First published: October 22, 2021
Last updated: December 4, 2024
By December 2024, 174 countries have passports with a contactless (NFC) chip — also called ePassports or biometric passports — which means that those passports can be read with ReadID. This number has grown continuously since their introduction in the eighties, making the adoption of ePassports almost universal. For example, Mongolia, Bahrain, Jamaica, Pakistan, Palestine, and Seychelles recently introduced them in their countries.
Many countries also have identity cards and residence cards with the same ICAO-compliant chip. Please check our blogs on European identity cards and residence permits for more details.
Although passports are required to follow the UN’s International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) standard, countries have some choices as to which part of this standard they implement. In 2016 there was an important deadline: newly issued passports must be so-called Machine-Readable Travel Documents (MRTD).
It meant that they must have two lines at the bottom on the first page, including the holder’s name, date of expiry, date of birth, issuing country. The chip, however, is not yet a mandatory part of the ICAO standard. Of course, many countries have been including the chip for many years already, to improve the trustworthiness of their passports. It also allows their citizens to use e-gates at airports. In the EU, the chip has been mandatory since 2004.
To the best of our knowledge, there is no good public overview of what countries have identity documents with ICAO compliant chips, and certainly not with the specific features (for example, what cloning mechanism) of those chips in the different generations of identity documents. The overviews of what countries have ePassports we did find often contain mistakes. For some regions it is simple: all EU countries must have ePassports. But for some, the information wasn’t so readily available.
So we have started collecting this data ourselves, leveraging ReadID Analytics’ anonymous data logging service. We collect data on which identity documents have chips, the features of those chips and whether or not ReadID can successfully verify them. We log the data from our public demo app and our live SaaS deployments, without any personal data, of course.
Based on our study, we know there were 174 countries and regions issuing ePassports by December 2024. This was more than 2.5 times as much as at the end of 2008. ReadID has a large default list of country signing certificates to verify the authenticity of most of the ePassports. This default list enables ReadID to verify passports from 120 countries (68% of all countries with ePassports), including all EU countries. Our default list misses some country signing certificates because some countries do not publish them. Please be aware there are workarounds, customers can contact our support department for details.
ReadID Worldwide Ordinary Passport Overview
In the map below we plotted ReadID’s coverage for passports, focusing on ‘ordinary’ passports (as opposed to, for example, diplomatic passports). Ordinary passports make up the vast majority of passports. We have specified the following categories:
India issues ePassports to their diplomats and officials. India has launched the ePassport pilot project in the region of Bhubaneswar and Nagpur for ordinary citizens since April 1, 2024. The project was successful. By August 2024, there were more than 9000 ePassports issued. But there is still no ePassport issued to ordinary citizens national-wise by December 2024.
More details
If you’d like access to a list of countries and some more details, then we have a summary available that you can download here. We also have a more detailed whitepaper, for our customers and partners.
The maps above were generated by combining data from public and non-public sources, our own testing, and ReadID Analytics data that has was collected until December 2024.
Please also check our blog post on ReadID coverage of European ID cards, residence permits, and cloning detection mechanisms. Finally, if you’ve spotted any mistake (it can be an error in how we generate the map or in the underlying data), then please contact us at documents@inverid.com.
Questions?
Do you want to know the possibilities in your country, or do you have questions about this blog?
Please contact us readid@inverid.com or use our contact form.