eIDAS Regulation: Simple and Complete Explanation
What is the eIDAS regulation, what does it change, what are its 3 signature levels and why it concerns every European business.
Certyneo Team
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eIDAS in One Sentence
eIDAS (Electronic IDentification, Authentication and trust Services) is European Regulation No. 910/2014 which unifies the legal framework for electronic signature, digital identity and trust services across the 27 Member States.
It came into force on 1 July 2016 with direct legal effect in each Member State.
Why eIDAS Was Created
Before 2016, each country had its own law. A signature issued in France was not automatically recognised in Germany.
eIDAS solves three problems:
- Legal fragmentation: a single framework for 27 countries
- Mutual recognition: a signature valid everywhere
- Harmonised levels: three standardised levels (SES, AES, QES)
The Three Signature Levels
- Simple signature (SES): any electronic consent
- Advanced signature (AES): unique identification + strong authentication
- Qualified signature (QES): AES + qualified certificate + secure device
For details, see simple, advanced, qualified.
Trust Service Providers (TSP/QTSP)
eIDAS creates the status of trust service provider (TSP), which can be qualified (QTSP) if it is audited and listed on a Member State's trust list. In France, ANSSI maintains this list (Docaposte Certigna, Universign, CertEurope…).
Mutual Recognition
A signature issued by a French QTSP is automatically recognised throughout the EU. This principle also applies to digital identities: FranceConnect+ will be interoperable with the identity wallets of other States under eIDAS 2.0.
Non-Discrimination Principle (Article 25)
Even a simple signature is admissible. The judge assesses the reliability of the process, but the digital format alone is not grounds for rejection.
eIDAS 2.0: What Changes
Regulation (EU) 2024/1183 modernises eIDAS with the European Digital Identity Wallet (EUDIW). By the end of 2026, each State must provide a mobile application to store identity credentials and sign with a QES.
What This Changes for Your Business
- Sign with EU counterparts without negotiating the framework
- Choose an eIDAS-compliant provider
- Prepare for EUDIW (2026-2027)
- Adapt the level to the stakes
How Certyneo Aligns with eIDAS
Certyneo natively issues SES and AES signatures in compliance, with PAdES token, timestamping and audit trail. For QES, we interface with European QTSPs.
Discover Certyneo's electronic signature solution
FAQ
Is eIDAS mandatory?
Strongly recommended for any signature with cross-border EU legal value.
Difference between eIDAS and GDPR?
eIDAS governs signatures and identities. GDPR governs data protection. Complementary.
Can I sign with a non-EU provider?
Legally yes, but cross-border recognition is lower.
Does ANSSI certify platforms?
ANSSI qualifies QTSPs (for QES). For SES/AES, it is the eIDAS compliance of the provider.
How do I know if a document is signed in QES?
In Adobe Reader: signature properties → level and certificate. See verify a signed document.
Conclusion
eIDAS is the European foundation that makes electronic signature legally reliable, cross-border and standardised.
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