European Professional Card USER GUIDE
20 November 2015, Version 1.0, European Commission DG GROW — R4
Document revisions
Date | Version number | Document changes |
---|---|---|
05/10/2015 | 0.1 | Initial draft |
16/11/2015 | 0.2 | Commission editors draft |
20/11/2015 | 1.0 | Final version for distribution |
This document provides an overview of the European professional card (EPC) procedure and the tasks competent authorities are expected to carry out through the Internal Market Information (IMI) system.
This document sets out:
The document does not include information on the system used by applicants when applying for an EPC. We will make some mention of the other IMI tools that authorities handling EPC applications might use, but we will not be explaining them in detail. If you want more information on other IMI tools, this document provides a list of further resources available.
The EPC is the first EU-wide electronic procedure that professionals can use to have their qualifications recognised. It provides streamlined and transparent procedures that will help professionals to get their professional qualifications recognised in other EU countries. The idea is for those involved to provide the necessary information and documents through a dedicated web application and to communicate with each other in a way that overcomes language barriers.
The EPC is intended to be used by both professionals and competent authorities.
For professionals, the EPC generates value by providing:
For competent authorities, the EPC generates value by providing:
The EPC works on the basis of interconnection between two web platforms, one for professionals and the other for competent authorities. These provide a secure channel for exchanging information and documents throughout the recognition process.
The two platforms are complemented by:
The European professional card is a key part of the modernised Professional Qualifications Directive, which lays down the rules for the mobility of regulated professionals throughout Europe. This modernisation was completed when Directive 2013/55/EU (amending Directive 2005/36/EC) was adopted at the end of 2013. The provisions on the EPC are set out in Articles 4a to 4e of the revised Directive 2005/36/CE and in Recitals 4 to 6 of Directive 2013/55/EC.
Further provisions clarifying technical aspects of the procedure were included in Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2015/983 and its annexes.
Professionals can apply to have their professional qualification recognised in another EU country for two main purposes:
The procedure can work in different ways depending on the nature of the profession and the purpose of the recognition:
1. Establishment cases: a. automatic recognition: recognition regime applicable to regulated professions whose minimum training conditions are harmonised at European level, namely nurses responsible for general care and pharmacists b. general system: recognition regime applicable to professions which do not fulfil conditions for the automatic recognition, namely physiotherapists, mountain guides and real estate agents
2. Temporary mobility cases: a. with prior check of qualifications: recognition regime that requires a verification of the qualifications in the country of destination b. without prior check of qualifications: recognition regime that does not require a verification of qualifications in the country of destination.
The actors involved in the procedure and the legal deadlines that have to be met will vary depending on the type of profession and the recognition regime under which it falls. In general, three actors are involved in EPC procedures:
The same public authority in a member state or region can play the role of both home CA and host CA in the context of two different applications.
To apply online and follow up on submitted applications, professionals use the EPC Frontoffice.
This document does not deal with the EPC Front-office platform.
Competent authorities use the IMI Back-office system to handle EPC applications and communicate with applicants. The main subject of this document is how to use this system.
The sequence of actions to be taken by the competent authorities can be grouped in two categories:
The main difference between the two workflows is that in workflow 1, competent authorities in both the home and host member states are involved in assessing EPC applications and the recognition of the professional qualification. Recognition is approved or refused by the host member state.
In workflow 2, the authority in the home member state takes the recognition decision. The authority in the host member state is simply notified.
The main steps in workflow 1, which are used for establishment and temporary mobility with a prior check of qualifications, are:
The main steps in workflow 2, which are for temporary mobility without prior check of qualifications, are:
The legal deadlines that a user in a competent authority must meet for specific actions depend on the profession in question and the type of recognition regime it falls under.
In addition to legal deadlines, the system also has some technical deadlines to ensure the smooth functioning of the procedure.
A summary of all these deadlines is provided in the table below.
