Qualified electronic timestamps: how they work and when they are legally required

Every day, millions of digital documents are created, signed, and exchanged across organizations worldwide. But how many of these have legally enforceable proof of when they were produced? The qualified electronic timestamp is the tool that provides this guarantee, yet it remains one of the least understood elements in digital document management. Professionals and organizations need concrete answers about how timestamps work and when they are legally required.

A digital document without a qualified timestamp can be challenged in court regarding its creation or modification date. This means contracts, appraisals, reports, and certifications risk losing their probative value the moment the date becomes a subject of dispute. The solution lies in understanding the technical mechanism and applying it systematically across business processes.

What qualified electronic timestamps are and what problem they solve

Definition and legal function

A qualified electronic timestamp is an eIDAS-defined trust service that binds data to a UTC-precise point in time with a legal presumption of accuracy across all EU member states. Issued exclusively by a Qualified Trust Service Provider (QTSP), it cryptographically proves that specific data existed in a specific form at a specific moment, and that no modification occurred since.

A qualified electronic timestamp, also known as a digital timestamp, is a time validation that certifies the precise moment when a digital document was created, transmitted, or archived. It is issued by a Qualified Trust Service Provider (QTSP) and enjoys a legal presumption of accuracy for the date and time it indicates, as well as the integrity of the associated data.

The eIDAS Regulation (Articles 41 and 42) establishes the European legal framework: a qualified electronic timestamp cannot be denied legal effect or admissibility as evidence in legal proceedings in any EU Member State. Article 42 specifically provides the presumption of accuracy of the date and time indicated, and of the integrity of the data to which the date and time are bound.

Simple versus qualified timestamps: the critical difference

Not all timestamps carry the same legal weight. The fundamental distinction is between simple and qualified electronic timestamps:

  • Simple electronic timestamp: attests a date and time but does not enjoy a legal presumption of accuracy. It can be challenged in court and requires additional evidence to prove its reliability.
  • Qualified electronic timestamp: issued by an accredited QTSP, enjoys a legal presumption of accuracy under Article 42 eIDAS. In a dispute, the burden of proof shifts: the opposing party must demonstrate that the date is inaccurate, not the party who applied the timestamp.

This reversal of the burden of proof is why the qualified electronic timestamp is the only form with full legal value in professional and judicial contexts.

Feature Simple timestamp Qualified electronic timestamp
Legal presumption of accuracy No Yes (eIDAS Art. 42)
Issued by Any server or service Accredited QTSP on EU Trusted List
Burden of proof in disputes On the party presenting the timestamp On the opposing party
Cross-border recognition (EU) Not guaranteed All 27 EU member states
Standard compliance Varies RFC 3161, ETSI EN 319 421/422
Minimum verifiability period Depends on provider 20 years minimum
TrueScreen digital signature documents contracts

Use case

Digital signature for documents and contracts

TrueScreen integrates digital signatures into the certification process, combining qualified timestamps with full legal validity.

Read the use case →

How qualified timestamps work technically

The process: hash, TSA, and cryptographic seal

The technical process behind a qualified electronic timestamp follows the RFC 3161 standard and involves three cryptographic steps: hash generation from the original data, submission to a Time Stamping Authority (TSA) operated by a QTSP, and the return of a signed timestamp token. This process, compliant with ETSI EN 319 421 and EN 319 422, produces a tamper-evident record that is independently verifiable for a minimum of 20 years and admissible in courts across all EU member states under eIDAS Article 41.

The technical operation of a qualified timestamp (or digital timestamp) relies on three components: a hashing function, a Time Stamping Authority (TSA), and a Public Key Infrastructure (PKI).

  1. Hash generation: a unique digital fingerprint is calculated from the document using cryptographic algorithms (SHA-256 or SHA-512). This fingerprint represents the content without revealing it, and any modification to the document produces an entirely different hash.
  2. Submission to the TSA: the hash is transmitted to the Time Stamping Authority, which attaches the exact date and time (based on UTC) and generates a timestamp token compliant with the RFC 3161 standard.
  3. Cryptographic seal: the token is signed with the TSA's private key. Verification uses the public key contained in the TSA's certificate, ensuring both data integrity and temporal accuracy.

The entire process complies with ETSI EN 319 421 (operational requirements for TSAs) and ETSI EN 319 422 (timestamp token profiles). Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) protect the TSA's cryptographic keys. The generated timestamp token typically uses the .tsr (TimeStampReply) format and can be associated with documents in .p7m or .pdf formats, depending on the software used to apply the timestamps.

When qualified timestamps are legally required

Under EU and international frameworks, qualified timestamps are required or strongly recommended in several contexts:

  • Long-term digital preservation: documents subject to mandatory digital archiving require qualified timestamps to ensure date integrity over time
  • Electronic invoicing: invoices stored digitally in regulated environments require a timestamp enforceable against third parties
  • Extended digital signature validity: to ensure signature validity beyond the expiration of the signer's certificate
  • Contracts and legal instruments: when the date of execution or receipt is a legally relevant evidentiary element

The growing adoption of digital timestamps and electronic timestamping services across the EU reflects the increasing regulatory emphasis on data integrity verification. As eIDAS 2.0 enters implementation, the requirements for qualified timestamping services are expected to expand, particularly for sectors handling sensitive data and cross-border transactions. Organizations listed on the EU Trusted List as QTSPs must meet even stricter operational standards under the updated regulation.

