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Iraq National Card
View on Wikipedia| National Card البطاقة الوطنية (Arabic) كارتى نيشتمانى (Kurdish) | |
|---|---|
| Type | Compulsory identity document |
| Issued by | |
| First issued | September 13, 2015 |
| Purpose | Citizenship and Identification |
| Valid in | |
| Eligibility | Iraqi citizenship |
| Expiration | 10 years after issuance |
| Cost | 6,000 dinar (first/renewal) |
The Iraqi National Card is an biometric identity card issued by the Ministry of Interior from January 1, 2016. It replaced the Nationality Certificate and Civil Identification Document and the Residency Card. This card has a high security platform and is connected directly to the Iraqi Civil System, and can be used to travel within Iraq and Syria.
History
[edit]The Ministry of Interior awarded Giesecke & Devrient the contract for this project on October 31, 2013. The National Card was first issued starting September 13, 2015 and is rolling out to each of the 190 districts of Iraq over a period of several years with the goal of issuing an ID card to every Iraqi citizen.

Design
[edit]The new National Card is an ID-1 (credit card size) polycarbonate card with an embedded RFID chip. It is covered with multi-color guillochés. All the information on it is given in Arabic and Kurdish.
Front side
[edit]The front side shows the coat of arms of Iraq and the words "جمهورية العراق / Republic of Iraq", "وزارة الداخلية / Ministry of Interior" and "مديرية الجنسية العامة / General Directorate of Nationality". It contains the following information:
- Photo of ID card holder
- National identification number(12 decimal digits)
- Access number for RFID chip (9 alphanumeric digits)
- Given name
- Father's name
- Grandfather's name (paternal)
- Surname (only if holder has one)
- Mother's name
- Grandfather's name (maternal)
- Gender
- Blood type
Rear side
[edit]- Issuing authority
- Date of expiry (YYYY/MM/DD)
- Date of issue (YYYY/MM/DD)
- Place of birth (only the city/town of birth, no country)
- Date of birth (YYYY/MM/DD)
- Family number (18 alphanumeric digits)
- Machine-readable zone
Machine-readable zone
[edit]The MRZ is structured according to the ICAO standard for machine-readable ID cards.
First line
[edit]| positions | text | meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1-2 | ID | Identity Document |
| 3-5 | IRQ | issuing country: Iraq (IRQ) |
| 6-14 | alphanumeric digits | Access number for RFID chip (2 alphabetic digits + 7 decimal digits) |
| 15 | decimal digit | check digit over 6-14 |
| 16-27 | decimal digit | document number (12 decimal digits) |
Second line
[edit]| positions | text | meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1-6 | decimal digits | date of birth (YYMMDD) |
| 7 | decimal digit | check digit over 1-6 |
| 8 | alphabetic digit | Gender (Male/Female) |
| 9-14 | decimal digits | date of expire (YYMMDD) |
| 15 | decimal digit | check digit over 9-14 |
| 16-18 | IRQ | nationality of holder: Iraqi (IRQ) |
| 30 | decimal digit | check digit over 6-30 (upper line), 1-7, 9-15, 19-29 (middle line) |
Third line
[edit]| positions | text | meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1-30 | alphabetic digits | GIVEN<NAME |
Empty spaces are represented by "<".
Security features
[edit]The identity card contains the following security features: It has an RFID chip.
Cost
[edit]It costs 5,000 Iraqi dinars for a new card application, which is equal to US$4.
| Description | Cost |
|---|---|
| issue 1st time / renewal | 5,000 د.ع |
| replace broken or corrupt card | 10,000 د.ع |
| replace lost card 1st time | 25,000 د.ع |
| replace lost card 2nd time | 50,000 د.ع |
| replace lost card after 2nd time | 100,000 د.ع |
| update picture | 1,000 د.ع |
| make correction or addition | 1,000 د.ع |
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Official website
- Iraqi General Directorate For Nationality Archived 2019-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
Notes
[edit]
Iraq National Card
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-2016 Identification Systems
Prior to 2016, Iraqi identification relied on a decentralized system of paper-based documents managed by the Civil Status Directorate under the Ministry of Interior, with no unified biometric national card.[7] The primary document was the Civil Status Identification Card (CSID), known locally as bitaqat al-ahwal al-madaniya or gensiya, which all Iraqi nationals were required to possess for accessing services, travel, and legal transactions.[8] Issued pursuant to Article 65 of the Iraqi Nationality Law of 1972, the CSID contained essential personal details including the holder's full name, date and place of birth, gender, religion, blood type, family registry number, a photograph, and a unique serial number linked to civil registry records.[7] These cards were typically valid for life but required renewal for damage, loss, or updates, with issuance beginning from adolescence or adulthood following birth registration in the family registry system.[8] Complementing the CSID was the Iraqi Nationality Certificate, a separate document certifying citizenship and often required for passports, employment, or residency abroad.[9] This certificate, also derived from civil registry data, included verification of descent from Iraqi parents or naturalization, but its absence could bar individuals from formal identification processes. Additional auxiliary documents included the Public Distribution System (PDS) card, used for rationing food and subsidies since the 1990s under UN oversight during sanctions, which informally served as proof of identity in daily transactions despite lacking photos or comprehensive biometrics.[10] Residency cards were issued for internal movement or provincial verification, particularly in areas with ethnic or sectarian divisions. Under the Ba'athist regime prior to 2003, this framework emphasized centralized control via the civil registry, but enforcement was inconsistent due to political purges and resource shortages.[7] Post-2003 invasion, the system faced severe disruptions from conflict, record destruction, and displacement, leading to widespread forgery and reliance on multiple documents for verification.[11] U.S.-led biometric initiatives from 2007 onward introduced ad-hoc iris and fingerprint scanning at checkpoints for security screening against insurgent databases, enrolling millions but not integrating into a civilian national ID framework.[12] These efforts, coordinated with Iraqi forces via systems like the Automated Biometric Identification System (ABIS), focused on counter-terrorism rather than everyday identification, leaving civilians dependent on fragile paper records vulnerable to loss in violence or migration.[13] By 2015, an estimated tens of millions of CSIDs remained in circulation, but gaps in documentation affected up to 20% of the population, exacerbating access to banking, voting, and public services.[8] The absence of a single, secure identifier contributed to administrative inefficiencies and security risks, prompting the shift to the biometric National Card under Law No. 3 of 2016.[14]Development and Launch (2016 Onward)