Professional Qualifications Directive | Article 4d | Article 4c | |||||
Purpose | Establishment | Temporary mobility | |||||
Profession | Health & safety | Non-health & safety | Health & safety | Non-health & safety | |||
Regime | Automatic recognition | General system | Automatic recognition | General system | General system Article 7(4) | Automatic recognition | General system |
Accept application by home member state | 2 week-days | 2 week-days | 2 week-days | 2 week-days | 2 week-days | 2 week-days | 2 week-days |
Completeness check by home member state | 1 week | 1 week | 1 week | 1 week | 1 week | 1 week | 1 week |
Verification of authenticity and validity of documents by home member state | 1 month | 1 month | 1 month | 1 month | 1 month | 3 weeks (including decision on recognition) | 3 weeks (including decision on recognition) |
Tacit recognition or decision by host member state | 1 month | 2 months | 1 month | 2 months | 2 months | - | - |
Tacit recognition first extension | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | - | - |
Tacit recognition second extension | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | 2 weeks | - | - | ||
Confirmation of possibility to take aptitude test | 1 month | - | - | ||||
Automatic closure for documents not provided | 3 months | 3 months | 3 months | 3 months | 3 months | 3 months | 3 months |
Data retention after request for removal | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked | 6 months available + 18 months blocked |
In the EPC procedure, the country in which a person is legally established or, if that person is not yet legally established, one of the countries where it obtained a qualification is called the home member state.
The competent authority in the home member state has the main task of assessing the completeness of EPC applications and attesting the overall validity and authenticity of supporting documents before they are sent to the country of destination. The country of destination, which is called the host member state, will then make the final decision whether or not to recognise the qualification.
If the application is to provide services on a temporary or occasional basis without a prior check of qualifications, the authority in the home member state also has the task of approving or refusing the recognition request.
The actions the authorities handling EPC applications as home member state can take are described in detail in the following sections, in the order in which they occur in the procedure.
As soon as a professional submits an application through the Front-office site, an automatic email is sent to the default recipient in the home member state, as defined later on in Chapter 6.
In cases of establishment and temporary mobility with a prior check of qualifications, as soon as the home CA sends an application to the host member state, an automatic email is sent to the default recipient in the host member state.
As EPC handler (system user) within the default recipient, you can:
Or
Or
Whatever way you open the application, the system will open the same detailed view with the details of the EPC application on the screen.
In this view, data are organised into five tabs:
NOTE: when the application has this status, personal data are not visible and are replaced by asterisks.
When your authority receives a newly submitted application as default home CA and you have opened the detailed view, two action buttons are available on the toolbar: Accept and Forward.
When you look at the details of the application, you may decide that your authority is not the right one to deal with it and that another authority in your country or region is registered in IMI to handle that kind of EPC application.
If that is the case you can transfer the application to the authority in question:
If your authority can handle the application, you will need to accept it:
NOTE: remember that you or other users in your authority need to accept the application within 2 week-days from the submission date. If not, the application is automatically forwarded to the EPC default coordinator in your country or region. If your authority is also the default coordinator, the application is simply forwarded to your authority again.
You may realise after accepting the application that the applicant selected the wrong home member state. For instance, the applicant may have incorrectly declared that it is legally established in your country. Alternatively, the applicant may have indicated that it acquired the qualification in your country , but it is already legally established in another EU country.
In this case, your authority is entitled to reject the application:
The professional may have submitted an application that has been attributed to the wrong regime, for instance if it has incorrectly declared that it benefits from acquired rights.
In this case, your authority is NOT entitled to reject the application. Instead you should advise the professional to withdraw the application and reapply under the right regime.
To do this, send a message to the professional, explaining the reasons. See Chapter 5.2 on sending messages.
If you have accepted the application in the previous steps , you now need to proceed with the treatment of the application.
At this stage, your authority has to assess whether any of the documents required by the host member state are missing. If documents are missing, you have seven calendar days from the submission date to ask the professional to provide them.
In order to verify the document requirements in the host member state, you can consult the EPC national requirements notifications in IMI, which was set up for this purpose.