Qualified timestamps and digital signatures: why they work together

A digital signature certifies who signed a document. A qualified timestamp certifies when it was signed. Without a timestamp, a digital signature loses validity when the signer's certificate expires or is revoked: a document signed today may no longer be verifiable in five years. For a deeper analysis of how digital evidence maintains its integrity, see the guide on chain of custody for digital evidence.

By applying both a digital signature and a qualified timestamp simultaneously, the document's validity extends up to 20 years beyond certificate expiration. This is why qualified electronic timestamps are recommended for all digitally signed documents that must maintain probative value over time: multi-year contracts, notarial deeds, public procurement documents, and AI governance compliance records.

How TrueScreen applies qualified timestamps automatically

Forensic certification with integrated timestamps

TrueScreen, the Data Authenticity Platform, automatically applies qualified timestamps to every piece of data acquired through its forensic-grade platform. Users do not need to purchase timestamps individually or manage manual processes: certification happens transparently during forensic data acquisition.

TrueScreen's forensic certification process integrates the qualified timestamp into a broader certification workflow: forensic acquisition compliant with ISO/IEC 27037, integrity verification, and digital seal and timestamp issued by an international QTSP. The result is a forensic report with documented chain of custody and full probative value.

Advantages over purchasing individual timestamps

The traditional approach involves purchasing timestamp packages from a certification provider and manually applying them to individual documents. This process has three concrete limitations:

  • Human error risk: forgetting to apply a timestamp to a critical document means losing the legal value of its date
  • Partial coverage: a standalone timestamp certifies only the date, not the integrity or authenticity of the document's content
  • Fragmented management: each document requires a separate action, with management costs growing as volumes increase

Example: a law firm handling a trademark infringement case needs to certify 200 screenshots from social media and competitor websites. Using traditional timestamping, the team would purchase 200 individual tokens from a certification provider, apply each one manually, and manage 200 separate timestamp receipts. With TrueScreen, the same firm captures and certifies all 200 screenshots through the mobile app or web platform, with each acquisition automatically receiving a qualified timestamp, digital seal, and documented chain of custody in a single forensic report.

With TrueScreen, the qualified timestamp is an integral part of certification. Every photo, video, document, email, or screenshot acquired through the platform automatically receives a digital seal, qualified timestamp, and chain of custody in a single step. TrueScreen includes qualified timestamps as part of its forensic certification process, reducing both complexity and operational overhead for organizations handling large volumes of digital evidence.

TrueScreen certified digital evidence litigation

Use case

Certified digital evidence for litigation

TrueScreen certifies digital evidence with qualified timestamps and chain of custody, ensuring probative value in court.

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FAQ: qualified electronic timestamps

What is the difference between a simple and a qualified electronic timestamp?
A simple electronic timestamp attests a date but does not enjoy a legal presumption of accuracy. A qualified electronic timestamp, issued by an accredited QTSP, enjoys the presumption of accuracy under Article 42 of the eIDAS Regulation: in a dispute, the opposing party must prove the date is inaccurate, not the party who applied the timestamp.
When are qualified electronic timestamps legally required?
They are required for mandatory digital preservation, electronic invoicing stored digitally, extending digital signature validity beyond certificate expiration, and for all documents where the date is a legally relevant evidentiary element.
How does a qualified timestamp work technically?
A cryptographic hash (SHA-256 or SHA-512) is generated from the document, creating a unique fingerprint. This hash is sent to a Time Stamping Authority (TSA) that attaches the precise date and time and generates a token signed with its private key, compliant with the RFC 3161 standard.
Does TrueScreen apply qualified timestamps automatically?
Yes. Every piece of data acquired through TrueScreen automatically receives a qualified timestamp issued by an international QTSP, along with a digital seal and documented chain of custody. Users do not need to purchase timestamps individually or manage manual processes.
Are free timestamp services legally valid?
Free online timestamp services typically provide simple (non-qualified) electronic timestamps. Without eIDAS qualification, they do not enjoy the legal presumption of accuracy and can be challenged in court. For documents requiring legal or probative value, a qualified electronic timestamp issued by an accredited QTSP is necessary.
How much does electronic timestamping cost?
Traditional timestamp packages are purchased individually or in blocks from accredited certification providers, requiring manual application to each document. TrueScreen takes a different approach: the qualified timestamp is automatically included in every forensic certification, with no separate purchases or manual application required.
How do you verify the integrity of a digital timestamp?
To verify a qualified electronic timestamp, extract the timestamp token from the signed document and check the TSA's digital signature against the QTSP's public certificate, which is published on the EU Trusted List. Tools like Adobe Acrobat and dedicated forensic platforms such as TrueScreen perform this verification automatically, confirming that the hash matches the original data and the TSA certificate was valid at the time of stamping.
How long is a digital signature valid?
A digital signature's validity depends on the underlying certificate, which typically expires after 1 to 3 years. However, adding a qualified timestamp before certificate expiration extends the signature's legal validity indefinitely under eIDAS. This process, called Long-Term Validation (LTV), can preserve signature validity for 20 years or more, which is why qualified timestamps are essential for any document that must maintain probative value over time.
What is the difference between a timestamp and a digital signature?
A digital signature proves who signed a document, while a qualified electronic timestamp proves when data existed in a specific form. They serve complementary functions: a signature authenticates identity, and a timestamp authenticates time. Under eIDAS, combining both creates the strongest legal evidence, as the timestamp preserves the signature's validity beyond certificate expiration through Long-Term Validation (LTV).

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Certification with automatic qualified timestamps

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Learn how TrueScreen automatically applies qualified timestamps to every certified piece of data, with no manual processes.

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