RFID and plans to continue expanding the system. Later this year, the company will begin equipping regional sortation hubs, bringing RFID tracking capability to the middle mile, officials say. Aircraft will also eventually be equipped with RFID sensors.
Executives have previously estimated the technology would eliminate 20 million manual scans per day for workers loading package cars.
โI think it is significantโ in terms of reducing costs for UPS and enabling customers to better see where their packages are, said Chris Sheridan, director of supply chain services at LJM, a parcel spend management firm. In addition to eliminating handheld scans, RFID can provide redundant tracking of packages that are currently scanned on conveyor belt sorters where scans can be missed if a package lays on top of another package, blocking the label from being read, he added.
The RFID investment is part of UPSโs multiyear transformation initiative, called Network of the Future, which involves shrinking the ground delivery footprint and automating remaining facilities to maintain volume throughput and service levels.
UPS began its so-called โsmart packageโ RFID initiative at about 100 facilities in 2022. UPS completed the RFID rollout across U.S. facilities in mid-2023 and subsequently began to equip package cars with RFID readers.
In addition to The UPS Store, RFID labels are currently being printed at final-mile package facilities for packages that havenโt been tagged further upstream. Misloads have dropped by nearly 70% since UPS started using the technology three years ago, according to the company. When packages go the wrong destination and have to be retrieved it costs parcel carriers extra money.
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