If your authority requests fees for handling the application as a home member state, you must ask for this fee within the same seven calendar day deadline. Please see Chapter 5.8 for further information on fees.
If you or another user in your authority fail to request missing documents within the legal deadline above, the application will automatically be confirmed as complete by the system.
NOTE: Please note that the Implementing Regulation limits your ability to ask for missing documents that should be issued by your authority. Please consult Articles 10-12 of the Implementing Regulation carefully.
If any missing documents need to be requested from the professional:
via automatic email.
When missing documents are requested, the procedure is suspended and remains in this status until the applicant provides the requested documents (it has up to 3 months to do so). No further actions are expected from your authority.
NOTE: The professional has 3 months to provide the requested documents. If the professional fails to provide the documents within this deadline, the application is closed automatically.
If the application has no missing documents or if the professional has now uploaded the documents you requested in the previous step, you need to confirm to the professional that the application is complete:
From this point, your authority has limited time to assess the authenticity and the validity of provided documents. The length of time allowed depends on the profession and the regime (please check the Deadlines table on page 13).
You can still request documents from the professional even after the completeness has been confirmed, but only if they are indispensable for the continuation of the procedure.
However, in this case the procedure is not suspended and you will still need to meet the deadline.
NOTE: If the quality of the documents provided by the professional is so poor and that you cannot properly check them (e.g. the scanned document is illegible or incomplete), you may request a clearer version from the professional. If a document is unreadable, it may also be considered as missing.
Once you have confirmed that the application is complete, your authority needs to verify the relevance, authenticity and validity of all attached documents. This is the home CA’s most important task in the procedure and it has to complete it within the legal deadline stated in the table in Chapter 2.3. The deadline will depend on the profession, purpose and regime.
If some of the documents attached have been already validated in previous applications submitted by the same professional, you only need to confirm the results of that validation, unless some of the documents had a limited period of validity and have expired. In this case, you may regard an expired document as a missing document and you should request a new version.
There are different ways you can verify the authenticity and validity of documents:
Whatever method you use to verify the authenticity and validity of documents, you will have to provide your conclusions for each document in the system.
The process:
NOTE: Professionals may upload documents that are not required for the EPC application in question, such as documents proving language knowledge and a CV. You will need to decide whether such documents need to be taken into account and flag them as relevant.
In addition to authenticating and validating documents, you may also need to amend the information the professional provided in the Evidence of formal qualifications. This could be necessary because the professional did not know the exact name of the title, misspelled it or made some other mistake.
By law you are not allowed any additional time to carry out this action so you must do it within the deadline for authentication and validation described in step 3.6 above.
To make the necessary corrections, you must:
Your authority should transmit the application to the host member state as soon as all attached documents have been given the appropriate declaration and justification. Do not wait for the deadline.
To transmit the application you must:
When the application has this status, you can still access it as home CA and use functions like Edit documents, Edit professional’s data and Edit application.
You can also generate a report of the application for your internal records.
NOTE: The tacit recognition timer starts as soon as the application is transmitted to the host CA. This timer determines how long the host CA has to make a decision.
For applications falling under the Temporary mobility without prior check of qualifications procedure, it is the home CA that has to make a decision on recognition rather than send it to the host CA.
Therefore, in such cases, the actions available to your authority are approval and refusal.
If the applicant meets all the requirements and you consider that you can approve the recognition request, you must:
NOTE: The EPC certificate that will be generated is exactly the same as the one the applicant can generate in the Front-office.
If the applicant does not meet all the requirements and you consider that you cannot approve the recognition request, you must:
attach documents to an application.
For applications falling under the Temporary mobility without prior check of qualifications procedure, the home CA has, in duly justified cases, the possibility to temporarily suspend the validity of an approved application.
To suspend the validity of an application, you must:
that it is no longer valid.
When the reasons that justified the suspension no longer apply, the home CA should reactivate the suspended EPC application.
