Across Europe and the UK, digital signatures have moved well beyond early adoption to become a mainstream part of business processes, especially where compliance and efficiency matter most. Research suggests that roughly 60-80 % of organisations across industries have now adopted some level of e-signature technology, leaving only around 20-40 % still reliant on paper-based signatures.
In the UK specifically, the shift has been particularly pronounced. A 2023 UK government report found that around 80% of businesses use e-signatures as part of their document and contract workflows, up significantly from pre-pandemic levels.
To put this in market terms, the Europe digital signature market was valued at nearly USD 2 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow more than ten-fold by the early 2030s, underscoring both adoption and investment in this technology across regulated and commercial sectors.
And in some national use cases, the scale is staggering: Italy alone recorded 3.4 billion digital signatures in the first half of 2025, illustrating just how integral digital signing has become to operations in active digital-identity ecosystems.
Taken together, these figures show a clear trend: digital signatures aren’t an emerging convenience. They’re core infrastructure for modern, efficient, and compliant workflows across regulated industries.
For financial advisers, legal professionals, education providers and other regulated organisations, relying on manual, paper-based processes introduces unnecessary risk, friction and delay.
While the pandemic was the catalyst that forced many to try digital signatures, recent data and research confirms that this shift is permanent. Digital signatures have become an everyday tool offering security and convenience to millions.
But in regulated industries, this shift is about more than convenience. It is about defensibility.
By removing the need to print, scan and physically archive documents, businesses are seeing a significant reduction in costs and time.
More importantly, structured digital processes create tamper-evident records, detailed audit trails and long-term evidential protection - all critical in the event of a dispute, audit or regulatory review.
It’s easy to imagine that signing a contract is the end of the process, but really that’s just one moment in its life cycle.
In regulated sectors, what matters is everything around the signature - how the document was created, how identity was confirmed, how consent was recorded and how the record is preserved.
The Videosign platform covers the entire life of your contracts and documents, helping you to offer the best service to your clients.
It supports the full workflow:
In financial services, documentation underpins client protection and FCA compliance.
In legal services, evidential weight and audit trails are critical.
In education, funding and regulatory audits demand structured, retrievable records.
Across all regulated industries, expectations are rising. Clients expect seamless digital experiences. Regulators expect clear auditability. And organisations increasingly operate across borders, where digital identity standards continue to evolve under frameworks such as eIDAS.
The figures from Europe and the UK offer a snapshot of a shift that has happened around the world.
Digital signatures have reached maturity. The question is no longer whether to adopt them, but how robust your digital process needs to be.
If you are still waiting to digitise your workflow, you are relying on systems that were not designed for today’s compliance and client expectations.
Meanwhile, there’s more change ahead. Digital identity frameworks are evolving across Europe, and higher levels of assurance are becoming more commonplace in regulated environments.
Qualified Electronic Signatures (QES), which provide the highest level of legal assurance under eIDAS, are increasingly relevant for organisations operating cross-border or in high-risk scenarios. Videosign will soon support QES as part of its continued commitment to regulated industries.
Videosign brings together video meetings, digital signatures and structured audit trails into one browser-based platform - designed specifically for regulated workflows.
The data is clear: digital signatures are here to stay.
In regulated industries, digital signatures are no longer optional. They are part of how organisations demonstrate trust, compliance and operational maturity.
If you are reviewing your signing processes in 2026, it may be time to consider whether your current approach is fit for what comes next.