eSignature legality summary
A wet-ink signature is not required for every valid contract — agreements between legally competent parties are generally valid whether made verbally, electronically, or on paper (Egyptian Civil Code arts. 89–90; Trade Law art. 69). Article 14 of the E-Signature Law confirms that a contract is not unenforceable merely for being electronic, provided the law’s technical requirements are met. Signatures certified by ITIDA-licensed providers are automatically admitted into evidence under the statutory criteria; a plain, uncertified signature can carry more litigation risk in sensitive or high-value matters.
Types of permitted electronic signature
Egyptian law recognizes a simple electronic signature (SES) as well as higher-assurance forms (advanced/AES and qualified/QES). An SES may be accepted where it is uniquely linked to and identifies the signatory, is created under their control, and detects later alteration — but it lacks the automatic evidential weight of an ITIDA-compliant QES, electronic seal, or related certified service.
Documents that may be signed electronically
Suitable uses include everyday B2B purchasing and standard terms, online consumer contracts, HR and onboarding paperwork, commercial agreements (NDAs, procurement, sales), IP licenses, real-estate lease and related documents, and incorporation paperwork where the competent authority accepts ITIDA-licensed signatures.
Use with caution / not typically appropriate
Where Egyptian law requires a specific form — for example a notarized or officially authenticated deed, or a physically verified handwritten signature — electronic signatures cannot replace those formalities. For regulated or high-value matters, prefer an ITIDA-certified QES.
- Real-property transfer contracts and deeds (leases and other real-estate contracts are fine)
- Intangible-property transfers
- Personal-status, family-law, and succession documents requiring specific formalities
- Powers of attorney
Seminal court cases
None reported.
Primary sources
- Law No. 15 of 2004 on E-Signature and the establishment of ITIDA
Disclaimer: This guide is general information, not legal advice, and is not a guarantee that any signature will be enforceable for a particular document, transaction, or jurisdiction. E-signature and data-protection laws change frequently. Confirm the requirements for your specific document and parties, and consult a licensed lawyer in the relevant country before relying on electronic signing.
Last reviewed: June 15, 2026