To reactivate a suspended application, you must:
Applications falling under the Temporary mobility without prior check of qualifications procedure have a validity limited to 18 months. At the end of this period, their status in the system changes automatically to EPC expired and they are no longer valid.
Before the expiry date, the professional can request an extension of validity for an additional 18 months to the home CA that approved the original EPC application. When a professional requests the extension, the home CA is notified via automatic email and a message is sent through the IMI system.
The status of the application is changed in the system to EPC Validity extension requested. The home CA can either approve the request or refuse it.
To approve the request for validity extension, you must:
The applicant is notified via automatic email and can see the changes in the Front-office.
To refuse the request for validity extension, you must:
For EPC applications for establishment or temporary mobility cases requiring a prior check of qualifications, it is the host member state that decides on recognition. The possible decisions are:
recognition. Therefore, the decision is postponed until the applicant has completed the imposed measures.
At this stage of the procedure, the authority in the host member state has limited time available to make the decision. If the authority has taken no action by the end of that period, the EPC application is automatically approved and recognition is granted to the professional, who will then be able to generate a valid EPC certificate.
The procedure for accessing and accepting incoming EPC applications is exactly the same as the one described in Chapters 3.1 and 3.2 for the home CA.
NOTE: The application cannot be rejected if the wrong country has been selected as host member state! If the professional has made a mistake, it should withdraw the application.
Once you have accepted the application transmitted by the home CA, you need to verify whether all required documents have been provided and that they have been authenticated, or at least issued with a provisional declaration.
You may need some additional information to carry out your final verification. However, you can only request the information allowed under the EPC legal framework. To gather such information you can:
If your authority requests fees as the host member state, you must ask for the fee at this stage, as required by Article 9(2) of the Implementing Regulation, (see Chapter 5.8 for more details).
Please remember that you cannot stop the tacit recognition timer while you gather additional information or ask for payment of fees. You can extend tacit recognition in line with the table of deadlines in Chapter 2.3 or in accordance with the procedure described in the next chapter.
If you need to gather additional documents or information while verifying an application and you think that you will not be able to finish the processing within the legal deadline for reaching a recognition decision (see the table in Chapter 2.3), you can extend the tacit recognition period by two weeks.
This extension may be repeated once more, in duly justified situations, if the application is for a profession in the area of health & safety.
To extend tacit recognition:
In establishment cases under the General system regime or Temporary mobility cases with prior check of qualifications and involvement of the host member state, your authority may consider that the applicant has not met all the recognition requirements, even if the application is correct and all supporting documents have been provided and validated by the home CA. This might be because of substantial differences between your national requirements and applicant’s training and experience. In order to obtain recognition, the professional will need to undertake compensation measures in form of an adaptation period or aptitude test.
When you impose compensation measures, the tacit recognition timer is suspended. The timer restarts only once the professional has proven that it implemented the measures and you have confirmed in the system that they have been completed.
To inform the professional about the need for compensation measures and to suspend tacit recognition, you must:
Tacit recognition is now suspended until your authority confirms in the system that all imposed measures have been completed by the professional. To confirm this, you must:
Both applicant and home CA are notified via automatic email.
In case of temporary mobility applications under Article 7(4) (Prior check of qualifications) your authority must first confirm that the professional has been given the opportunity to pass an aptitude test within one month from the starting date of the compensation measures. You must confirm this before you confirm the completion of compensation measures. If you fail to do so within this deadline, tacit recognition takes place and the recognition is granted to the professional automatically.
Assuming that you have already requested compensation measures, to confirm that your authority gave the professional the opportunity to pass an aptitude test, you must:
If the applicant does not meet all or some of the requirements and you consider that you cannot grant the recognition request, you must:
If the applicant meets all the requirements and you consider that you can grant the recognition, you must:
After the granting of the recognition, if the home or the host CA discovers that the decision was based on inaccurate or false information (such as a false diploma), the approved EPC can be revoked. Following a revoking, any EPC certificate generated in past is no longer valid.
