With the development of passive sensing technology, WiFi-based identification research has attracted much attention in areas such as human–computer interaction and home security. Although WiFi sensing-based human identification has achieved initial success, it is currently mainly applicable to scenarios where the user’s identity category is fixed and not applicable to scenarios where the user’s identity category changes frequently. In this paper, we propose an identification system (CIU-L) in a scenario where user’s identity categories frequently change, allowing for incremental registration and unregistration of identity categories. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt to register and unregister user identity information under the previous identity category constraints. CIU-L proposes a training and updating strategy in the registration phase of new user to avoid catastrophic forgetting of old user’s identity information, and trains a targeted noise for the user to be unregistered in the degistration phase of old user, achieving precise removal of the user to be deregistered without affecting the retained users. In addition, this paper presents adequate comparative experiments of CIU-L with other systems in the user identity category fixing scenario. The experimental results show that the average difference between CIU-L and other systems in terms of Accuracy, Precision, Recall and F1-Score is within 5% of each other, while running time and storage space are saved by more than 6 times, which is more capable of meeting the needs of identity recognition in real scenarios.