Head-to-Head Comparison
| Feature | Italy | Netherlands |
|---|---|---|
| app Name | IT-Wallet | NL-wallet |
| auth Method | SPID / CIE | DigiD |
| launch Status | Active pilot | Late 2026 expected |
| user Base | 37M SPID users | 13M DigiD users |
| open Source | Partial | ✓ Yes (GitHub) |
| leadership | AgID | Ministry BZK, Logius |
Winner by Category
userBase
🏆 Italy (IT-Wallet)
transparency
🏆 Netherlands (NL-wallet)
pilot
🏆 Italy (IT-Wallet)
openSource
🏆 Netherlands (NL-wallet)
Architecture and Technical Approach
Italy's IT-Wallet and the Netherlands' NL-wallet represent contrasting approaches to the EUDI Wallet challenge. Italy takes a mobile-first approach managed by AgID, building on the massive SPID infrastructure that already provides digital identity to 37 million Italians. The IT-Wallet integrates with both SPID for routine authentication and CIE (electronic identity card) for high-assurance operations, creating a flexible tiered system.
The Netherlands' NL-wallet uses a local-first architecture where credentials are stored on the device with optional cloud backup. Developed by Logius with full open source publication on GitHub, NL-wallet emphasizes privacy-by-design and community-driven development. The DigiD authentication foundation, used by virtually all Dutch residents, provides a natural onboarding path.
Italy prioritizes scale and rapid mobile deployment; the Netherlands prioritizes privacy, transparency, and architectural rigor. Both must meet eIDAS 2.0 requirements, demonstrating the framework's flexibility in accommodating different national strategies.
Security Models Compared
Italy's security model uses SPID's tiered assurance levels, with multiple certified identity providers ensuring redundancy and competition. For high-assurance EUDI operations, the CIE card provides hardware-backed NFC authentication. AgID coordinates security standards across the SPID ecosystem, ensuring consistent protection while allowing provider-level innovation.
The Netherlands uses DigiD's 20+ years of operational security experience, extending it with modern cryptographic techniques including zero-knowledge proofs. The local-first architecture means credentials are protected by the device's secure enclave, minimizing the centralized attack surface. Logius publishes security findings openly, enabling community scrutiny.
Both implementations meet eIDAS 2.0 assurance requirements. Italy's multi-provider model offers resilience through diversity; the Netherlands' open source model offers resilience through transparency and community oversight.
User Experience and Adoption
Italy's 37 million SPID users give IT-Wallet an enormous potential adoption base. Italian citizens are already accustomed to mobile-first digital identity through SPID, making the transition to IT-Wallet natural. The active pilot phase is generating real-world user feedback that shapes the final product.
The Netherlands' DigiD has near-universal adoption, but the transition to NL-wallet involves moving from a browser-based authentication system to a full mobile wallet. The Dutch emphasis on user research and iterative design aims to make this transition smooth, with public beta testing informing development decisions.
Both countries have digitally literate populations and strong government digital service platforms. The key difference is that Italy is further along in pilot deployment, while the Netherlands is investing more time in architectural refinement before launch.
Cross-Border Interoperability
While Italy and the Netherlands may not share a border, they share significant economic ties and tourism flows. Under eIDAS 2.0, IT-Wallet credentials must be accepted in the Netherlands and NL-wallet credentials must work in Italy. The standardized credential formats ensure smooth interoperability regardless of mobile-first versus local-first architecture.
Both countries participate in EU Large Scale Pilots testing cross-border scenarios. The Netherlands' open source GitHub presence makes it easier for Italian developers to understand the NL-wallet verification protocol, facilitating early interoperability testing.
For EU citizens traveling or conducting business between Italy and the Netherlands, both wallets will provide equivalent functionality once fully launched, with credential verification being transparent to relying parties.
Which Should You Choose?
Use the wallet provided by your country of residence. Italian residents use IT-Wallet; Dutch residents use NL-wallet. Both provide full EU-wide interoperability under eIDAS 2.0.
Italy leads in user base scale and pilot deployment speed. The Netherlands leads in open source transparency, privacy-first architecture, and community-driven development. Both approaches contribute valuable models to the European EUDI ecosystem.