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    This area focuses on the development and improvement of transport and mobility systems, covering all modes of transport, including urban mobility and public transportation. Actions aiming at improving transport connections through traffic and transport planning, rehabilitation and modernisation of infrastructure, better connectivity, and enhanced accessibility. Projects promoting multimodal transport and logistics, optimising intermodal transport chains, offering sustainable and efficient logistics solutions, and developing multimodal mobility strategies. Also, initiatives establishing cooperation among logistic centres and providing access to clean, efficient, and multimodal transport corridors and hubs. 

    Activities focusing on the sustainable development and strategic planning of urban, regional, and rural areas. This includes urban development such as city planning, urban renewal, and strengthening urban-rural links through climate adaptation, sustainable mobility, water efficiency, participatory processes, smart cities, and the regeneration of public urban spaces. Regional planning and development cover the implementation of regional policies and programmes, sustainable land use management plans, integrated regional action plans, spatial planning, and the efficient management of marine protected areas. Rural and peripheral development addresses the challenges of remote and sparsely populated areas by fostering rural community development, enhancing rural economies, improving access to remote regions, and promoting tailored policies for rural sustainability and growth. 

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Call key data

Consolidation of the Network of European Digital Innovation Hubs (EDIHs with reinforced AI focus)

Funding Program

Digital Europe

Call number

DIGITAL-2026-EDIH-EU-EEA-09-CONSOLIDATION-STEP

deadlines

Opening
04.11.2025

Deadline
03.03.2026 17:00

Funding rate

50%

Call budget

€ 79,200,000.00

Estimated EU contribution per project

between € 1,000,000.00 and € 3,000,000.00

Link to the call

Link to the submission

Call content

short description

The objective of this call is the consolidation of the network of European Digital Innovation Hubs (EDIHs) aiming to cover all regions of the European Union and Associated Countries by strengthening its performance and capacity to meet local, regional, national and European digitalisation needs.

Call objectives

With increased experience and capacities, the EDIHs will continue providing the complete set of services of an EDIH, including the necessary infrastructure, focusing primarily on specific geographical areas and covering the digital transformation needs of local SMEs, mid-caps and/or public sector organisations. Considering the transformation potential of AI technologies, these will be a reinforced focus of EDIHs’ operations under this call.

The consolidation of the EDIHs network will be pivotal in supporting the wide deployment and uptake of European AI technologies, solutions and tools and in promoting the adoption of other crucial digital technologies, while upholding Union values and human-centric perspective.

Furthermore, the network will harness the potential of green digital technologies, advancing Europe’s collective climate and environmental goals. This approach not only enhances the resilience of Europe’s industry but also boosts its strategic autonomy. With its enhanced presence in countries associated to Digital Europe, the EDIH network will help bridge technology gaps, and support competitiveness and economic convergence. 

EDIHs are part of the AI innovation ecosystems in the EU which also encompass infrastructures such as AI Factories, AI Testing and Experimentation Facilities (TEFs), AI on Demand Platform implemented through the Deploy AI Initiative, and the forthcoming AI skills Academy, Generative AI pilots for public administrations and AI Regulatory sandboxes.

The EDIHs will closely collaborate with European AI innovation infrastructures, inparticular with AI factories and future Gigafactories, the AI-on-demand platform and AI Testing and Experimentation Facilities to ensure a flexible  journey for European companies to benefit fully from these AI innovation infrastructures.

Each EDIH will provide services based on a specific focus and expertise, which will support the local private and public sector with their digital transformation with particular focus on support to development, training deployment and uptake of European AI. This specialisation can be strengthened over time and should make use of existing local competencies in this area.

The EDIH network is dedicated to promoting and facilitating the digital transformation of SMEs and public services through four types of services:

  • Test before invest: providing access to technical expertise and experimentation facilities, in particular to AI-related services.
  • Training and skill development: offering training sessions to SMEs and public services for upskilling and reskilling of the workforce, including on the adoption and use of AI technologies.
  • Support to identify and facilitate access to potential financing sources to support digital transformation.
  • Foster an innovation ecosystem and networking opportunities

Each EDIH is expected to provide all four types of services. They can however have different weights in the overall services portfolio. The services will be provided on an open, transparent and non-discriminatory basis and will be targeted mainly to (1) SMEs and mid-caps and/or (2) public sector organisations conducting non-economic activities.

