International Article Number
International Article Number
International Article Number
GTIN-13 number encoded in EAN-13 barcode. The first digit is always placed outside the symbol;
additionally a right ">" indicator is used to indicate a "Quiet Zone" that is necessary for barcode scanners to
work properly.
An EAN-13 barcode (originally European Article Number, but now renamed International Article
Number even though the abbreviation EAN has been retained) is a 13 digit (12 data and 1 check) barcoding
standard which is a superset of the original 12-digit Universal Product Code (UPC) system developed in the
United States.[1] The EAN-13 barcode is defined by the standards organization GS1.
The 13 digits in the EAN-13 barcode are grouped as follows:
The left group: Digits 2-7. The left group also encodes digit 1, through a scheme of odd and even
parity.
The right group: Digits 8-13, digit 13 is the check digit.
The EAN-13 barcodes are used worldwide for marking products often sold at retail point of sale. The
numbers encoded in EAN-13 bar codes are product identification numbers, which are also called Japanese
Article Number (JAN) in Japan. All the numbers encoded in UPC and EAN barcodes are known as Global
Trade Item Numbers (GTIN), and they can be encoded in other GS1 barcodes.
The less commonly used EAN-8 barcodes are used also for marking retail goods; however, they are usually
reserved for smaller items, for example confectionery.
2-digit (EAN 2) and 5-digit (EAN 5) supplemental barcodes may be added for a total of 14 or 17 data digits.
These are generally used for periodicals (to indicate the current year's issue number[2] ), or books and
weighed products like food (to indicate the manufacturer suggested retail price or MSRP[3] ), respectively.
The GS1 Prefix, the first three digits, usually identifying the national GS1 Member Organization to
which the manufacturer is registered (not necessarily where the product is actually made).[4] When
the EAN-13 symbol encodes a conversion of an ISBN, the GS1 Prefix will be either 978 or 979.
Likewise the prefix will be 979 for ISMNs (whose prefix is shared with ISBN) and 977 for ISSNs.
The Company number, consisting of three to eight digits depending on number of GTIN-13s
required by the manufacturer to identify different product lines (in ISBN and ISSN, this component
is used to identify the language in which the publication was issued and managed by a transnational
agency covering several countries, or to identify the country where the legal deposits are made by a
publisher registered with a national agency, and it is further subdivided any allocating subblocks for
publishers; many countries have several prefixes allocated in the ISSN and ISBN registries).
The Item reference, consisting of two to six digits (in ISBN and ISSN, it uniquely identifies the
publication from the same publisher; it should be used and allocated by the registered publisher in
order to avoid creating gaps; however it happens that a registered book or serial never gets published
and sold).
The Check digit, a single checksum digit. The check digit is computed modulo 10, where the
weights in the checksum calculation alternate 3 and 1. In particular, since the weights are relatively
prime to 10 the EAN system will detect all single digit errors. But, since the difference of
consecutive weights is even, the EAN system does not detect all adjacent transposition errors.
The complete number is used as a reference key to look up information about the product line held on a
database; the number is not normally broken down into its components within users' systems.
GS1 Prefixes[edit]
Further information: List of GS1 country codes
The first two or three digits of the GTIN of any product identify the GS1 Member Organization which the
manufacturer has joined. Note that EAN-13 codes beginning with 0 were rarely seen, as this is just a longer
form of a 12-digit UPC and is represented by the same barcode, but in the last few years, more products sold
by retailers outside United States and Canada have been using EAN-13 codes beginning with 0, since they
were generated by GS1-US.
The 200-299 country code is worth a special mention; most GS1 member organizations define this as being
available for retailer internal use (or internal use by other types of business). Some retailers use this for
proprietary (own brand or unbranded) products (although many retailers obtain their own manufacturer's
code for their own brands); some retailers use at least part of this prefix for products which are packaged in
store, for example, items weighed and served over a counter for a customer. The barcode may encode a
price, quantity or weight along with a product identifier (in a retailer defined way); the product identifier
may be one assigned by the Produce Electronic Identification Board or may be retailer assigned. Retailers
who have historically used UPC barcodes will tend to use GS1 prefixes 04 (for products) and 02 (for store
packaged products) in a similar way.
