The card's compatibility with standard
X.509 and
TLS infrastructure by providing a
client certificate to each person has made it a convenient means of identification for use of web-based government services in Estonia (see
e-Government). All major banks, many financial and other web services support ID-card based authentication. Adding support of Estonian ID-card based identification is very simple nowadays because majority of used browsers, web servers and other software supports TLS (SSL) client-certificate based authentication and Estonian ID-card use exactly that system.
Web discussion forums Web commentary columns of some Estonian newspapers, most notably
Eesti Päevaleht, used to support ID-card based authentication for comments. This approach caused some controversy in the internet community.
Public transport Larger cities in Estonia, such as
Tallinn and
Tartu, have arrangements making it possible for residents to purchase "virtual" transportation tickets linked to their ID-cards. Period tickets can be bought online via electronic bank transfer, by
SMS, or at public kiosks. This process usually takes less than a few minutes and the ticket is instantly active from the moment of purchase or since the first use of the ticket. Customers also have the option of requesting e-mail or SMS notification alerting them when the ticket is about to expire, or of setting up automatic renewal through internet banking services. To use the virtual ticket, customers must carry their ID-card with them whenever they use public transport. During a routine ticket check, users are asked to present their ID-card, which is then inserted into a special device. This device then confirms that the user holds a valid ticket, and also warns if the ticket is about to expire. The ticket check usually takes less than a second. Ticket information is stored in a central database, not on the ID-card itself. Thus, to order a ticket, it is not necessary to have an ID-card reader. Ticket controllers have access to a local archive of the master database. If the ticket was purchased after the local archive was updated, the ticket device is able to confirm the ticket from the master database over mobile data link.
Electronic voting The Estonian ID-card is also used for authentication in Estonia's
Internet-based voting program called
i-Voting. In February 2007, Estonia was the first country in the world to institute electronic voting for
parliamentary elections. Over 30,000 voters participated in the country's e-election. In the
Parliamentary election of 2011 140,846 votes were cast electronically representing 24% of total votes. The software used in this process is available for
Microsoft Windows,
macOS and
Linux. == Use as a travel document ==