Each EDIH will act as an access point to the European network of EDIHs, helping local companies and/or public actors to get support from other EDIHs in case the needed competences fall outside their remit, ensuring that every stakeholder gets the needed support wherever it is available in Europe. Reversely, each EDIH will support the companies and public actors from other regions and countries presented by other EDIHs that need their expertise. The EDIHs will also serve as contact point for the AI innovation infrastructures as described above, notably the AI factories, AI-on-demand platform and TEFs, and offer a first-line AI help desk to businesses and public sector organisations, including basic information on compliance with the AI Act as well relevant sources of further information and ensuring a broad adoption of strategic technologies supporting the development of an AI continent and implementing the Apply AI strategy. These helpdesks by EDIHs shall further coordinate with the DTA on replies and new questions on the AI Act.

Each EDIH will make available the relevant experimentation facilities and demonstrators related to its specialisation. SMEs, mid-caps and the public sector will be able to demonstrate, prototype and test the technologies proposed, including where relevant their environmental impact, and the feasibility of applying these technologies to their business before further investing in it. Likewise, EDIHs will harness the potential of green digital technologies, advancing Europe’s collective climate and environmental goals.

EDIHs will also provide access to finance services including providing information and facilitating access to public and private funding sources as well as to public and private investors.

The EDIHs will be active in networking with other hubs, sharing best practices and specialist knowledge, in bringing companies into contact with other companies of their value chain, and in seeking synergies with innovators and early adopters that test solutions in novel experiments and can foster the adoption of digital technologies, and notably AI, in working and business environments in a more human-friendly way. EDIHs will also play a brokering role between public administrations and companies providing e-government technologies.

In all the networking activities, EDIHs will be supported by the Digital Transformation Accelerator (DTA) and therefore it is compulsory that EDIHs participate actively in the relevant support activities of the Digital Transformation Accelerator, such as matchmaking, training and capacity building events. The Digital Transformation Accelerator in cooperation with the Commission will also host tools, such as the Digital Maturity Assessment Tool, and have the role to centralise overall Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) of the network, and therefore each EDIH will report the necessary information to the DTA. EDIHs are encouraged to make use of the digital tools provided but are also free to use their own tools. However, interoperability with the EDIH network tools is a requirement, so that users of the EDIHs will have a seamless experience.

DTA will organize events and activities for the network of EDIH, to share information and experiences, train, build cohesion. EDIHs should foresee active participation in those events and activities.

EDIHs will collaborate with the EU AI Innovation infrastructures and will become a central point for companies and public sector ensuring a flexible and seamless digital journey and referring them to the services provided by these AI innovation infrastructures where appropriate. This collaboration does NOT mean that EDIHs need to integrate a representative of each EU AI infrastructures in their own consortium. It means that EDIHs have to map out these infrastructures, establish contacts with them and help their customer benefit from the services provided by the other initiatives in a client journey perspective. These collaborations will not only accelerate the deployment of AI technologies but also ensure that these technologies are applied effectively and ethically. EDIHs will play a pivotal role in bridging the gap between AI research and real-world applications, driving economic growth and improving public services across Europe.

The EDIHs will act as a multiplier and widely diffuse the use of all the digital capacities built up under the different specific objectives of the Digital Europe Programme and including the effective use of key digital standards. To the extent possible, the EDIHs should use the AI solutions of European start-ups and SMEs and/or those provided and stemming from EU projects, including from the AI-on-Demand Platform.

Highlighting the vital importance to strengthen the value chains of critical digital technologies, the EDIHs should closely collaborate with AI Factories and future Gigafactories as well as with the High-Performance Computing competence centres. Where relevant, the EDIHs will facilitate access for their customers to the EuroHPC AI-optimised supercomputers. They will also help SMEs fine-tune available AI solutions to their business needs and use cases by providing, wherever needed, also access to AI training.