A revoking decision may entail further actions you could take in the system, such as invalidating the false document attached to the original application (Chapter 3.6), introducing a disciplinary sanction (Chapter 5.4) or introducing a PQ alert.
To revoke an approved EPC, you must:
The IMI system has a number of additional features that you can use while dealing with EPC applications. These additional features can help you communicate with the other actors in the procedure or fulfil tasks linked directly or indirectly to the treatment of a specific application.
While processing an application as home or host CA, you may need to attach documents because:
To attach a new document to an application:
While handling an EPC application as home or host CA, you may need to contact the professional to request clarifications, additional information, etc.
To send a message to the professional:
Once an application has been transmitted to the host CA, you may need to contact the other authority with specific questions or to ask it for further clarification.
To send a message to the other authority involved in an application:
The system saves the comment in the comments list and notifies the other authority via automatic email that a new comment has been added. NOTE: The professional cannot see these comments in the Front-office.
A professional may ask your authority to amend some personal data, for instance if the professional has a new identity document and this information has to be updated in the system.
In duly justified cases, your authority may also need to update the professional’s profile to add a disciplinary sanction which relate to a prohibition or restriction and which have consequences for the pursuit of activities by the professional.
To update the professional’s data, you must:
NOTE: The professional’s personal details can only be amended by a competent authority once the first application has been submitted.
When a professional submits a request in the Front-office to remove personal data, the system sends an automatic email notifying the home CA with access to the professional’s most recently submitted application. In the detailed view for this application, a new action will be available to the home CA user in the form of the Acknowledge profile removal button.
Under the IMI Regulation (EU) (1024/2012), when the removal is confirmed by your authority:
To proceed with the removal of personal data, you must:
NOTE: All data and documents are totally removed from the Front-office as soon as the professional confirms its request. However, only the professional's Front-office account is destroyed, whereas the European Commission Authentication System account remains available. If the professional tries to login, a new EPC account will need to be created, but it will not be associated with the applications submitted using the previous account.
Pursuant to Article 8 of the EPC Implementing Regulation, member states can allow professionals to apply for recognition on paper. If your authority wishes to handle a paper application through the EPC online procedure, you must input the application into the system on the professional’s behalf.
To do this, you must sign in the Front-office with a special account that can be created by the IMI Helpdesk at the request of your member state. This special account enables you to create a profile and submit applications on the professional’s behalf.
The EPC validity check is a separate system that allows the public to verify the authenticity of an EPC certificate online.
As an EPC authority user, you do not need to use this online tool to verify the authenticity of the EPC because you have direct access to the file, unless your authority was not involved.
To verify the authenticity of an EPC certificate online, you need to:
NOTE: The number of the proof of identity entered in the validity check must be taken from the actual identity document (ID card or passport) provided by the professional together with the EPC certificate print-out.
The payment of fees is not integrated into the EPC procedure and should be handled outside IMI. However, as the payment of fees may have an impact on whether your authority can proceed with the processing of applications, you need to know how to take this factor into account when dealing with the procedure in IMI.
If your authority requests payment of fees when processing EPC applications as the home CA, you have the following options:
If your authority requests payment of fees when processing EPC applications as the host CA, you have the following options:
When you are processing EPC applications as the host CA, you cannot suspend tacit recognition by requesting a proof of payment and treating it as a missing document.
However, you may extend the tacit approval by two weeks while waiting for the payment. You may still send the professional a message asking for it to upload proof of payment.
Due to the very strict deadlines for processing EPC applications, the system has to ensure they are delivered to the right competent authority in the shortest possible time.
In the IMI system, submitted applications are delivered to competent authorities on the basis of the authorities’ competencies, which are determined using a combination of three factors:
Each possible combination of these three factors should ideally identify one competent authority to be responsible for handling an EPC application. However, due to the various forms of organisation of public administration in the member states, we cannot rule out the possibility that more than one competent authority could be identified by a single combination of factors.
