Smart Card Cost Estimator
Estimate per-unit smart card costs based on volume, chip type, and features.
CalculatorCard Configuration
Volume & Personalization
Unit Cost
$0
Total Cost
$0
Setup Fee
$0
Grand Total
$0
Cost Breakdown (per unit)
| Total per Card |
Volume Pricing Guide
| Quantity | Discount | Est. Unit Cost |
|---|---|---|
How to Use
-
1
Select chip type and form factor
Choose the card IC family (ISO 7816 contact, ISO 14443 contactless, or dual-interface), the target operating system (Java Card, MULTOS, or proprietary), and the form factor (ID-1 card, SIM plug, module, or COB).
-
2
Enter volume and feature requirements
Input your annual volume tier and check required features: cryptographic coprocessor, biometric template storage, NFC antenna, personalization complexity, and custom printed design.
-
3
Review the per-unit cost breakdown
The estimator outputs a per-unit cost range broken down by chip, module or antenna, card body, personalization, and packaging, with volume discount curves from 10K to 10M units.
About
The Smart Card Cost Estimator provides parametric unit cost estimates for smart card production projects, covering the full bill of materials from IC chip to finished personalized card. Accurate cost modeling is essential for budget planning, vendor negotiations, and make-vs-buy decisions in smart card procurement.
The estimator is structured around the four cost layers that every smart card project incurs: silicon (the chip and its embedded operating system license), the physical substrate (contact module or contactless antenna inlay and card body laminate), personalization (electrical data writing and graphical printing), and certification and tooling amortization. Each layer has different volume sensitivity and vendor negotiation leverage points, which the estimator models independently before combining into a total per-unit range.
The tool covers the primary chip platforms in the market—Java Card contact, dual-interface, and USB token form factors—and distinguishes between commodity chips for access control or transit and high-assurance chips for EMVCo-certified payment or government-document applications. Volume breakpoints at 10K, 100K, 1M, and 10M units show how aggressively pricing scales with order size, helping procurement teams evaluate whether consolidating demand across programs to reach the next volume tier justifies the operational change.