It should be avoided that there is duplication of actions of the other AI innovation infrastructures and the EDIHs, and therefore working arrangements will be agreed among them, where the focus of the EDIHs will be on their role as multiplier and reaching out to all regions in Europe. Proposals will describe the planned delivery of AI services and referral mechanisms.

EDIHs will maintain structured long-term relationships with the relevant local actors like regional authorities, industrial clusters, SME associations, business development agencies, incubators, accelerators, chambers of commerce, and partners of the Enterprise Europe Network (EEN), Cybersecurity Centers and Startup Europe by offering joint investor-related events, organising common trainings, workshops or info days, referring SMEs from EEN to EDIHs and from EDIHs to EEN according to their specific needs. It is expected that local actors planning mutual support with a local EDIH will sign a Memorandum of Understanding for a proper governance of their collaboration.

Additionally, EDIHs will serve as an interface for the European Commission to support the implementation of specific sectorial policies, SME policies and eGovernment policies. This will imply that EDIHs specialised in a specific sector could be consulted on policies related to their sector of competence and could participate in specific actions.

EDIHs will design operations to achieve sustainability level beyond the implementation and will indicate how they will build local capacity, foster community ownership, and integrate the initiative into their ecosystems.

Price list

Proposals have to include a list of the services to be provided to SMEs and public sector, and make available online. The list will enumerate the services by category, indicating the target clients, the nominal service price, the amount of State aid passed on by the EDIHs and the remaining amount that the clients have to pay, if applicable. A first list is a requirement in the proposal.

This list is necessary to comply with the State aid regulations, even when the services will be offered for free or at a discount, as explained in the Work Programme, Appendix 6. In case the price list will be modified in terms of e.g., new services, updated prices or discount conditions, the new price list will be made public online and will be included in the periodic report.

The total public funding for this action may be up to 100% of eligible costs (50% coming from the Digital Europe Programme and up to 50% coming from the Member States). Proposals will describe their co-funding sources (e.g. public funding and remaining amounts to be paid by customers) and how they will achieve economic sustainability for their operations. In line with Appendix 6 on State Aid, Member States have to ensure that State aid is granted in line with the applicable State aid rules, such as de minimis or GBER (ensuring compliance with GBER compatibility conditions, including on aid intensities and notification thresholds set out in Article 4 GBER).

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Expected effects and impacts

KPIs to measure outcomes and deliverables
The following indicators will be used to evaluate the performance of the hub; proposals should define their indicators as well as the targets related to each of them:

  • Number of entities which have used the European Digital Innovation Hubs’ services, by user category (businesses of different sizes, public sector entities, etc.), sector, location, by technology and type of service received (test-before-invest, training, access to finance, networking). Specific sub- indicators have to be proposed when the services are related to develop and uptake AI solutions, and will include a description of which European AI Innovation Infrastructures have been used (such as the AI-on-Demand platform) or referred to (such as the AI Factories).
  • Number of entity referral to European AI Innovation Infrastructures
  • For access to finance: amount of additional investments successfully triggered (e.g. through venture capital, bank loan, etc.).
  • Number of collaborations foreseen with other EDIHs and stakeholders outside the region at EU level, and description of jointly shared infrastructures / joint investments with other EDIHs.

A set of additional impact indicators will be collected and analysed with the support of the Digital Transformation Accelerator:

  • Increase in digital maturity of organizations that have used the services of the EDIH network. Digital maturity will be defined on the basis of a questionnaire assessing the categories of digital strategy and readiness, intelligence and automation, data and connectedness, sustainable and human-centric digitalisation. EDIHs will administer the questionnaire at the start of the engagement with a client, and later after having delivered services, and report without delay the results to the DTA repository. An updated simpler questionnaire is being developed by the Joint Research Centre.
  • Increase in number of companies benefiting from the use of European AI technology.

Targeted stakeholders
A European Digital Innovation Hub (EDIH) is a single entity or a coordinated group of entities with complementary expertise and a not-for-profit objective to support on a large scale the digital transformation of companies (especially SMEs and mid-caps) and/or public sector organisations.