The National Card Law No. 3 of 2016 provided the legal foundation for Iraq's unified national identity system, mandating the Ministry of Interior to establish a centralized civil information database and issue biometric cards with unique national numbers to all registered Iraqi citizens.[1] [14] Enacted to consolidate fragmented documentation amid post-conflict reconstruction needs, the law superseded prior regulations on domicile and residence, aiming to curb fraud, improve security vetting, and enable digital service delivery by integrating fingerprints and other biometrics.[2] The Directorate of National Card Affairs, under the Ministry of Interior's General Directorate of Nationality, was designated as the issuing authority, with cards valid for 10 years and renewable only in the holder's home governorate.[15] [2] Issuance commenced on January 1, 2016, marking the official launch of the electronic biometric Unified National Card, which replaced the civil status identity card (CSID), Iraqi nationality certificate (INC), and residency card as primary proofs of identity.[15] [2] Enrollment required in-person visits to local civil status directorates for biometric capture, including fingerprints and photographs, to verify against the national database; existing CSIDs remained valid during the transition but were phased out as national cards proliferated.[2] The system was positioned to support freedom of movement, access to healthcare, education, and banking, while addressing gaps in identification exacerbated by ISIS disruptions to civil registries.[15] Early rollout encountered delays due to infrastructure limitations, security constraints in contested areas, and the need for extensive database reconciliation, resulting in gradual adoption through 2017 and beyond.[2] By mid-2017, distribution had expanded to select provinces, but full nationwide coverage lagged, with not all security checkpoints equipped for biometric validation initially.[16] [2] The program's development emphasized interoperability with e-government platforms, though implementation relied on federal authority, creating tensions with semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government offices that aligned partially by issuing compatible cards.[2]Expansion and Enrollment Milestones
The Iraq National Card program, which established a centralized electronic civil register in 2013, began issuing biometric electronic identity documents in 2015. In its inaugural year, over 1 million cards were distributed nationwide, marking the initial phase of replacing older civil status and nationality cards with a unified biometric system.[17] Enrollment accelerated in subsequent years, supported by the deployment of registration infrastructure across the country. By 2020, more than 18 million cards had been issued, reflecting significant progress in digitizing civil records and integrating biometric data for over 95% of family books.[17] This milestone underscored the system's role in enhancing administrative efficiency amid post-conflict reconstruction challenges. Further expansion occurred through the operation of over 320 local registration offices, enabling broader access to issuance and renewal services. As of March 2023, approximately 37.2 million cards were in circulation, increasing to nearly 39 million by October 2024.[18] The program reached 40 million issued cards by January 2025, covering a substantial portion of Iraq's estimated population of around 45 million.[17] To address gaps for Iraqis abroad, the system expanded in 2024 to include registration at Iraqi embassies and consulates, starting with facilities like Washington, D.C., without requiring return to Iraq. This initiative, coordinated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, aims to serve the diaspora through 15 overseas passport offices and up to 26 missions, facilitating remote biometric enrollment.[18]Physical and Technical Design
Card Layout and Visual Elements
The Iraq National Card is a credit card-sized plastic document measuring approximately 85.6 mm by 54 mm, constructed from durable material with an embedded RFID chip visible as a small rectangular element on the front surface. It incorporates multi-colored guilloché patterns—intricate, fine-line designs in red, white, black, and green hues echoing the national flag—for aesthetic and basic visual security against reproduction.[2] The front layout centers national symbols at the top, including the coat of arms of Iraq depicting the Eagle of Saladin clutching a shield with the national flag colors, flanked by Arabic script. Accompanying text reads "Republic of Iraq" (جمهورية العراق), "Ministry of Interior" (وزارة الداخلية), and "General Directorate of Nationality" (مديرية الجنسية). The holder's color photograph, sized 35 mm by 45 mm with a neutral expression and white background, occupies the right side. Personal data fields on the left and below include a unique 12-digit national ID number, a 9-alphanumeric access code, full name in Arabic and Kurdish (incorporating father's and grandfather's names per tribal nomenclature), tribal affiliation, sex, and blood type.[2][19] The reverse side features administrative details such as the issuing authority (regional Civil Status Directorate), date of issue, expiry date (valid for 10 years from issuance), date and place of birth, and an 18-alphanumeric family linkage number for genealogical tracking. A machine-readable zone spans the bottom edge in three lines of alphanumeric code for automated scanning. All text uses Arabic script primarily, with Kurdish variants where applicable, ensuring readability in official contexts.[2]
