“Made in Europe” is a start, not the finish.
Sovmark defines what European tech sovereignty actually means — European-established, European-owned, running on European infrastructure — and puts your claim on a public record for free.
EuroCompany
Is the legal entity subject only to European jurisdiction?
- European-established
- European-owned
- Runs on European tech
EuroOperated
Is the data hosted on European soil and run in a sovereign datacentre?
- European-established
- European-owned
- Runs on European tech
EuroSovereign
Are the company and its supply chain both European?
- European-established
- European-owned
- Runs on European tech
How it works
Grab a badge, tell us what you're claiming, you're on the list.
01
Check the criteria
Each badge links to a precise, versioned, public definition. Read exactly what you’d be attesting.
02
Attest publicly
Fill a short form: company, domain, which claims, one sentence on how you meet each. No audit. No fee. No distracting bureaucracy.
03
Display & link
Add the badge to your site and link it back to your public registry entry so anyone can verify.
Questions, answered.
- Why isn't hosting in an EU datacentre enough?
- A non-EU provider can be compelled under its home jurisdiction — such as the US CLOUD Act — to hand over data even when the servers are physically in the EU. That's why EuroOperated asks who runs it, not just where it sits. See the EuroOperated criteria →
- Can't I just say this myself?
- You can — but a self-claim means whatever its author wants it to. Sovmark is one shared standard: every badge certifies against the same strict, versioned criteria, so the claim means the same thing for every company — and it sits on a dated, public record anyone can check.
- What's in it for my company?
- A public, checkable commitment instead of a marketing line. It signals to customers, partners, and buyers who care about European digital sovereignty that your stack genuinely meets a defined bar.
- My supplier uses Sovmark. What does that mean?
- A Sovmark badge means the company publicly claims to meet a defined set of standards for European digital sovereignty, certified against specific, dated criteria. Sovmark doesn't audit those claims — but a badge lets you identify European suppliers faster, with less back-and-forth. If sovereignty is a hard requirement for you, always ask the supplier for evidence that they meet the criteria their badge claims.