Typical entities contributing to an EDIH will be tech and business developers with experience in digitalisation and digital innovations, research & technology organisation (RTO) or university labs offering technology services (beyond academic R&I), which could work in collaboration with partners whose expertise lies in business financing, public sector innovation or training such as for example chambers of commerce, industrial clusters, industry associations, local Enterprise Europe Network centres (EEN), accelerators, vocational training centres or others.

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Expected results

Each EDIH will support the digital transformation of SMEs, mid-caps, and public sector organizations within its geographical area and area of expertise, while also aiming to extend its impact beyond its immediate region. An EDIH can select to focus on specific group(s) of clients (e.g. mainly SMEs or mainly public sector).

Each selected project will provide the four core types of services (testing before investing, training and skills development, support to find investments, networking and access to innovation ecosystems) covering a wide range of digitalisation needs, from mainstream technologies and AI capacities to specialised technologies. The services will be provided seamlessly, through proxies when required, maintaining consistency and accessibility for stakeholders. EDIHs complement and build synergies with existing regional and national initiatives, collaborate with the EU AI Innovation infrastructures and will become a central point for companies and public sector ensuring a flexible and seamless digital journey and referring them to the services provided by these AI innovation infrastructures where appropriate.

All together, EDIHs will contribute to consolidation of a balanced network of EDIHs, ensuring the broadest coverage of regions in Europe, addressing the needs of public and private sectors across all economic sectors, fostering cross-regional collaboration and resource sharing and offering a wide range of digitalisation services, from mainstream to specialised technologies.

Each EDIH will carry out Digital Maturity Assessments for their clients, using the tools provided by the Commission and DTA, and deliver services leading to greater digitalisation of their clients as well as to their adoption of AI. While not all services need to be preceded by a Digital Maturity Assessment, EDIHs are encouraged to use it as often as practically possible.

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Eligibility Criteria

Regions / countries for funding

EU Member States, Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT)
Moldova (Moldova), Albania (Shqipëria), Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosna i Hercegovina / Босна и Херцеговина), Iceland (Ísland), Kosovo (Kosova/Kosovë / Косово), Liechtenstein, Montenegro (Црна Гора), North Macedonia (Северна Македонија), Norway (Norge), Serbia (Srbija/Сpбија), Switzerland (Schweiz/Suisse/Svizzera), Türkiye, Ukraine (Україна)

eligible entities

Education and training institution, Non-Profit Organisation (NPO) / Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Other, Private institution, incl. private company (private for profit), Public Body (national, regional and local; incl. EGTCs), Research Institution incl. University, Small and medium-sized enterprise (SME)

Mandatory partnership

Yes

Project Partnership

Proposals must be submitted by candidate European Digital innovation Hubs originating from existing EDIHs funded by the Digital Europe Programme and EDIHs with a Seal of Excellence as listed in the Commission Implementing Decision 2023/1534 establishing the Initial Network of EDIHs (see also Section 5.3.2), in Annex I (List of European Digital Innovation Hubs retained for funding by the Digital Europe Programme) and Annex II (List of European Digital Innovation Hubs with a Seal of Excellence). The candidate EDIH will indicate as previous proposal the number and acronym of the original EDIH as listed in the Annexes of the Decision. In the case of several EDIHs submitting a joint proposal, the proposal will list all the original EDIHs from which it originates.

A candidate EDIH may change the composition of the original consortium, and/or the coordinating entity of the EDIH.

Two or more EDIH proposals may be submitted from the same original EDIH consortium. However, in this case, after evaluation, only one candidate EDIH at most will be retained as successor of the original EDIH.

Furthermore, after consulting with Digital Europe Programme Committee, proposals must be submitted by eligible EDIHs from the territories listed in section 3, and with the specific focus as defined in the table in section 3.

In particular, some countries with no budget allocation are eligible for candidate EDIHs aiming at getting the STEP Seal. These candidate EDIHs will not receive any funding of Digital Europe Programme. However, if their country will support them with national or regional funding, the STEP Seal allows them to become full members of the EDIH network. EDIHs which have already received a STEP Seal after DIGITAL-2025-EDIH-CONSOLIDATION-EU-EEA-08 do not need to reapply.


