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National wallet

The U.S. does not have a single national digital identity wallet like the EU’s EUDI Wallet. Instead, it has a fragmented ecosystem:

  • Apple Digital ID (2025): Apple launched a feature allowing users to create a Digital ID in Apple Wallet using their U.S. passport. It’s accepted at TSA checkpoints in 250+ airports for domestic travel. It uses secure on-device storage, Face ID/Touch ID, and selective disclosure. [apple.com], [usatoday.com]
  • Google Wallet pilot: Google supports adding a passport-derived ID pass for TSA use. [digitalide...yindex.com]
  • State-level mobile IDs: Over 15 states offer mobile driver’s licenses (mDLs) (e.g., Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maryland). [digitalide...yindex.com]
  • Login.gov: A federal authentication portal, but not a wallet for storing credentials.
    So, the U.S. has multiple wallets (Apple, Google, state apps), but no unified national wallet.


Fragmented efforts

https://itif.org/publications/2024/09/23/path-to-digital-identity-in-the-united-states/

LA Wallet: Louisiana's Digital Driver's License

Efforts similar to the EUDIW
  • No direct equivalent to EUDI Wallet exists in the U.S.
  • EUDI Wallet emphasizes privacy, interoperability, and cross-border use, while the U.S. approach is decentralized and market-driven.
  • Federal initiatives (e.g., Improving Digital Identity Act of 2023) aim to create a coordinated framework, but progress is slow. [congress.gov]
  • Current U.S. wallets (Apple, Google) are private-sector-led, not government-issued.
    [itif.org]
Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)
  • PID in the U.S. includes:
    • Passport details, driver’s license data, Social Security Number.
    • Biometric data (Face ID, fingerprints) for authentication.
  • Frameworks:
    • NIST SP 800-63 Digital Identity Guidelines define assurance levels for identity proofing, authentication, and federation. [nist.gov]
    • Federal pilots prioritize privacy-preserving, user-held credentials that do not constantly “phone home” to government servers. [biometricupdate.com]
  • No centralized PID repository like Aadhaar (India) or Cyberspace ID (China); identity remains federated and state-based.
National architecture documents
  • NIST Special Publication 800-63 (Rev. 4, 2025): Core technical guidelines for digital identity assurance, authentication, and federation. Publicly available. [nist.gov]
  • Public Identity and Access Management (PIAM) Framework: Draft guidance for federal agencies. [idmanagement.gov]
  • Improving Digital Identity Act of 2023: Legislative framework for a government-wide approach. [congress.gov]
  • Accessible via NIST, GSA, and Congress.gov.
Stakeholder groups
  • Federal agencies:
    • NIST (standards)
    • GSA (Login.gov)
    • DHS/TSA (digital ID acceptance)
  • State governments: DMV-led mobile ID programs.
  • Private sector: Apple, Google, ID verification vendors.
  • Policy think tanks: ITIF, MITRE, Atlantic Council.
  • Legislators: Bipartisan efforts (e.g., Sen. Sinema’s bill).
    [biometricupdate.com], [nextgov.com]
Current progress

New Jersey and North Carolina have enacted laws to launch digital driver’s licenses, reinforcing the Eastern U.S. shift toward mobile identity. The initiatives emphasize compliance with REAL-ID standards, security, and fraud prevention, while keeping physical licenses in parallel. Key updates include New Jersey’s $1.5M investment and July 2029 rollout, and North Carolina’s authorization paving the way for future implementation. link

As of 2025:

  • Apple Digital ID launched nationwide (Nov 2025) for TSA domestic travel. [apple.com]
  • Google Wallet passport ID pilot ongoing.
  • 15+ states have mobile driver’s licenses; 12 more expected by end of 2025. [idscan.net]
  • Federal guidance: NIST SP 800-63 Rev. 4 published; EO 14144 still in effect but low priority under current administration. [biometricupdate.com]
  • Challenges:
    • Fragmentation (state vs federal vs private)
    • Lack of interoperability
    • Privacy concerns and trust issues
  • Trend: Rapid adoption in travel and age verification; growing pressure for a national strategy.
    [scworld.com]

Canada

Current progress
National wallet

Canada does not yet have a single nationwide digital identity wallet, but several initiatives exist:

    • GC Sign-In & GC Issue and Verify: Federal platforms under development to allow Canadians to sign in once and access all government services, and to store digital versions of credentials (e.g., work permits, licenses) on mobile devices. [canada.ca]
    • Provincial wallets:
      • BC Wallet (live): Stores verifiable credentials for government and private services using privacy-preserving technology. [digitalide...yindex.com] British

There is not a national wallet in Canada, but regional ones.

