⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria’s Council of Ministers approved a draft law in November 2025 creating a national digital ID linked to biometric cards, legalizing electronic signatures with full handwritten-equivalent validity, and establishing rules for digital seals, timestamps, and trust service providers. The law targets 37.8 million internet users and a fast-growing e-commerce market.

Bottom Line: Prepare your organization’s digital workflow now, because once the law passes, every government submission, contract, and commercial transaction will shift to legally binding electronic formats.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

This law directly affects every citizen, business, and government agency by creating the legal foundation for digital transactions, e-signatures, and national digital identity.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

The draft law is moving through the legislative process. Organizations should begin preparing digital-first workflows and evaluating trust services platforms now.
Key Stakeholders
Government digital services directors, e-commerce businesses, fintech companies, trust service providers, cybersecurity firms, citizens using government services
Decision Type
Strategic

The law creates a permanent legal framework that will reshape how Algeria conducts business and delivers public services for decades.
Priority Level
High

Early movers who build trust services capabilities and digital-first workflows will capture significant market share when the law takes full effect.

Quick Take: Technology companies should evaluate becoming qualified trust service providers, as the law creates a government-mandated market for digital certificates, timestamps, and electronic seals. E-commerce businesses should begin integrating digital signature capabilities into their platforms now to be ready when legal recognition takes full effect.

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