Every business signs documents, but the moment you swap ink for pixels, a nagging question pops up: is an electronic signature legal and enforceable? The short answer is yes, with a few conditions. Understanding those conditions matters whether you're sending offer letters, closing contracts, or rolling out new company policies. Here's what you actually need to know to feel confident going paperless.
Understanding the legal framework for Electronic Signatures
The eIDAS Regulation
In the European Union, electronic signatures rest on a single piece of legislation: the eIDAS Regulation (EU No 910/2014). Because it is a Regulation rather than a Directive, it applies directly and identically in all 27 member states, including Belgium, without each country needing to pass its own version. This is a meaningful difference from the United States, where the ESIGN Act and a separate state law (UETA) have to work together. In Europe, a signature that is valid in Belgium is recognised on the same basis in the Netherlands, Luxembourg and across the Union.
eIDAS sets out a core principle of non-discrimination: an electronic signature cannot be refused legal effect or denied admissibility as evidence in court purely because it is electronic. On top of that, it defines three levels, which is where the real nuance sits. A simple electronic signature (SES) covers basic cases such as a typed name or a clicked checkbox. An advanced electronic signature (AES) is uniquely linked to the signer and can detect later tampering. A qualified electronic signature (QES), created with a qualified certificate and a secure signature device, carries the highest assurance. Under Article 25, a QES has the same legal effect as a handwritten signature, explicitly and across the whole EU.
In Belgium, this framework is reinforced by the Code of Economic Law, and qualified trust service providers are supervised at national level, which gives organisations in regulated sectors a clear chain of accountability.
Key Criteria for Legal Validity and Enforceability
Not every click or typed name carries the same weight, though. The strength of an electronic signature depends on a few factors. The signer must intend to sign, the signature must be reliably linked to the specific document, and there must be a dependable way to establish who signed and when. Consent matters too: the parties should agree to do business electronically. A clear audit trail, with timestamps and identity verification, strengthens enforceability if a dispute ever reaches court.
The practical question for most organisations is not whether an electronic signature is valid, since eIDAS already settles that, but which of the three levels a given document actually requires. Routine internal approvals rarely need a QES, while notarial deeds, certain HR documents or high-value contracts may. Matching the signature level to the legal and risk profile of each document is where most of the real decisions are made.
Best practices for implementing a paperless strategy
Going paperless isn't just about buying software. Start by auditing your current document workflows to identify bottlenecks: where do forms stall, who touches them, and what gets lost? Prioritize high-volume processes like invoice handling or HR onboarding for your first rollout.
SoftAdvice guarantees a 30-day go-live for first solutions like these, which means you don't need a six-month implementation timeline to see results. Train your team on the new tools, set clear naming conventions, and build folder structures that make sense for how people actually search.
Finally, plan for AI readiness: structured, well-organized data today means accurate, source-backed AI answers tomorrow instead of hallucinated guesses.
The legal standing of e-signatures is well established, and the practical benefits of going digital extend far beyond compliance. If your organization is still buried in paper or struggling with scattered files, consider getting a professional assessment of your document processes.
Schedule your demo and start building a foundation where any file is five seconds away, not five minutes.