The adoption of biometrics across various applications in an array industries is continually increasing. Concerning consumer technologies, fingerprint and facial biometrics are already prevalent in the devices we use daily. This is only expected to increase with time, with ABI Research observing the adjoining movement of growing penetration of biometric technology within devices, with the increasing integration of biometrics in smartphone operating systems, external apps, and web pages. Alongside facial and fingerprint technologies, numerous other biometric modalities, including voice, gesture, and vein recognition, are seeing strong uptake.
Smartphone biometrics are a convenient and secure method to authenticate user identities, which spans simply unlocking your device, authenticating a payment in your banking app, and verifying your identity online. Through biometrics on a mobile device, both user experience and security are enhanced, strengthening the product offering of the vendor in question. Moreover, a biometric login modernizes the lengthy and tedious processes of old.
The inclusion of biometrics in mobile devices becomes a point of differentiation between smartphone vendors and their product lines, particularly in a market where the latest and greatest consumer tech holds a strong appeal. Including biometric capabilities for smartphones is only becoming easier and cheaper with the natural progression of technology, to the point where even low-end smartphone models will include these features. As a result, this will drive the market and overall biometric penetration of the smartphone user base.
A circular generation then arises for the need for biometrics on behalf of both smartphone Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) and application designers. Smartphone manufacturers include biometric capabilities in their mobile devices to improve their offerings. At the same time, external applications take advantage of this capability by implementing biometric features. From the application developer side, integrating biometric-backed features in apps then drives a need for these technologies in mobile devices, so as to not be left behind the status quo.
To paint a picture of the growth of biometrics in smartphones, driven by the aforementioned reasoning, ABI Research details a breakdown by biometric modality. While Chart 1 indicates shipments of fingerprint sensors, Chart 2 (at the end of the list) depicts the attach rates of other biometrics by year.
Chart 1: Fingerprint Sensor Shipments (Source: ABI Research)
Below is a list of ways that smartphone biometrics can be used.
Chart 2: Smartphone Biometric Technology Attach Rates (Source: ABI Research)
As the adoption of biometrics in smartphones and other mobile devices continues to increase, market players should be aware of the following points:
This blog post features some top-level analysis drawn from ABI Research’s Consumer Biometrics market data (MD-CB-23). See ABI Research’s full product for a deep dive on mobile biometrics, spanning smartphones, tablets, wearables, and other consumer devices.