First published: 21 May 2021
Last updated: 8 August 2024
One question we often get is which European countries have identity cards with NFC chips that ReadID can read and verify. If you have an identity card in your hand, then checking if it has an NFC chip is easy: simply look for the ICAO chip logo. This logo indicates an ICAO 9303-compliant NFC chip and can also be found on passports and residence cards. ICAO 9303 is the United Nation’s international standard for passports and identity cards.
We focus here on identity cards in Europe, and specifically on the European Economic Area (EEA, namely EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway), since these all follow EU standards. Identity cards are considered travel documents, and they have a standardised lay-out, similarly to passports. But contrary to passports, the EU did not enforce usage of the ICAO 9303 standard for identity cards until 2019. As a result, in 2019 there were 86 different versions of identity cards in circulation in the EU, and some countries were still issuing quite unsecure identity cards. To illustrate this latter point, the UK decided to no longer accept EU identity cards as of 1 October 2021 because of concerns with fake European identity cards. Please note the UK does not differentiate between secure identity cards with an ICAO 9303 NFC chip and unsecure identity cards, meaning this non-acceptance applies to all EU identity cards, chipped or otherwise.
In August 2019 the EU decided to strengthen and standardise security features for identity cards from the different member states. Regulation (EU) 2019/1157 stipulates that all member states must follow the ICAO 9303 standards when issuing identity cards including an NFC chip with a face image inside.
Most European countries that introduced a new generation of identity cards already made sure that these had an ICAO compliant NFC chip, also before this new regulation. The new regulation ensures that remaining countries with older and less secure identity cards have since replaced them with more secure versions, with a few exceptions as discussed below. Member states had two years (until August 2021) to adopt the regulation and stop issuing non-compliant identity cards.
Note that the regulation does not mean that member states are obliged to issue identity cards to their citizens, only that if they do, these must be compliant. Most European countries do issue them.
NEW: (Updated on 8 August 2024)
As of the end of June 2024, except Denmark, all EEA countries issue identity cards, and all of them have an ICAO-compliant Machine-Readable Zone. Among them, 28 also have an ICAO-compliant NFC chip. Identity cards are normally valid for 10 years. Some countries started issuing them less than 10 years ago, so they have both the compliant and non-compliant versions in circulation. These include Spain, Italy, Belgium, and Poland.
ReadID works with all ICAO-compliant identity cards in Europe. This means that ReadID can read the contactless chip of the identity cards from 28 countries, verify their authenticity, and check for clones.
The map below shows which countries ReadID can:
Through the above-mentioned Regulation (EU) 2019/1157, the percentage of compatible identity cards has increased over time and will continue to do so. All EU countries which were issuing non-compatible identity cards must stop issuing them. As of June 2024, all EU countries issue ICAO-compliant electronic identity cards. Denmark is the only exception, which does not issue identity cards. The non-compatible identity cards in circulation will expire in the coming years, leading to an increase in compliant identity cards. We would like to mention in particular:
There is no authoritative source of all identity documents worldwide, and certainly not a publicly available one that contains details on the contactless chip implementation. We combined knowledge from public sources, non-public sources, our own testing data, and ReadID Analytics data to make this overview. ReadID Analytics contains anonymous logging information that we use to improve ReadID, including chip characteristics and whether an MRZ scan or NFC read was successful.
We provide this overview as-is, without any form of guarantee. We appreciate it if you let us know if you notice mistakes or outdated information via documents@inverid.com.
If you’d like access to a list of countries and some more details, then we have a summary available that you can download. We also have a more detailed whitepaper available for our customers and partners.