ID Verifier FAQ

The applicant must provide a range of ID documents as part of the DBS check application process. As an employer you must:

If there are any discrepancies in the information provided by the applicant and/or the identity documents supplied and fraud is not suspected, please ask the applicant to clarify. Failure to do so may compromise the integrity of the DBS service and introduce risk to your recruitment or licensing arrangements.

As an employer you must not attempt to amend the application form without the applicant’s knowledge and agreement. Doing this will invalidate the declaration by the applicant and may breach data protection legislation.

What you must do as part of the ID checking process

It is important to note that a DBS check does not provide evidence of a person’s right to work in the UK. You must do a separate check to make sure a job applicant can work in the UK which also includes roles for voluntary work.

If the applicant is not a national of the UK or the European Economic Area (EEA) they must use a different route to apply for paid work in the UK. They can use Route 1 for voluntary work.

Three routes of ID checking

Route 1

The applicant must be able to show:

At least one of the documents must show the applicant’s current address.

If the applicant is not a national of the UK or the EEA and is applying for voluntary work, they may need to be fingerprinted if they cannot show these documents.

Route 2

Route 2 can only be used if it is impossible to process the application through Route 1.

If the applicant is not a national of the UK or the EEA and is applying for voluntary work, they cannot use Route 2.

If the applicant does not have any of the documents in Group 1, then they must be able to show:

At least one of the documents must show the applicant’s current address. The organisation conducting their ID check must then also use an appropriate external ID validation service to check the applicant details provided.

EEA nationals who have been resident in the UK for 5 years or less may need to be fingerprinted if they cannot show these documents.

Route 3

Route 3 can only be used if it is impossible to process the application through Routes 1 or 2.

EEA nationals who have been resident in the UK for 5 years or less cannot use Route 3.

For Route 3, the applicant must be able to show:

At least one of the documents must show the applicant’s current address. If the applicant cannot provide these documents, they may need to be fingerprinted.

Please follow this link for the DBS ID Verifier checking guidelines:

DBS ID Checking Guidelines