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Oct 27, 2025

Government shifts digital-ID project to Cabinet Office, signalling faster rollout

Government shifts digital-ID project to Cabinet Office, signalling faster rollout
Digital identity moved a step closer to reality for UK citizens and residents as the Cabinet Office formally took over stewardship of the national digital-ID programme on 27 October. Government Digital Service (GDS) engineers will continue to build the technology stack, but policy, legislation and strategic oversight now sit within the Cabinet Office—reflecting Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s desire for ‘whole-of-government’ delivery.

Announced in September as part of efforts to curb illegal employment and streamline border checks, the ‘BritCard’ scheme is envisaged as a smartphone-based credential that proves right to work, rent and access public services. Critics, including privacy group Big Brother Watch, warn of mission creep and potential surveillance. Proponents argue that a secure digital identity will simplify onboarding for employers and cut document-fraud risk for sponsor licence holders.

In practical terms, today’s administrative shift unlocks budget and cross-departmental staffing, and paves the way for primary legislation promised in the King’s Speech this November. Officials privately target limited-pilot issuance to newly naturalised citizens by Q3 2026.

For global mobility teams, a mandatory digital-ID would dovetail with the Home Office’s move to eVisas and could eventually replace physical Biometric Residence Permits, reducing document logistics for assignees. However, suppliers will need to update right-to-work systems and train HR staff on verification protocols.

Businesses should monitor forthcoming secondary legislation on data retention and third-party access—areas likely to determine whether digital-ID checks can be integrated seamlessly into existing global mobility workflows.
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