  • Alberta has introduced the Digital Alberta Wallet app, beginning with a mobile health card available to residents 14 and older. The app uses encryption and requires user consent for data sharing, ensuring privacy, while paper health cards remain valid. Parents can add children’s cards, and spouses can share within the wallet. More government documents will be added in the future, with a combined driver’s licence–health card expected by 2026." ref
    British
      • Columbia has developed the Canada's first government-issued digital identity solution, used to securely store and share digital
  • credentials with public and private organizations in the region. ref
     
Similar efforts to EUDIW
Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)
National architecture documents
Stakeholder groups
      • credentials with public and private organizations in the region. ref
      • Ontario Digital ID (planned): A secure digital ID program for online and in-person use, delayed but still in development. [digitalide...yindex.com]
      • Alberta has introduced the Digital Alberta Wallet app, beginning with a mobile health card available to residents 14 and older. The app uses encryption and requires user consent for data sharing, ensuring privacy, while paper health cards remain valid. Parents can add children’s cards, and spouses can share within the wallet. More government documents will be added in the future, with a combined driver’s licence–health card expected by 2026." ref
  • These wallets are optional and designed for selective disclosure (e.g., proving age without sharing full identity). [diacc.ca]
     
Similar efforts to EUDIW
  • Canada’s approach is similar in concept but not identical:
    • The Pan-Canadian Trust Framework (PCTF) provides interoperability and privacy principles for digital ID systems, akin to EUDI’s architecture. [diacc.ca]
    • Canada emphasizes federated identity (provincial and federal collaboration) rather than a single national wallet.
    • Unlike EUDI Wallet, Canada’s system is not mandated by law and remains voluntary.
  • Canada’s Digital Ambition strategy aligns with global standards like eIDAS, but implementation is slower and fragmented. [biometricupdate.com]
Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)
  • Canada does not have a centralized PID repository like China or India.
  • PID includes:
    • Passport, driver’s license, health card, and other government-issued credentials.
    • Biometric authentication is supported but optional (e.g., facial recognition for wallet apps).
  • The PCTF and CAN/DGSI 103-0:2025 standard define processes for identity proofing, credential issuance, and authentication, ensuring privacy and user control. [biometricupdate.com], [diacc.ca]
National architecture documents
  • Pan-Canadian Trust Framework (PCTF): Open resource for interoperability and privacy in digital identity systems. [diacc.ca]
  • CAN/DGSI 103-0:2025: National standard for digital trust and identity, aligned with international frameworks (eIDAS, FATF). [biometricupdate.com]
  • Government of Canada ICAM Framework: Defines identity, credential, and access management for federal services. [canada-ca.github.io]
  • Canada’s Digital Ambition 2024–25: Strategic plan for digital government transformation.
    All these documents are publicly accessible online. [canada.ca]
Stakeholder groups
  • Federal agencies:
    • Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
    • Canadian Digital Service (CDS)
  • Standards bodies:
    • Digital ID & Authentication Council of Canada (DIACC)
    • Digital Governance Standards Institute (DGSI)
  • Provincial governments: Ontario, British Columbia, Alberta (digital ID programs)
  • Private sector: Banks, telecoms, tech companies (e.g., Interac, SecureKey)
  • Civil society: Privacy advocates, research labs (Digital Identity Lab) [digitalide...yindex.com], [diacc.ca], [dtlab-labcn.org]
Current progress

As of 2025:

  • Standards: CAN/DGSI 103-0 approved as a national standard in August 2025. [biometricupdate.com]
  • Provincial wallets: BC Wallet live; Ontario Digital ID still in planning.
  • Federal initiatives: GC Sign-In and GC Issue and Verify platforms under development.
  • Policy: Canada’s Digital Ambition updated for 2024–25; cybersecurity legislation (Bill C-8) introduced to protect critical infrastructure and align with identity frameworks. [diacc.ca], [canada.ca]
  • Challenges:
    • Fragmentation between federal and provincial systems.
    • Privacy concerns and slow adoption compared to EU and Asia.
  • Canada scores 81.5 (Very High) on the Global Digital Identity Index, reflecting strong capabilities but incomplete nationwide rollout. [digitalide...yindex.com]
Information contributed by
Esther Ruiz Ben Ben - Amineh Akhavan

Panama

National wallet
Panama’s Land Transit and Transportation Authority (ATTT) has approved digital driver’s licenses on mobile phones, giving citizens a secure, convenient alternative to the plastic card. Issued through the same provider, Sertracen, the digital format can be verified in real time by police and ATTT officers. While the physical license remains official, this move marks a major step in Panama’s digital-government push toward more accessible, tech-enabled identity options. ref
Similar efforts to EUDIW

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress

...


