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Digital ID and Access to Public Services

Lifecycle: Implementation Cabinet Office · Companies House · Disclosure and Barring Service · Home Affairs Committee · Home Office · Science, Innovation and Technology Committee · Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee Last regenerated 14 hours ago

Summary

What this is

The UK digital identity regime now has three linked layers: the statutory DVS trust framework and register under Part 2 of the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025; the Cabinet Office-led national Digital ID built on GOV.UK One Login; and the Digital Access to Services Bill announced in the 13 May 2026 King's Speech, which is intended to establish the legal framework for creating, issuing and using that national credential across public services and priority wider-economy use cases including digital right-to-work checks.

Why it matters

Digital ID is being positioned both as a productivity and public services reform (removing repeated identity proofing across HMRC, DWP, Companies House and the Veteran Card) and as an illegal-working enforcement tool (mandatory for right-to-work checks). It interlocks data protection, immigration enforcement, accessibility/digital inclusion and competition policy, and is now subject to live national consultation (CP 1498).

Current status

Part 2 of the DUAA is already in force for the DVS framework and register, while the national Digital ID scheme has moved from roadmap and consultation into the 2026 legislative programme. The King's Speech announced the Digital Access to Services Bill as the vehicle for national Digital ID, public-service access through the GOV.UK app, public-sector join-up and priority uses such as digital right-to-work checks.

What changed recently

  • 29 Apr 2026 — Cabinet Office published guidance on proving identity with the GOV.UK One Login app to coincide with the consultation closing.
  • 28 Apr 2026 — CP 1498 'Making public services work for you with your digital identity' consultation closed.
  • 13 Apr 2026 — OfDIA published the DVS trust framework data schema 1.0 to support interoperability between certified providers and relying parties.
  • 24 Mar 2026 — Government published Digital Inclusion Action Plan: One Year On, the principal accessibility/exclusion backdrop to mandatory Digital ID.
  • 10 Mar 2026 — Cabinet Office launched national Digital ID consultation (CP 1498) with Commons statement by the Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister.

Key documents

Framework

Statutory basis

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 7

  • Cabinet Office → src
    Lead department for the national Digital ID scheme from 23 October 2025 following the HCWS981 machinery of government transfer; owns CP 1498 and the People's Panel for Digital ID.
  • Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) → src
    Sponsor of the DUAA 2025 and parent of OfDIA; retains policy ownership of the statutory DVS trust framework, register and trust mark.
  • Office for Digital Identities and Attributes (OfDIA) → src
    Operates the DVS trust framework, supplementary codes, the public DVS register and the UK CertifID trust mark; publishes inclusion and sectoral analysis reports.
  • Government Digital Service (GDS) → src
    Operates GOV.UK One Login and the GOV.UK app — the underlying single-sign-on and credential rails for the national Digital ID scheme.
  • Home Office → src
    Owns right-to-work, right-to-rent and DBS identity check policy; consulting on extending RTW to gig-economy work, which would expand mandatory DVS use.
  • HM Revenue and Customs → src
    Migrated new customers onto GOV.UK One Login from 9 February 2026; subject to the (still prospective) HMRC-specific information gateway and onward-disclosure offence in DUAA s.46.
  • Companies House → src
    WebFiling moved to GOV.UK One Login from 13 October 2025 — the first major regulator-style verification migration onto the platform.

Sponsoring minister 6

  • Sir Keir Starmer → src
    Prime Minister; announced the new national Digital ID scheme on 26 September 2025 and signed HCWS981 transferring lead responsibility to the Cabinet Office on 23 October 2025 (treat status as historical given live status unknown).
  • Liz Kendall → src
    Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology (live status unknown — treat as historical); answered Commons oral questions on Digital ID protection on 18 March 2026 as the responsible departmental Secretary of State.
  • Baroness Jones of Whitchurch → src
    Then Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Future Digital Economy and Online Safety when she repeated the Digital Inclusion Action Plan First Steps WMS (HLWS466, 26 February 2025); current status unknown.
  • Chris Bryant → src
    Then Minister of State for Data Protection and Telecoms when the Digital Inclusion Action Plan First Steps WMS was issued in February 2025; current status unknown.
  • Baroness Smith of Basildon → src
    Lord Privy Seal (live status unknown — treat as historical); associated with the 23 October 2025 machinery of government statement on Digital ID.
  • Darren Jones → src
    Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister; delivered the 10 March 2026 Commons statement launching the CP 1498 national Digital ID consultation.

