NIS2 vs. DORA: What's the Difference and Do You Need to Comply With Both?
Two EU regulations. Both about cybersecurity. Both with tight deadlines. If you're in the financial sector, you've probably heard of both NIS2 and DORA — but you may not be sure how they differ, whether they overlap, and which one takes priority.
The short answer: DORA takes priority for financial entities, but NIS2 still matters for your ICT suppliers. This article gives you the full picture.
What are NIS2 and DORA?
NIS2 (Directive 2022/2555) is a broad EU directive covering cybersecurity risk management across 18 sectors — including but not limited to the financial sector. It requires essential and important entities to implement 10 cybersecurity measures, report incidents within strict deadlines, and ensures personal board liability.
DORA (Regulation 2022/2554) — the Digital Operational Resilience Act — is a sector-specific regulation exclusively for the financial sector. It covers banks, insurance companies, investment firms, payment providers, crypto-asset service providers, and their critical ICT third-party providers.
NIS2 vs ISO 27001 — Requirements Comparison
◈NIS2 OnlyMandatory incident reporting to authorities (24h / 72h)Board-level personal liability for cybersecuritySupply chain security obligations for essential entitiesSector-specific regulatory obligations⬡Shared RequirementsInformation security risk managementAccess control and identity managementBusiness continuity and disaster recoverySecurity awareness and training◇ISO 27001 OnlyInternal audit and management review cyclesStatement of Applicability (SoA) documentationFormal certification and third-party audit◈NIS2 OnlyMandatory incident reporting to authorities (24h / 72h)Board-level personal liability for cybersecuritySupply chain security obligations for essential entitiesSector-specific regulatory obligations⬡Shared RequirementsInformation security risk managementAccess control and identity managementBusiness continuity and disaster recoverySecurity awareness and training◇ISO 27001 OnlyInternal audit and management review cyclesStatement of Applicability (SoA) documentationFormal certification and third-party auditThe centre column shows requirements that both NIS2 and ISO 27001 share
Key differences at a glance
| NIS2 | DORA | |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Directive (must be transposed into national law) | Regulation (directly applicable) |
| Scope | 18 sectors across the economy | Financial sector only |
| Applicable since | Transposition deadline: Oct 2024 (status per country) | 17 January 2025 — directly applicable |
| Risk management | 10 Article 21 measures (broad) | Detailed ICT risk management framework (prescriptive) |
| Incident reporting | 24h / 72h / 1 month to national authority | 4h initial / 72h intermediate / 1 month final to competent authority |
| Third-party risk | Supply chain security requirements | Comprehensive ICT third-party risk management + oversight of critical providers |
| Testing | Effectiveness assessment required | Mandatory threat-led penetration testing (TLPT) for significant entities |
| Board role | Personal liability, training required | Board must approve ICT risk framework, training required |
| Penalties | Up to €10M or 2% global turnover | Defined by national financial supervisors; administrative penalties and periodic penalty payments |
The lex specialis principle: DORA takes priority
Article 4 of NIS2 explicitly states that where sector-specific EU legislation provides for cybersecurity requirements that are at least equivalent to those in NIS2, the sector-specific legislation takes precedence. This is the lex specialis principle.
DORA is recognised as such sector-specific legislation for the financial sector. In practice, this means:
- Financial entities (banks, insurers, investment firms, etc.) primarily comply with DORA, not NIS2
- Where DORA is silent on a topic that NIS2 covers, NIS2 may still apply as a fallback
- ICT third-party providers to the financial sector may face requirements under both NIS2 and DORA
Does NIS2 Apply to Your Organisation?
1Does your organisation operate in an essential or important sector (energy, transport, health, digital infrastructure, etc.)?
Yes▼No▼2Does your organisation have 50 or more employees, or an annual turnover exceeding €10 million?
✗NIS2 does not directly apply to your organisation.
Yes▼No▼✓NIS2 applies to your organisation as an Essential or Important Entity.
3Is your organisation a critical infrastructure provider or a qualified trust service provider?
Yes▼!NIS2 may apply to your organisation — seek legal advice to confirm your status.
1Does your organisation operate in an essential or important sector (energy, transport, health, digital infrastructure, etc.)?
Yes ↓No →2Does your organisation have 50 or more employees, or an annual turnover exceeding €10 million?
Yes ↓No →3Is your organisation a critical infrastructure provider or a qualified trust service provider?
Yes ↓No →✗NIS2 does not directly apply to your organisation.
✓NIS2 applies to your organisation as an Essential or Important Entity.
!NIS2 may apply to your organisation — seek legal advice to confirm your status.
