The EU Digital Wallet: Why Waiting is Not an Option
Why decentralized identity will change authentication and trust across Europe
- The EU Digital Wallets signals a broader shift to user controlled identity, allowing people to prove who they are without constantly sharing personal data.
- Under eIDAS 2.0, EU member states will have to offer digital wallets by 2026, with many public and regulated services required to accept them shortly after.
- Organizations that start testing wallet-based identity and verifiable credentials now will be a lot better positioned for better user experiences, stronger security, and future compliance.
Governments have long wrestled with the "Holy Grail" of citizen authentication and controlled citizen data access: providing secure, privacy-focused access to services without creating bureaucratic nightmares, or a massive security honeypot.
It’s been more of an evolution than a straight path. In the UK, especially, we’ve seen identity strategies swing between centralized and decentralized models for nearly two decades. As technology advances, privacy concerns and political priorities have played tug of war.

But the U.K. isn’t alone in this identity crisis. Across Europe, nations like Denmark, France, and Germany have performed their own identity “dance," oscillating between state-run databases and distributed systems. Years of experimentation (and a few missteps) have led to a global consensus: the future of digital identity is user-centric and decentralized.
It’s against this backdrop that the EU Digital Identity Wallet (EUDI) steps in. You’ve likely seen the headlines. A digital wallet that lets you prove your identity, store your driver's license, or hold university diplomas on your smartphone. For those of us in the Identity and Access Management (IAM) world, this isn’t just another app for the sake of building an app. It’s a paradigm shift.

From centralized silos to decentralized trust
For decades, the centralized model meant your data lived in a government-hosted database. To prove your identity, systems had to "phone home" to a central authority—or you had to upload copies (after copies) of sensitive documents. This created massive data honeypots—tempting targets for hackers—and left citizens with little control over their information.
Today, the EUDI Wallet is the flagship of the decentralized identity model movement. Instead of a central server verifying every move, the wallet places the proof right in the user’s hands. Using Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and Verifiable Credentials, you can prove things like your age or right to work—without the verifying party ever needing to contact a government database in real-time.
In other words, we’re moving from "trust the authority" to "trust the cryptography."
Our digital identity system is showing its age
Our current digital lives are fragmented. We manage dozens of passwords and constantly overshare data just to access basic services. This isn’t just an inconvenience, but an economic drag. The EU Intellectual Property Office found that counterfeiting and digital piracy cost the EU economy €83 billion and 671,000 jobs every year—much of which stems from the ease of identity fraud in siloed systems.
For the public sector, the challenge lies in efficiency. Verifying citizens for passports or tax services still relies too heavily on manual checks. Meanwhile, for the private sector, high-friction onboarding, like opening a bank account, creates significant drop-off rates and soaring operational costs.
The reality is: This current system isn’t working well for anyone.
The deadlines are upon us
For organizations operating in Europe, the digital wallet is well on its path to become a part of the infrastructure. Under the eIDAS 2.0 regulation, the timeline is already in motion (tick-tock, people):
- By late 2026: All EU Member States must provide at least one certified Digital Identity Wallet to their residents.
- For the public sector: Government services must accept these wallets for authentication to online services.
- For the private sector: By 2027, "Relying Parties" in regulated, high-stakes industries (banking, energy, transport) must also accept the wallet for identity verification.
Why waiting could be a costly mistake for the private sector
It’s easy to assume this is mainly a government initiative, but that’s a mistake. The benefits of early adoption go well beyond compliance:
- Frictionless onboarding: Imagine a customer signing up with a single tap, sharing only verified attributes like "Over 18" instead of filling out a 20-field form.
- Reduced identity fraud: Because credentials are cryptographically signed by trusted authorities, the risk of digitally altered IDs and synthetic identities drops dramatically.
- Strategic credential issuance: The biggest win? Becoming an issuer. If you’re a university, why not issue digital diplomas directly into the wallet? If you're an employer, why not issue a "Current Employee" credential? This positions your organization right in the center of the user’s digital life.
Get ready for the wallet
Of course, this change isn’t simple. Organizations will have to support emerging standards like OID4VC (OpenID for Verifiable Credentials) while supporting legacy systems. The most practical approach is to build an Identity Fabric that can accept credentials from any compliant wallet.
At Broadcom, we focus on modularity to support this exact transition. Solutions like the Broadcom Identity Security Platform (IDSP) provide an API-first, cloud-native foundation that helps you bridge the gap between your existing IAM stack and the new world of wallet-based identity.
The goal isn't to rip and replace what already works. We want to ensure you’re ready for the 2026 wallet era without worrying over costly disruptions.
Lead the identity shift
The EU Digital Wallet is the blueprint for how trust will function in the digital age. As user-controlled, decentralized wallets become the new standard, private organizations who embrace the model early will undoubtedly gain a competitive advantage and secure their user’s high-trust future first.
So the question isn't whether the wallet is coming. It’s whether you’ll be ready when 450 million Europeans reach for their phones instead of their plastic ID cards.
Instead of waiting for the mandate, start looking at the standards now. Understand the tech, test the user experience. You don’t have to build this yourself. If you want to understand how Broadcom can help, take a look at IDSP to see how an identity fabric can provide you the solid foundation you need. Before long, you won’t even remember how it used to be.





