Legal recognition and affordability of electronic signatures

Expert review of laws. Legal recognition of electronic signatures is directly linked to transposition of the Electronic Signatures Directive 1999/93/EC, and a basic requirement for harmonisation with the EU eIDAS Regulation (EU No. 910/2014 on electronic identification and trust services for electronic transactions in the internal market). Verification of costs of electronic signatures should take the following into account: • Combination of electronic signature with national ID card: application for the national ID card can be subject to a fee. For a point to be awarded, however, no additional fee should be required to activate the electronic signature function of the ID; • The possibility of third-party digital signatures that are officially certified: this can be by mobile operators, banks or other service providers. There can be fees for the core services of those providers, but for a point to be awarded, the digital signature should involve no additional cost to end users. For each of the following three criteria, 1 point is awarded (total of 3 points).

Criteria fulfilled: 2/3

Yes
No
No data available / not assessed
National legislation stipulates that an electronic/digital signature is equivalent to a handwritten signature (1 point)
The digital signature framework is compatible with eIDAS (1 point)
The digital signature is free of (an additional) charge for end users that are moral entities (i.e. citizens) (1 point)