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March 2, 2026·7 min read·e-signature, contracts, legal, documents

What Is an Electronic Signature, and Is It Legally Binding?

Most people overthink electronic signatures. Here is what they are, why courts accept them, and the handful of things that actually matter.

The first time I sent a contract for electronic signature, I half expected someone to tell me it did not count. It felt too easy. You click a box, you type your name or draw a squiggle with your mouse, and somehow that is supposed to bind two companies to a six-figure agreement. After a few years of running a company that lives and dies by contracts, I can tell you the easy version is the real version. It counts. But it helps to understand why, so you stop hesitating and start closing.

This is not legal advice, and your situation may have wrinkles I cannot see from here. Treat this as a working founder explaining how the plumbing fits together, then go ask a lawyer about anything that touches real money or real risk.

What an electronic signature actually is

An electronic signature is any electronic sound, symbol, or process attached to a record and adopted by a person with the intent to sign. That is roughly how the law defines it, and the breadth is the point. A typed name at the bottom of an email can qualify. A checkbox that says you agree can qualify. Drawing your signature on a touchpad qualifies. The form is flexible because the law cares about intent and attribution far more than it cares about whether the mark looks like your handwriting.

Compare that to the mental model most of us inherited, where a signature is a specific squiggle that a handwriting expert could verify. That model never really worked anyway. The value of a signature was never the ink. It was the evidence that a specific person agreed to specific terms at a specific time. Electronic signatures simply capture that evidence better than paper ever did.

Why it holds up in court

In the United States, the ESIGN Act of 2000 and the state-level UETA give electronic signatures the same legal standing as wet-ink signatures for most commercial agreements. In the European Union, the eIDAS regulation does the same and goes further by defining tiers of signature with different evidentiary weight. The short version is that across the markets most of us sell into, a contract is not less enforceable because it was signed electronically.

The deeper truth is that enforceability rarely turns on the signature method at all. If a dispute ever lands in front of a judge, the questions are whether the parties intended to agree, whether you can show who signed, and whether the document was tampered with afterward. A good electronic signature workflow answers all three better than a printed PDF someone scanned on their phone.

The pieces that actually matter

  • Intent to sign. The signer has to do something deliberate. A buried checkbox in tiny gray text is weaker than a clear sign here action.
  • Attribution. You need to tie the signature to a real person. Email verification, an access link sent to a known address, and IP capture all help.
  • Consent to do business electronically. In consumer contexts especially, the signer should agree to use electronic records at all.
  • An audit trail. A tamper-evident record of who did what and when is the single most valuable artifact you will ever produce around a contract.
  • Document integrity. After signing, the file should be sealed so any later change is detectable.

Where electronic signatures hit limits

There are categories where the rules are stricter or where wet ink is still expected. Wills, certain family law documents, some property transfers, and a few notarized instruments can carry extra requirements that vary by jurisdiction. These are the exceptions, not the rule, and they are exactly the moments to call a lawyer rather than trust a blog post. For the everyday work of running a company, sales contracts, NDAs, statements of work, vendor agreements, offer letters, the electronic path is fully solid.

I have learned to keep a short internal list of document types that require special handling, and to route everything else through the same fast default workflow. That separation keeps the common case frictionless without ignoring the genuine edge cases.

How I think about it as a founder

The business case is not really about legality. It is about speed and evidence. Every day a contract sits unsigned is a day a deal can die, a vendor can stall, or a hire can take another offer. Electronic signature collapses that delay from days to minutes. And the audit trail you get for free is stronger evidence than the paper version it replaced.

My advice to a founder who is still printing and scanning is to stop this week. Pick a tool, send one real contract through it, and watch how the other side responds. In my experience they exhale, because they hate the printer ritual as much as you do.

A note on tooling

We built electronic signature directly into Atlas because we did not want contracts living in a separate silo from the deals and projects they belong to. You draft, send, and legally sign with a full audit trail on the same record as the customer relationship. If you want to see how that fits together, our pages on the all-in-one approach and the signing tools walk through it.

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FAQ

Questions, answered.

Is a typed name a valid electronic signature?
Often yes, if the person typed it with the intent to sign and you can attribute it to them. The legal standard centers on intent and attribution rather than the visual form of the mark, though stronger evidence such as email verification and an audit trail makes any signature more defensible.
Will an electronic signature hold up if a deal goes to court?
In most commercial situations in the US and EU, yes. The ESIGN Act, UETA, and eIDAS give electronic signatures legal standing. What matters in a dispute is proving intent, attribution, and that the document was not altered, which a good workflow with an audit trail handles well. This is general information, not legal advice.
Are there documents I should not sign electronically?
A few categories, such as certain wills, some property transfers, and specific notarized or family law documents, can carry extra requirements that vary by jurisdiction. For everyday business contracts like NDAs, SOWs, and vendor agreements, electronic signing is well established. Check with a lawyer on edge cases.

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