However to comply with tasks laid down in the Implementing Regulation, authorities need to be set up in the IMI system with either one or both of the technical roles set out below. These are used by the system to determine exactly which authority should receive a particular application:
1. EPC default recipient: this is the authority which receives all incoming applications submitted by a professional or transmitted by the home CA for a clearly defined geographical area, profession and regime.
For example, if the application concerns the profession of nurse responsible for general care under the General system regime and if the identified home member state is France, the application will be dispatched to the competent authority ABC in France or in one of its departments.
2. EPC default coordinator: this is the authority to which applications are automatically forwarded (for a geographical area, profession and regime) if they are not accepted by the Default recipient within two week-days of submission or transmission by the home CA.
When member states are deciding which authorities could potentially deal with EPC applications, they will face some constraints when assigning the technical roles:
Given the constraints above, member states can structure the network of competent authorities in a very flexible way and in a way that is adapted to the administrative structure in place in that country.
Examples of possible structures:
In the table below you will find a jargon-free explanation of the terms used in this guide.
Term | Explanation |
---|---|
European Professional Card - EPC | The EPC is the first EU-wide electronic procedure, allowing professionals to have their qualifications recognised in the context of establishment or provision of services on a temporary or occasional basis in another country than the one of current legal establishment or residence |
EPC Front-office & IMI Back-office | The EPC Front-office is a web platform accessible to professionals for the purposes of requesting recognition of their professional qualifications. |
The IMI Back-office is a web platform used by competent authorities to handle EPC applications | |
EPC application | A request in electronic form for the recognition of a professional qualification submitted by a professional through the EPC Frontoffice and containing all necessary information and supporting documents required by the host member state |
EPC certificate | A digitally signed PDF document that professionals or competent authorities can generate when the requested recognition of professional qualification has been granted. It contains the information identifying the professional and the details of the granted recognition. |
Third parties validity check | Web tool open to the public for verifying the authenticity and the validity of an EPC certificate |
Home member state | EU country where the professional is legally established when it makes the application or where the professional qualified, if not yet legally established |
Host member state | EU country where the professional intends to establish or provide services on temporary or occasional basis and where, for such purpose, its professional qualifications need to be recognised |
Home competent authority (CA) | Authority in the home country responsible for handling submitted EPC applications according to its competencies in terms of geographical area, profession and recognition regime |
Host competent authority (CA) | Authority in the host country responsible for handling an EPC application transmitted by the home CA according to its competencies in terms of geographical area, profession and recognition regime |
Recognition regime | Type of administrative procedure for the recognition of a professional qualification applicable to a specific case |
Automatic recognition | Recognition regime applicable to regulated professions whose minimum training conditions are harmonised at European level (doctors, nurses responsible for general care, dentists, veterinary surgeons, midwives, pharmacists and architects) or occupations mutually recognised on the basis of professional experience in the crafts, trades and industry sectors |
General system | Recognition regime applicable to professions which do not fulfil conditions for automatic recognition |
Prior check of qualifications | Recognition regime that requires the verification of qualifications in the country of destination in case of temporary mobility |
Tacit recognition | Recognition granted automatically by the system when the host CA fails to take a decision within the deadline applicable to the specific case |
Compensation measures | Mechanisms for assessing theoretical knowledge and practical skills which might be required for accessing professions falling under the general system regime in case of substantial differences between the two member states involved |
EPC default recipient | Authority that receives all incoming applications submitted by a professional or transmitted by the home CA for a specific geographical area, profession and regime. |
EPC default coordinator | Authority to which applications are automatically forwarded if they are not accepted by the default recipient within two weekdays of submission or transmission by the home CA |
IMI WEBSITE: http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/imi-net/
IMI HELPDESK: imi-helpdesk@ec.europa.eu
NATIONAL IMI COORDINATORS: http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/imi-net/contact/index_en.htm
‘YOUR EUROPE’ WEB SITE: http://europa.eu/youreurope/
'FREE MOVEMENT OF PROFESSIONALS' PAGES: http://ec.europa.eu/growth/single-market/services/free-movement-professionals/