Passive RFID Asset Tracking for High-Security Facilities

AssetTrack ensures your most critical assets never leave your secured perimeter.

Assettrack On Wall Next To Elevator

Controlling Critical Assets Starts at the Exit

In corrections facilities and other high-security environments, weapons, radios, tasers, and other critical equipment must stay within the secured perimeter at all times. A breach of that perimeter is a serious safety risk that no facility can afford. AssetTrack’s passive RFID asset tracking system creates secure choke points at facility exits, alarming before a tagged asset ever crosses the threshold. Asset control doesn’t require complexity. It requires certainty.

Reliable Technology Designed for High-Security Environments

AssetTrack’s passive RFID platform is purpose-built for environments where asset control isn’t optional. Battery-free tags, choke point readers, and a straightforward installation process combine to create a system that performs consistently without ongoing maintenance or oversight.

Passive RFID Means No Silent Failures

Every tagged asset in AssetTrack’s system uses a battery-free passive RFID fob. There’s no internal power source to die, no daily testing required, and no risk of a tag going offline without anyone knowing. Assets are monitored reliably from the moment the system is installed, with no degradation over time.

Every Asset Type. One Consistent System.

AssetTrack requires no software installation, no licensing fees, and no battery replacements. Passive RFID tags have no internal power source and no end of life, so the system you install is the system you keep. Compared to retail loss prevention alternatives, the total cost of ownership over time isn’t close.

AssetTrack Puts Control Exactly Where It Needs to Be

With AssetTrack, every item that needs to stay inside your facility gets tagged with a passive RFID fob. Readers installed at secured doorways and exits create the choke points that keep your perimeter airtight. The moment a tagged asset approaches that threshold, AssetTrack detects both the motion and the tag, triggering audible alarms and flashing LED alerts before anything crosses the line. Your team has the window to intervene, enforce protocol, and prevent a breach before it happens. No software dashboards, no complex configuration, no guesswork.

Frequently Asked Questions

The underlying technology is the same—passive RFID readers at choke points alarm before a tagged item crosses an exit threshold. The distinction is in what’s being tracked. Exit prevention focuses specifically on keys in gaming environments, where strict compliance regulations drive the requirement. Asset tracking applies that same choke point approach to physical equipment in corrections and other high-security facilities, where the priority is perimeter integrity rather than regulatory compliance.

No, and that’s by design. AssetTrack is a passive RFID asset tagging and tracking system that monitors choke points at secured exits and doorways, not movement patterns throughout the building. When a tagged asset approaches a reader-equipped threshold, the system alarms. This focused approach is more reliable and significantly more cost-effective than real-time location systems, which add complexity without meaningfully improving asset control at the perimeter.

Yes. Each asset is individually tagged, and AssetTrack readers monitor all tagged items simultaneously at every choke point. A single reader at an armory door can track radios, tasers, and weapons at the same time without any additional configuration. The system doesn’t distinguish between asset types at the alarm level—if a tagged item approaches the threshold, it alarms.

Installation follows the same straightforward process as AssetTrack’s exit prevention system. Readers are powered via Power Over Ethernet, meaning a single cable handles both data and power with no complex wiring required. Every installation starts with identifying the optimal reader placement at each exit choke point, and connectivity options include your existing network, cellular, or a fully standalone setup.