Content
- Introduction
- Which Electronic Signature Is Required for HR Documents
- Do Orders, Applications, and Employment Contracts Signed Electronically Have Legal Force?
- Which HR Documents Can Be Signed Online
- How to Sign an Employment Contract Online
- How to Sign Orders Online
- How to Sign Employee Applications Online
- How to Organize Electronic Signing in Company HR Processes
- Common Mistakes That Lead to Fines, Disputes, and Missed Deadlines
- Conclusions
Paper-based HR documents usually create the same recurring problems: “the document needs to be signed urgently, but the person is working remotely from another country,” “the original was lost,” “will this be accepted during an inspection,” and many others. In companies where part of the team works remotely or in a hybrid format, these situations occur constantly, and with each document the risks only increase.
HR processes are increasingly moving to a digital format to eliminate paper, unnecessary meetings, and dependence on the office. Electronic document management allows HR specialists to create, approve, and store HR documents online without breaking the familiar working logic.
However, for these documents not only to be exchanged but also signed with full legal force, an electronic signature must be part of the process. It is the electronic signature that makes electronic HR document management complete and legally valid. In this article, we explain which type of signature HR should use, which documents can be signed online, how the process works in practice, and how to organize it without chaos.
Which Electronic Signature Is Required for HR Documents
An electronic signature is a way to confirm that an electronic document was signed by a specific person and that this person agrees with its content. In HR processes, the key reference point is a qualified electronic signature (QES).
A QES is an electronic signature that is legally equivalent to a handwritten signature. It allows clear identification of the signer, confirms the integrity of the document, and records the exact time of signing. That is why QES is usually chosen for orders, applications, and employment contracts in HR processes—it provides maximum evidentiary value in case of an inspection or dispute.
A simple rule for HR: if a document can become the subject of an inspection or a conflict, rely on QES. Signature verification always comes down to three things: who signed the document, whether it was changed after signing, and when exactly it was signed.
Do Orders, Applications, and Employment Contracts Signed Electronically Have Legal Force?
Yes, electronic HR documents have legal force, provided that basic requirements are met. What matters is not “how exactly” the document was signed, but whether its authenticity can be confirmed.
In the event of a dispute, the evidence includes:
- the electronic document file;
- the applied electronic signature;
- data about the signer and the time of signing;
- confirmation that the document remained unchanged after signing.
It is also advisable to involve a lawyer if the document contains non-standard contract terms, an international element, or individual executive contracts. In such cases, it is especially important not only how the document is signed, but also how it is worded.
Which HR Documents Can Be Signed Online
As shown in the table, HR documents always involve two parties—the employer and the employee. The difference lies in the roles: for some documents, the employer’s signature with employee acknowledgment is sufficient, while others require signatures from both parties. This must be considered when designing the electronic signing process, rather than trying to apply one scenario to all documents.
Special cases—remote work, employees abroad, or urgent signatures—do not change signature requirements. On the contrary, in such situations the electronic format reduces the most risks: it allows you to identify the signer, record the date and time of signing, and preserve the final version of the document without losing control.
Identify the 10 most common HR documents in your company and who signs them—this is the foundation for starting electronic signing.
How to Sign an Employment Contract Online
First of all, create one standard signing workflow for employment contracts and use it for all new hires.
A typical scenario looks like this:
HR prepares the contract text.
The parties agree on the terms.
The employer signs the contract with QES.
The employee signs the contract with QES.
The document is stored in the HR archive.
If an employee does not have a QES, the options are simple and legal: help them obtain a signature, including through the Vchasno.QES service, use signatures via government services, or postpone signing until identification is completed. Temporary solutions without a signature create risks specifically for the employer, because the document effectively remains unsigned.
How to Sign Orders Online
An order is an employer’s document, but it often requires confirmation from the employee.
There are two common scenarios:
- the manager signs the order, and the employee confirms acknowledgment;
- the document is signed by several parties if required by the process.
