EU Digital ID Claims Misstate What Brussels Can Legally Force on Member States
The European Union has approved a bloc-wide digital identity framework, but the rollout is governed through EU regulation and national implementation — not unilateral control by Brussels over sovereign states.
The European Union’s European Digital Identity framework is an ACTOR-DRIVEN regulatory project built around eIDAS 2.0, a binding EU regulation adopted in 2024 that requires member states to provide at least one compatible digital identity wallet by late 2026.
Claims circulating online that the EU “cannot impose anything on member states” are legally incomplete: EU regulations approved through the bloc’s legislative system are directly applicable across member states once adopted.
What is confirmed is that the EU is not a sovereign country or federal state.
However, member states voluntarily transferred limited legal competences to EU institutions through treaties, including authority over parts of the digital single market.
Under that framework, the digital identity regulation entered into force across the bloc in 2024.
The wallets are designed to let citizens store official credentials such as IDs, licenses, diplomas, and banking verification in a standardized digital format usable across the EU.
Current EU law also states that use of the wallet must remain voluntary for individuals, while member states are obligated to make a compliant system available.