India

National wallet(s)

India has introduced national digital identity wallets:

  • Aadhaar App (2025): A secure mobile wallet launched by UIDAI for storing and sharing Aadhaar credentials.
    • Features:
      • Store up to 5 Aadhaar profiles on one device
      • Facial authentication and biometric lock
      • Selective disclosure (share only age or address)
      • QR-based offline verification
      • Works without internet for certain use cases
    • Use cases: hotel check-in, SIM activation, banking KYC [biometricupdate.com], [mobileidworld.com]
  • DigiLocker: A government-backed cloud wallet for official documents (driving license, PAN, education certificates). It is widely used for e-KYC and service onboarding. [digitalidentityindex.com]
EUDI Wallet status
India does not yet have a full EUDI-equivalent, but discussions are ongoing:
  • Experts propose a National Digital Identity Wallet (NDIW) using Verifiable Credentials (VCs) and Blockchain, similar to EUDI principles (privacy by design, selective disclosure).
  • India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI)—Aadhaar, DigiLocker, e-Sign, UPI—provides the backbone for such a wallet.
  • UIDAI’s Vision 2032 hints at moving toward citizen-owned, portable credentials. [linkedin.com]
Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)
  • Foundational ID: Aadhaar (12-digit number linked to biometrics and demographic data).
  • PID includes:
    • Biometric data (fingerprints, iris scans, facial image)
    • Demographic data (name, DOB, address)
  • Stored in Central Identities Data Repository (CIDR) managed by UIDAI.
  • Authentication ecosystem:
    • Yes/No response or e-KYC data for service providers
    • PID is encrypted in a PID block before transmission for security. [uidai.gov.in]
National architecture documents
  • IndEA Framework (India Digital Ecosystem Architecture) by MeitY: promotes open standards, interoperability, and modular architecture for digital identity and services.
  • India Stack Blue Book: outlines implementation principles for DPI, including Aadhaar, DigiLocker, and UPI.
  • UIDAI technical specifications for authentication and PID encryption are publicly available.
  • Research papers and policy briefs (e.g., ECIS 2023, Centre for Internet & Society) analyze Aadhaar’s architecture and governance.
    Most documents are accessible online via MeitY, UIDAI, and think tanks. [thequantumhub.com], [aisel.aisnet.org], [blogs.busi...assllc.com]
Stakeholder groups
  • Government agencies:
    • UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India)
    • MeitY (Ministry of Electronics & IT)
    • NPCI (for UPI integration)
    • State governments for welfare schemes
  • Private sector:
    • Banks, telecom operators, fintech companies
  • Civil society & policy think tanks:
    • The Dialogue, Digital Empowerment Foundation
  • International partners:
    • MOSIP (open-source identity platform), W3C for standards
  • Recent stakeholder meets included 250+ entities (BFSI, telecom, fintech) for Aadhaar offline verification ecosystem. [biometricupdate.com], [pib.gov.in]
Current progress

As of 2025:

  • Coverage: Aadhaar enrollment exceeds 1.3 billion people (94%+ population).
  • New Aadhaar App launched for secure offline verification and selective data sharing.
  • DigiLocker adoption: 539 million users.
  • National Digital ID India 2025 announced:
    • Unified ID linked with Aadhaar, PAN, Voter ID, Passport
    • Mobile app with biometric login and QR code
    • End-to-end encryption and user-controlled permissions
  • Cybersecurity rules (2025) mandate stronger identity compliance and biometric authentication for organizations.
  • India ranks high (68/100) on global digital identity readiness index.
    Challenges: privacy concerns, exclusion risks, and need for stronger governance frameworks. [mpgk.in], [careerahea...online.com], [digitalide...yindex.com]


Laos

National wallet


national digital ID cards  link

Similar efforts to the EUDIW
-
Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)
-
National architecture documents

The Southeast Asian state officially launched its digital identity project in July last year, according to the Laotian Times. In May, the government announced it would establish a digital ID infrastructure to manage citizens’ personal data securely as part of its public services modernization drive. The Ministry of Technology and Communications had completed 37 digital government systems as of this past February as it seeks to spur socio-economic development with open source technology and digital public infrastructure (DPI).

Stakeholder groups

The agency developing and managing the national citizen database is the Ministry of Public Security, while other ministries will need to ensure that their data systems are ready for secure integration and data exchange. The digital ID is managed by the Digital Government Center under the Ministry of Technology and Communications of Laos.

Laos is getting support from Vietnam and Japan in the building of the digital ID management system. Vietnamese officials and experts have provided strategic advice while Japan is providing government funding and technical advice from companies like NEC, Ryobi Systems and J&C.

Current progress
Laos will begin issuing national digital ID cards across the country next month(Oct 2025), replacing its paper-based system and providing citizens with official proof of identity from birth through old age.