AppliesPossibly appliesDoes not apply
Where they overlap — and where they diverge
ICT risk management
NIS2 requires broad cybersecurity risk management through 10 measures but leaves significant room for interpretation.
DORA is far more prescriptive. It requires a comprehensive ICT risk management framework with specific requirements for identification, protection, detection, response, recovery, and learning. DORA also mandates specific policies, governance structures, and reporting lines.
Bottom line: If you comply with DORA's ICT risk management framework, you exceed NIS2 requirements in this area.
Incident reporting
This is where the divergence is most notable:
| Stage | NIS2 | DORA |
|---|---|---|
| Initial notification | Within 24 hours | Within 4 hours of classification |
| Follow-up report | Within 72 hours | Within 72 hours |
| Final report | Within 1 month | Within 1 month |
DORA's 4-hour initial notification is significantly tighter than NIS2's 24-hour window. If you're a financial entity, DORA's timeline is the one you must meet.
Important: Under DORA, you report to your financial supervisory authority (e.g., ECB, national central bank, or financial market authority). Under NIS2, you report to your national competent authority and CSIRT. If both apply, you may need to report to different authorities.
Third-party and supply chain risk
Both regulations address supply chain security, but DORA goes much further:
- NIS2 requires supply chain security assessments of direct suppliers
- DORA requires a full ICT third-party risk management framework, including:
- Register of all ICT third-party arrangements
- Pre-contractual risk assessments
- Mandatory contractual clauses (access rights, exit strategies, audit rights)
- Ongoing monitoring of ICT third-party performance
- EU oversight framework for critical ICT third-party providers (CTPPs)
The CTPP oversight is unique to DORA — the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) can directly supervise ICT providers deemed critical to the financial sector.
Testing and resilience
NIS2 requires effectiveness assessment (measure 6) but doesn't prescribe specific testing methodologies.
DORA mandates:
- Regular ICT testing programmes
- Threat-Led Penetration Testing (TLPT) at least every 3 years for significant financial entities
- Testing must cover critical ICT systems and follow the TIBER-EU framework or equivalent
Scenarios: which framework applies to you?
Scenario 1: You're a bank
Primary framework: DORA NIS2 role: Fallback where DORA is silent Action: Focus on DORA compliance. NIS2 gap analysis for areas DORA doesn't explicitly cover.
Scenario 2: You're an MSP serving banks
Primary framework: NIS2 (you're in Annex I as ICT service management B2B) — see our NIS2 for MSPs guide DORA role: Your financial customers will impose DORA-level requirements on you contractually Action: Comply with NIS2 for your own obligations. Prepare for DORA-level contractual requirements from financial clients.
Scenario 3: You're a cloud provider to multiple sectors
Primary framework: NIS2 (if you meet the size threshold — check here) DORA role: If you're designated as a Critical ICT Third-Party Provider (CTPP), you fall under direct ESA oversight Action: Comply with NIS2. Monitor whether ESAs designate you as a CTPP.
Scenario 4: You're in energy, healthcare, or another non-financial NIS2 sector
Primary framework: NIS2 only DORA role: Does not apply to you Action: Focus entirely on NIS2. Start with our overview of the 10 Article 21 measures.
What to do if both apply
If your organisation faces requirements under both NIS2 and DORA:
- Map both frameworks — identify which requirements come from NIS2 and which from DORA
- Comply with the stricter standard — where both cover the same topic, the stricter requirement satisfies both (usually DORA)
- Track reporting obligations separately — different authorities, different timelines, different formats
- Use DORA as the baseline — if you're DORA-compliant, you're likely NIS2-compliant on most measures. Run a gap analysis for NIS2-specific areas DORA doesn't cover.
- Document everything — both frameworks require demonstrable compliance
Key takeaway
NIS2 and DORA are complementary, not competing. DORA is the specialist regulation for financial entities, while NIS2 covers the broader economy. If you're in the financial sector, DORA is your primary obligation — but NIS2 still matters for your supply chain, for your ICT providers, and as a fallback where DORA is silent.
The organisations that will navigate this best are those that build a unified cyber resilience framework that satisfies both — rather than treating them as two separate compliance exercises.
Read also
- The 10 NIS2 Article 21 measures explained — The full breakdown of NIS2 cybersecurity requirements
- NIS2 for MSPs and MSSPs — How ICT service providers are affected by both NIS2 and their financial customers' DORA obligations
- NIS2 incident reporting deadlines — Compare the NIS2 24h timeline with DORA's 4h requirement
Find out where you stand on NIS2
Our free NIS2 quickscan assesses your organisation against all 10 Article 21 measure categories. If you're navigating both NIS2 and DORA, the scan shows you where your NIS2-specific gaps are — so you can focus your effort where it matters.