In order to be eligible, the applicants (beneficiaries and affiliated entities) must:

  • be legal entities (public or private bodies)
  • be established in one of the eligible countries, i.e.:
    • EU Member States (including overseas countries and territories (OCTs))
    • non-EU countries (except for topics with restrictions; see below):

Financial support to third parties is not allowed.

This Call reinforces the continuation of EDIH services started either as an EDIH co-funded by the Programme or as an EDIH with a Seal of Excellence. Proposals wil
clearly describe how the proposal builds on previous achievements and learns from past experience to ensure an efficient implementation (addressed e.g. under the Maturity sub-criterion) and even greater impact.

other eligibility criteria

Specific cases and definitions

Natural persons are NOT eligible (with the exception of selfemployed persons, i.e. sole traders, where the company does not have legal personality separate from that of the natural person).

International organisations are NOT eligible, unless they are International organisations of European Interest within the meaning of Article 2 of the Digital Europe Regulation (i.e. international organisations the majority of whose members are Member States or whose headquarters are in a Member State).

Entities which do not have legal personality under their national law may exceptionally participate, provided that their representatives have the capacity to undertake legal obligations on their behalf, and offer guarantees for the protection of the EU financial interests equivalent to that offered by legal persons.

EU bodies (with the exception of the European Commission Joint Research Centre) can NOT be part of the consortium.

Entities composed of members may participate as ‘sole beneficiaries’ or ‘beneficiaries without legal personality’. Please note thatif the action will be implemented by the members, they should also participate (either as beneficiaries or as affiliated entities, otherwise their costs will NOT be eligible).

Beneficiaries from countries with ongoing negotiations for participating in the programme (see list of participating countries above) may participate in the call and can sign grants if the negotiations are concluded before grant signature and if the association covers the call (i.e. is retroactive and covers both the part of the programme and the year when the call was launched).

Special rules apply for entities subject to EU restrictive measures under Article 29 of the Treaty on the European Union (TEU) and Article 215 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU). Such entities are not eligible to participate in any capacity, including as beneficiaries, affiliated entities, associated partners, subcontractors or recipients of financial support to third parties (if any).

Special rules apply for entities subject to measures adopted on the basis of EU Regulation 2020/2092. Such entities are not eligible to participate in any funded role (beneficiaries, affiliated entities, subcontractors, recipients of financial support to third parties, etc). Currently such measures are in place for Hungarian public interest trusts established under the Hungarian Act IX of 2021 or any entity they maintain (see Council Implementing Decision (EU) 2022/2506, as of 16 December 2022).

Additional information

Topics

Digitalisation, Digital Society, ICT

Relevance for EU Macro-Region

EUSDR - EU Strategy for the Danube Region, EUSBSR - EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, EUSALP - EU Strategy for the Alpine Space, EUSAIR - EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region

UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs)

project duration

36 months

Additional Information

Proposals must be complete and contain all the requested information and all required annexes and supporting documents:

  • Application Form Part A — contains administrative information about the participants (future coordinator, beneficiaries and affiliated entities) and the summarised budget for the project (to be filled in directly online)
  • Application Form Part B — contains the technical description of the project (template to be downloaded from the Portal Submission System, completed, assembled and re-uploaded)
  • mandatory annexes and supporting documents (templates to be downloaded from the Portal Submission System, completed, assembled and reuploaded):
    • list of previous projects (key projects, notably previous EDIH operations, for the last 2 years) (template available in Part B)
    • 2022/2023 letter of designation by the Member State. This is the original document demonstrating that the submitted proposal was designated by the Member State, and can be in any appropriate format (e.g.: copy of a letter, link to a government web site, etc.). The European Commission will verify the information submitted against the Commission Implementing Decision 2023/1534 establishing the Initial Network of EDIHs, and with the corresponding Member State if necessary.
    • In the other annexes, please merge the different documents that are related to:
    • List of services and prices (highly recommended)
    • Summary of your KPIs and targets, with proper references to part B for explanation (highly recommended)
    • your support letter(s) (optional)
    • Memorandum of Understanding with other EDIHs or European AI innovation infrastructures (optional)

Proposals are limited to maximum 70 pages (Part B).

Contact

Digital Europe NCPs
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