Lead committee 3

  • Home Affairs Committee → src
    Conducting an inquiry into 'Harnessing the potential of new forms of digital ID'; took expert oral evidence in November 2025 after receiving >3,500 written submissions, mostly from the public.
  • Science, Innovation and Technology Committee → src
    Departmental select committee for DSIT; received March 2026 ministerial correspondence relating to the 3 March Digital ID evidence session.
  • Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee → src
    Scrutinises the DUAA commencement and consequential-amendments SIs that switch the statutory DVS regime on (SIs 2025/904, 2025/1213, 2026/82, 2026/317, 2026/386).

Regulator / delivery programme 4

  • Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) → src
    Statutory consultee on the DVS trust framework and supplementary codes (DUAA ss.28(3), 29(4)); consulting on DUAA-related ADM and complaints guidance affecting DVS providers.
  • UK Accreditation Service (UKAS) → src
    Statutory 'UK national accreditation body' for accrediting conformity assessment bodies that certify DVS against the trust framework (DUAA s.33(6)–(7)).
  • Disclosure and Barring Service → src
    Owner of pre-employment criminal records checks; relying party for the DBS supplementary code under DUAA s.29.
  • National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) → src
    Source of authentication / passkey guidance referenced by the DVS trust framework; subject of PQ 129967 on One Login's compliance with the Cyber Assessment Framework.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 2

  • Home Affairs Committee public evidence base → src
    Over 3,500 written submissions, the vast majority from members of the public, fed into the Committee's November 2025 oral evidence session on digital ID.
  • Lord Clement-Jones → src
    Liberal Democrat peer; consistent Lords scrutiny voice — spoke in Lords debates on Digital ID on 14 October 2025, 19 January 2026 and the 18 March 2026 statement debate, and on the DUAA Bill at Report stage.

Commentator 12

  • Mr Alistair Carmichael → src
    Liberal Democrat MP for Orkney and Shetland; spoke in the 10 March 2026 CP 1498 statement debate and the December 2025 / January 2026 Digital ID debates from a civil-liberties angle.
  • Victoria Collins → src
    Liberal Democrat MP for Harpenden and Berkhamsted; recurrent contributor to 2025-26 Commons Digital ID debates, focused on consent and design.
  • Martin Wrigley → src
    Liberal Democrat MP for Newton Abbot; spoke at the CP 1498 statement, December 2025 'Digital ID' debate and October 2025 Mandatory Digital ID debate.
  • Ben Maguire → src
    Liberal Democrat MP for North Cornwall; repeatedly spoke against mandatory Digital ID across the Oct–Dec 2025 debate cluster.
  • Iqbal Mohamed → src
    Independent MP for Dewsbury and Batley; recurrent critic in Commons Digital ID debates between October 2025 and March 2026.
  • Jim Shannon → src
    DUP MP for Strangford; six recorded contributions to Digital ID debates from the October 2025 Mandatory Digital ID debate onwards.
  • Bradley Thomas → src
    Conservative MP for Bromsgrove; spoke at the 10 March 2026 CP 1498 statement and the December 2025 / October 2025 Digital ID debates.
  • Joy Morrissey → src
    Conservative MP for Beaconsfield; raised PQs and spoke in debates including the 10 March 2026 statement and January 2026 'Digital ID' debate.
  • Dame Chi Onwurah → src
    Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West; engaged as a Labour technologist voice in CP 1498 and October–December 2025 Digital ID debates.
  • Emily Darlington → src
    Labour MP for Milton Keynes Central; recurrent backbench contributor to the Oct 2025–March 2026 Digital ID debate cluster.
  • Jo White → src
    Labour MP for Bassetlaw; spoke at the CP 1498 statement and the October 2025 Mandatory Digital ID debate.
  • Brian Leishman → src
    Labour MP for Alloa and Grangemouth; backbench voice raising concerns in the October–December 2025 debate cluster and the January 2026 Lords-themed Digital ID debate.

