NEW EU REGULATIONS ARE CHANGING HOW DIGITAL DOCUMENTS MUST BE VARIFIED, STORED, AND TRUSTED
New EU Regulations Are Changing How Digital Documents Must Be Verified, Stored, and Trusted
The European Union is introducing a new legal and technological framework designed to strengthen digital trust, identity verification, and data authenticity.
Through regulations such as eIDAS 2.0, the Digital Product Passport (DPP) framework, and the EU Battery Regulation, organizations are entering an environment where digital documents, credentials, and compliance data must be secure, authentic, and verifiable.
These changes affect startups, manufacturers, service providers, and professionals working with contracts, certifications, intellectual property, and digital records.
Understanding these regulations is essential for operating safely and compliantly in the modern European digital economy.
1. eIDAS 2.0: A New Legal Foundation for Digital Identity and Trust
In May 2024, the European Union adopted Regulation (EU) 2024/1183, commonly known as eIDAS 2.0, updating the legal framework for electronic identification and trust services.
A key innovation is the introduction of the European Digital Identity Wallet (EUDI Wallet), which will allow individuals and organizations to securely store and share verified digital credentials.
These wallets will enable users to:
prove their identity online securely
digitally sign documents with legal validity
store verified credentials
share authenticated information across EU Member States
This regulation strengthens the legal role of qualified trust services, which provide verified digital signatures, timestamps, and authentication mechanisms recognized across the European Union.
As a result, digital trust infrastructure is becoming a core component of regulatory compliance.
2. Digital Product Passport (DPP): A New Standard for Product Data and Compliance
The EU is also introducing the Digital Product Passport (DPP) under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR).
The Digital Product Passport is a structured digital record that provides verified information about a product’s lifecycle, including:
origin and manufacturing data
materials and sustainability information
compliance documentation
technical specifications
lifecycle and traceability data
The goal of the DPP is to improve transparency, traceability, and accountability across supply chains.
This represents a shift from fragmented and unverifiable documentation toward structured, secure, and trusted digital product records.
Companies must ensure that product-related documentation and data remain reliable, accessible, and authentic over time.
3. Battery Passport Requirements Starting in 2027
One of the first mandatory implementations of the Digital Product Passport applies to batteries under EU Regulation 2023/1542 (Battery Regulation).
Starting from 18 February 2027, certain batteries — including electric vehicle batteries and industrial batteries above 2 kWh — must include a digital battery passport.
This passport will contain verified information such as:
manufacturer identity
technical and performance data
carbon footprint information
compliance and safety documentation
lifecycle and traceability data
These requirements ensure that critical product data remains trustworthy, transparent, and verifiable throughout the product lifecycle.
4. Why Digital Document Authenticity and Integrity Are Becoming Critical
These regulatory developments reflect a broader shift in the European Union toward verifiable digital trust.
Organizations increasingly need to demonstrate:
when a document was created
who created or signed it
that it has not been altered
that it is authentic and reliable
This applies to a wide range of digital assets, including:
contracts and agreements
certifications and compliance documents
intellectual property
product and technical documentation
digital credentials and identity records
The ability to verify document authenticity, ownership, and integrity is becoming essential for compliance, risk management, and operational trust.
5. The Future of Compliance: Trusted and Verifiable Digital Infrastructure
The EU is building a digital ecosystem where trust is embedded into electronic systems by design.
Digital identities, product passports, and compliance records will increasingly rely on secure verification mechanisms, trusted timestamps, and authentication technologies.
Organizations that implement secure document verification solutions will be better positioned to:
comply with EU regulations
protect intellectual property
reduce fraud and disputes
improve transparency
strengthen trust with partners and clients
Digital trust is becoming a foundational requirement for doing business in Europe.
Become Compliance-Ready with Notarify
As EU regulations increasingly require secure, verifiable, and trusted digital records, organizations need reliable solutions to protect and authenticate their documents.
Notarify helps businesses and professionals:
certify digital documents
prove ownership and authorship
secure files with trusted timestamping
support compliance with EU digital trust regulations
protect intellectual property and sensitive data
Notarify acts as your trusted partner in protecting, certifying, and verifying digital documents in the new regulatory landscape.
Book a free consultation with our specialist to learn how Notarify can support your organization.
Sources
European Commission — European Digital Identity Wallet