Before signing, check the details, date, grounds, attachments, and the approval workflow. In Vchasno, these elements are visible before signing, allowing you to quickly verify the document and avoid mistakes that most often cause issues during inspections.
How to Sign Employee Applications Online
Employee applications are among the most sensitive HR documents because they record a person’s personal decision: to take leave, change the work format, or resign. Therefore, in electronic form it is important not only to prepare the application correctly, but also to clearly confirm that it was submitted by that specific employee.
Most commonly, these are applications for leave, resignation, and remote or hybrid work. In all these cases, the process should be the same: the employee creates the application and signs it with an electronic signature, after which HR or the manager works with an already confirmed document. This records the submission date, content of the application, and the identity of the signer.
Security Rule for HR
Employee applications must be submitted only through the channel defined by the company and must always be signed with an electronic signature. Applications from chats, emails, or unsigned files are not considered valid grounds for HR actions.
How to Organize Electronic Signing in Company HR Processes
If the process is set up correctly from the start, electronic signing works simply and predictably. That is why below we have collected recommendations that companies usually begin with to simplify work and avoid chaos.
1. Define Roles in the Process
Clearly document who prepares HR documents, who approves them, who signs them, and who monitors deadlines. This eliminates situations where a document gets “stuck” between people and no one knows its status.
2. Define a Minimal Policy
To start, a short document is enough, containing at least:
- which HR documents are signed electronically;
- which type of signature is used for each document;
- signing and approval deadlines;
- rules for storing electronic HR documents;
- access rights and roles of employees working with documents.
This does not need to be a legal treatise, it is important that the rules are clear to all participants.
3. Establish Storage Rules
Define a single place where all electronic HR documents are stored and a rule for quickly finding them: by type, date, employee, or event. Separately, determine who has viewing access and who has editing rights.
4. Set Up Deadline Control
HR documents are almost always tied to dates. Therefore, it is important not only to define signing deadlines but also to have a way to monitor compliance without manual reminders in messengers.
5. Reinforce the process in practice
Choose one typical scenario—such as a leave application or an order—and complete it from start to finish using the new rules. After that, the process can easily be scaled to other documents.
In Vchasno.Kadry, this usually looks like a clear workflow: the HR specialist prepares the document, the manager signs it with QES, the employee confirms the signature or acknowledgment, and the final version is automatically stored in the archive with an action history.
Common Mistakes That Lead to Fines, Disputes, and Missed Deadlines
Problems with electronic signatures in HR almost never arise because of technology. Most often, the reason is much simpler—the process was not fully thought through or was handled “on the go.” Over time, these gaps turn into disputes, fines, or missed deadlines when a document suddenly becomes critically important.
1. Incorrect Signature or Missing Employee Signature
The document was signed with the wrong type of signature or the employee’s signature or acknowledgment was not obtained where required. This is the most common cause of disputes and inspection remarks.
How to avoid it: define a clear list of HR documents and specify which signature and whose signature is required in each case.
2. No Single Final Version of the Document
Edits are stored in correspondence, files, and drafts of different process participants.
How to avoid it: work with one working document and fix a single final version after signing, without changes.
3. Edits After Signing
Any changes after a signature is applied make the document legally vulnerable because the signature no longer confirms its content.
How to avoid it: agree on the text before signing, and formalize all changes as a separate document or addendum.
4. No Workflow or Deadline Control
There is no clear understanding of who prepares the document, who approves it, who signs it, and who monitors deadlines.
How to avoid it: define the approval workflow, signing deadlines, and responsible persons for each document type.
5. Chaos with Access and Storage
HR documents are stored in email, chats, and personal drives. During an inspection or dispute, finding the required file takes significant time.
How to avoid it: define a single storage location for HR documents, access roles, and clear navigation rules.
Conclusions
Electronic signatures in HR mean security, control, and peace of mind. QES provides legal force, a clear list of documents removes doubt, and a well-designed process allows you to work without paper and running around for signatures. Start with one scenario, test it in practice, and scale it further.