Civil society 1

  • Yoti → src
    Private DVS provider expressly named in PQ 123830 on biometric use in publicly accessible digital identity systems; emblematic of certified private-sector DVS firms operating under the trust framework.

Political commitments

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · New digital ID scheme to be rolled out across UK

    Roll out a national Digital ID combining illegal-working enforcement with easier access to public services

    A new digital ID scheme will help combat illegal working while making it easier for the vast majority of people to use vital government services.

    Why linked: Defines the dual-objective political framing under which CP 1498 and the One Login expansion are being progressed.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · Digital ID – A Roadmap for Modern Digital Government (campaign.gov.uk)

    Modern Digital Government 2025–2030 roadmap commits to a free, secure digital credential for all UK citizens and residents

    A new cross-government scheme, led by the Cabinet Office, will make a free and secure digital credential available to all UK citizens.

    Why linked: Sets the formal cross-government 2025–2030 trajectory for the national Digital ID layer.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Machinery of Government

    Transfer of Digital ID lead from DSIT to the Cabinet Office

    I am making this statement to bring to the House's attention the following Machinery of Government update.

    Why linked: Reorganises lead departmental responsibility for the national Digital ID scheme — the institutional anchor of the policy.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Digital Inclusion Action Plan – First Steps: An update on Government’s approach…

    Digital Inclusion Action Plan First Steps

    The Digital Inclusion Action Plan aims to close the digital divide in the UK.

    Why linked: Government commits to a digital inclusion programme that will be load-bearing for the legitimacy of any mandatory Digital ID.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Conservative · 2024 · The Digital Government (Disclosure of Information) (Identity Verification Servi…

    Identity Verification Services data-sharing regulations made under DEA 2017 s.35

    These Regulations relate to the disclosure of information in relation to public service delivery, pursuant to Chapter 1 of Part 5 of the Digital Economy Act 2017.

    Why linked: The immediate Conservative-era statutory predecessor to the DUAA s.45 information gateway, retained by the current government.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Commencement of DUAA ss.45–48 (the public-authority information gateway and HMRC/WRA/Revenue Scotland disclosure offences) — listed as prospective even after the No. 4 commencement order.
  • Government response to CP 1498 consultation (closed 28 April 2026).
  • Final 1.0 publication of the DVS trust framework (currently in pre-release) and the corresponding final supplementary codes for RTW, RTR and DBS checks.
  • Final form and timing of any extension of right-to-work checks to gig-economy work following the October 2025 Home Office consultation.

Beyond the corpus

  • MISSING Published Data Protection Impact Assessment for the national Digital ID scheme. — PQ 125373 confirmed the DPIA has been completed but the cited evidence does not show it as published; this is the central transparency artefact for a national identity credential.
  • MISSING Government response to the Home Affairs Committee inquiry on 'Harnessing the potential of new forms of digital ID'. — Committee took oral evidence in November 2025; a substantive Government response is the natural next milestone.
  • MISSING Final, signed-off NCSC compliance / Cyber Assessment Framework statement for GOV.UK One Login. — PQ 129967 was not answered before prorogation and the November 2023 'high level of risk' remarks remain on the record (HL6781).

Confidence gaps

  • Whether the national Digital ID will in practice become compulsory beyond the announced right-to-work use case — debate transcripts show this is contested but CP 1498 leaves the scope partly open.
  • How the new Cabinet Office-led national Digital ID layer and the OfDIA-administered private-sector DVS layer divide live responsibility for credential issuance, recovery and fraud response.
  • Interaction with Online Safety Act user-verification provisions (raised in PQ 120001) — not directly resolved in the corpus.