Calculation[edit]
Taking the numbers from an EAN 8 code we get: 7351353 or in the table:
Getting the weights for a barcode
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Weight 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3
Code
7 3 5 1 3 5 3
Sums
21 3 15 1 9 5 9
The sum from this barcode is then: 63
63 modulo 10 = 3
10 minus 3 makes the checksum = 7
The complete EAN 8 code is then: 73513537
Encoding EAN-13
below. (Unlike the other digits, the first digit is not represented directly by a pattern of bars.) All digits in the
last group of six digits are encoded using a single set of patterns which are the same patterns used for UPC.
If the first digit is zero, all digits in the first group of six are encoded using the patterns used for UPC,
therefore, a UPC barcode is also an EAN-13 barcode with the first digit set to zero.
Structure of EAN-13
First digit First group of 6 digits Last group of 6 digits
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
LLLLLL
LLGLGG
LLGGLG
LLGGGL
LGLLGG
LGGLLG
LGGGLL
LGLGLG
LGLGGL
LGGLGL
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
RRRRRR
Structure of EAN-8
First group of 4 digits Last group of 4 digits
LLLL
RRRR
0001101
0011001
0010011
0111101
0100011
0110001
0101111
0111011
0110111
0001011
0100111
0110011
0011011
0100001
0011101
0111001
0000101
0010001
0001001
0010111
1110010
1100110
1101100
1000010
1011100
1001110
1010000
1000100
1001000
1110100
Note: Entries in the R-column are bitwise complements (logical operator: negation) of the respective entries
in the L-column. Entries in the G-column are the entries in the R-column in reverse bit order. See pictures of
all codes against a colored background.
Bookland[edit]
Main article: Bookland
The EAN country codes 978 (and later 979) have been allocated since the 1980s to reserve a Unique
Country Code (UCC) prefix for EAN identifiers of published books, regardless of country of origin, so that
the EAN space can catalog books by ISBN rather than maintaining a redundant parallel numbering system.
Similar arrangements are in place for ISSNs for periodicals (country code 977) and ISMNs for sheet music
(country code 979).
Coding[edit]
The barcode consists of 95 equally spaced areas. From left to right:
Each area can be black (meaning 1) or white (meaning 0). A maximum of four black areas can be grouped
together, these make up a bar. Likewise a maximum of four white areas can be grouped together, these make
up a space.
The start marker and the end marker are encoded as 101. The center marker is encoded as 01010.
Each digit in GTIN, except digit 1, consists of seven bits (seven areas). A decimal number between 0 and 9
is encoded so that it consists of two bars and two spaces. The combination of widths of the bars and spaces
encodes the number.
The digits in the left group are encoded so that they always start with a space, and end with a bar. The digits
in the right group are encoded so that they always start with a bar, and end with a space.
The encoding is described in the following table:
Pattern
Bar width
Encoding
Digit
left
right
of
odd even
digit
1
odd
even (even)
0 0001101 0100111 1110010 3211 1123 OOOOOO EEEEEE
1 0011001 0110011 1100110 2221 1222 OOEOEE EEEEEE
2 0010011 0011011 1101100 2122 2212 OOEEOE EEEEEE
3 0111101 0100001 1000010 1411 1141 OOEEEO EEEEEE
4 0100011 0011101 1011100 1132 2311 OEOOEE EEEEEE
5 0110001 0111001 1001110 1231 1321 OEEOOE EEEEEE
6 0101111 0000101 1010000 1114 4111 OEEEOO EEEEEE
7 0111011 0010001 1000100 1312 2131 OEOEOE EEEEEE
Pattern
Bar width
Encoding
Digit
left
right
of
odd even
digit
1
odd
even (even)
8 0110111 0001001 1001000 1213 3121 OEOEEO EEEEEE
9 0001011 0010111 1110100 3112 2113 OEEOEO EEEEEE
For each digit there are three similar encodings: Left even and right are mirror-symmetrical to each other.
Left odd is the bitwise inverse of right.
The first digit from the left is always encoded with odd parity, and the last digit (on the right side) is always
encoded with even parity. It thus does not matter whether the barcode is scanned from the left or from the
right: The scanning software can determine what is the beginning and end of the barcode, with the help of
the fact that the first digit should have odd parity and the last digit should have even parity.
Example[edit]
EAN-13 barcode. A green bar indicates the bars and spaces that encode a digit.
Decoding[edit]
Scanning part of an EAN-13 barcode.
By using the barcode center marker, it is possible for a barcode scanner to scan just one half of the barcode
at a time. This allows reconstruction of the code by means of a helical scan of the barcode by an angle of
approximately 45 degrees.