Sri Lanka

National wallet

Sri Lanka is evolving its e-NIC system into a new digital ID (SL-UDI) delivered through a mobile eLocker app. The 3–5-year rollout reuses existing infrastructure, with encrypted citizen data managed locally under government control. Designed for security and inclusivity, SL-UDI aims to modernize identity while maintaining public trust  ref

Similar efforts to the EUDIW

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress


Oman

National wallet(s)

Oman has legally recognized mobile digital ID as official identification, embedding it into its Vision 2040 digital transformation strategy. The move streamlines verification across government and financial services while expanding usability for law enforcement. Key updates include digital access to passports and birth certificates, banking integration, kiosk-based license issuance, and tools for virtual services and reporting.

EUDI Wallet status

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress
link

Hong Kong

National wallet(s)

Hong Kong has launched its first e-Driving License app, making phones valid digital alternatives to physical driver’s licenses. The rollout, part of broader “smart mobility” efforts, emphasizes convenience, security, and inclusivity. Key updates include support for all license types (full, learner, probationary, instructor), color-coded validity (blue/yellow/red), single-device account binding, QR-code security, and authentication via “iAM Smart” for residents or the e-Licensing Portal for others.

EUDI Wallet status

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress
link


Malaysia

National wallet(s)

Malaysia’s 13th Malaysia Plan puts MyDigital ID at the center of its digital transformation, aiming to make 95% of federal services fully online by 2030. The secure ID system enables real-time verification without storing biometrics and already powers 45 platforms. Supporting initiatives include a National Data Bank, Data Commission, and digital twin tech to boost trust, security, and innovation. ref 

EUDI Wallet status

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress


Iran

National wallet(s)
  • Iran has issued smart national identity cards. As of 2020, about 48.7 million people had smart ID cards. The cards are domestically produced, following necessary technical standards. trend.az

  • The MyGov (also called the National Smart Government Portal or “My Government”) is Iran’s unified portal/app to provide citizens access to many electronic services across government agencies. Through the portal (my.gov.ir) and mobile app, users can access more than 3,000 e-services in areas like education, health, taxation, welfare, administration. ref

  • A major recent update introduced digital signature capability, i.e. electronic documents can be signed using PKI (public key infrastructure). This makes formal document exchange more legally binding and reduces paper/bureaucracy. 17 executive bodies are already connected to use this service via web services; expansion is ongoing. 
  • They are replacing or supplementing SMS/OTP login with amulti-factor authentication algorithm based on “unique number matching”, so that login can occur without needing one-time password via SMS. 
  • Biometric login is supported under standards akin to eKYC Level 3 — facial recognition / selfie verification. The biometric data is claimed to be stored locally on user devices and not on central servers. en.ito.gov.ir
EUDI Wallet status
Not clear if there's a fully digital national wallet or identity-wallet standard in place formally that matches international “digital ID wallet” models (e.g. with selective disclosure, real-time verifiable credentials). No evidence of a fully deployed digital ID wallet found in the sense used in EU eIDAS / EUDI frameworks.

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents
  • MyGov acts as a “backbone” for Iran’s digital service architecture: interoperability, scalability, and security are key principles. It relies on National Digital ID (NID) as a centralized authentication system, so users don’t need separate credentials for each agency. ref 

    Authentication is tiered into levels:

    1. Mobile number + national ID + OTP (basic)

    2. Biometric verification (face matching)

    3. Digital signature (highest assurance / non-repudiation)


Stakeholder groups
  • Information Technology Organization of Iran (ITO) –> the main digital transformation authority under the Ministry of ICT; publishes updates and technical standards for MyGov.

  • Ministry of ICT –> policy owner of national digital government initiatives.

  • National Organization for Civil Registration (NOCR) – manages Iran’s national ID system and population database; provides the identity backbone for MyGov.

  • Executive Agencies / Ministries – more than 17 bodies already integrated, e.g. health, education, welfare, taxation, judiciary, municipalities, etc.

  • International organizations (e.g. WSIS, ITU) – have recognized Iran’s “National Digital Plan” which includes MyGov, so they are indirect stakeholders for benchmarking and global standards. The “National Digital Plan” (Iran Digital National Plan) has been recognized internationally, e.g., winning a WSIS prize. One of its key goals is building digital identity infrastructure, data protection, digital literacy. Tehran Times

  • A knowledge-based firm is building a domestic authentication service aimed at preventing identity data from being transferred abroad. This indicates concern about sovereignty and privacy of identity data.

  • Citizens / Residents –> main users of MyGov for accessing e-services, identity verification, signing forms, etc.

  • Businesses / Private Sector –> may use MyGov for official filings, tax submissions, permits, or government contracts.

Current progress


Africa

Nigeria

National wallet
NIN (National identity Number) ref
Similar efforts to EUDIW

Electronic identity and Personal Identification Data (PID)

National architecture documents


Stakeholder groups


Current progress

Useful References:


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