Microcredentials in Europe, Explained
A practical resource for universities, training providers, event organisers and learning teams that want to understand what microcredentials are, how European standards fit together, and what a good implementation actually looks like.
Who uses microcredentials?
Microcredentials are relevant across education, training and professional development.
Universities
Short courses, extracurricular learning, postgraduate programmes and mobility.
Learn more →Training providers
Commercial training, certification programmes, professional development courses.
Learn more →Events and conferences
Workshops, conferences, expos and hybrid events with verifiable attendance.
Learn more →The European trust layer
In Europe, the conversation is not only about issuing something digital. It is about issuing something that can be understood, verified and used with confidence. That is why four concepts show up again and again:
- EDC —the verifiable digital credential format
- Europass —portability and storage for learners
- ELM —the multilingual data model behind learning descriptions
- qSeal —the eIDAS trust layer for electronic seals
From theory to implementation
A good microcredential strategy is not only about standards. It is also about workflow.
Moodle integration
Learn how to issue microcredentials directly from Moodle after course completion.
Read the guide →Platform comparison
Evaluate standards, compliance, workflow and trust before selecting a microcredential platform.
Compare platforms →Frequently Asked Questions
What is a microcredential?
A microcredential is a way to recognise learning that is smaller, more focused and more flexible than a traditional qualification. It documents assessed learning outcomes against clearly defined criteria.
How is a microcredential different from a certificate or badge?
A certificate is a visual representation of an achievement. A badge is a graphic marker. A microcredential is the learning claim itself, including structured data about what was learned, assessed and issued. In Europe, the EDC standard makes this distinction especially clear.
Are microcredentials recognised across Europe?
The EU adopted a recommendation on microcredentials in June 2022, encouraging member states to develop national frameworks. Recognition is growing, especially through EDC, Europass and standards-first platforms.
What is EDC and why does it matter?
European Digital Credentials for Learning (EDC) is a verifiable digital credential format developed by the European Commission. It matters because it enables portability, verification and trust across borders.
Can training companies and event organisers issue microcredentials too?
Yes. Microcredentials are relevant for any organisation that certifies learning or participation, including training providers, conference organisers, professional associations and employers.
See how Credentium turns European standards into a working issuance workflow
Credentium is a European microcredentials platform built around EDC, ELM, Europass and qualified electronic seals.