Last September, the first edition of the European Data Spaces Awards was officially launched, an initiative promoted by the Data Spaces Support Centre (DSSC) in collaboration with the European Commission. These awards were created with the aim of promoting the best data exchange initiatives, recognizing their achievements and increasing their visibility. This seeks to promote good practices that can serve as a guide for other actors in the European data ecosystem. The idea is that the awards will be awarded annually, which will help the community grow and improve.
Why are these awards important?
Data is one of Europe's most valuable economic assets, and its strategic harnessing is critical for the development of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI). Therefore, the European strategy It involves establishing a single market for data that allows innovation to be promoted effectively. However, at present, the data is still widely distributed among many actors in the European ecosystem.
The European Data Spaces Awards are especially relevant because they recognise and promote initiatives that help to overcome this problem: data spaces. These are organisational and technical environments where multiple actors – public and private – share data in a secure, sovereign, controlled way and in accordance with common standards that promote their interoperability. This allows data to flow across sectors and borders, driving innovation.
In Spain, the development of data spaces is also being promoted through specific initiatives such as the Plan to Promote Sectoral Data Spaces.
Two award categories
In this context, two categories of awards have been created:
- Excellence in end-user engagement and financial sustainability: Recognizes data spaces with a strong user focus and viable long-term financial models.
- Most innovative emerging data space: rewards new initiatives that bring fresh and innovative ideas with high impact on the European ecosystem.

Who can participate?
The European Data Spaces Awards are open to any data space that meets these criteria:
- Its governance authority is registered in the European Union.
- It operates wholly or partially within European territory.
- It is being actively used for data exchange.
- It includes restricted data, beyond open data.
Spaces in the implementation phase can also apply, as long as they share data in pilot or pre-operational environments. In these cases, the project coordinator can act on behalf of the project.
The assessment of eligibility will be based on the applicant's self-assessment, facilitating broad and representative participation of the European data ecosystem.
The same data space can apply for both categories, although you must make two different applications.
Schedule: registration open until November 7
The competition is structured in four key phases that set the pace of the participation and evaluation process:
- On 23 September 2025, the launch event was held and the application period was officially opened.
- The application submission phase will run for 7 weeks, until November 7, allowing data spaces to prepare and register their proposals.
- This will be followed by the evaluation phase, which will begin on December 17 and last 6 weeks. During this time, the Data Spaces Support Centre (DSSC) will conduct an internal eligibility review and the jury selects the winners.
- Finally, the awards will be announced and presented during the Data Space Symposium (DSS2026) event, on February 10 and 11, 2026 in Madrid. All nominees will be invited to take the stage during the ceremony, so they will get great visibility and recognition. The winners will not receive any monetary compensation.
How to participate?
To register, participants must access the online form available on the official website of the awards. This page provides all the resources needed to prepare for your application, including reference documents, templates, and updates on the process.
The form includes three required elements:
- Basic questions about the requester and the data space.
- The eligibility self-assessment with four mandatory questions.
- A space to upload the Awards Application Document, a document in PDF format and whose template is available on the platform. (maximum 8 pages). The document, which follows a structure aligned with the Maturity Model v2.0, details the objectives and evaluation criteria by section.
In addition, participants have a space to provide, optionally, links to additional resources that help give context to their proposal.
For any questions that may arise during the process, a support platform has been set up.
The European Data Spaces Awards 2025 not only recognise excellence, but also highlight the impact of projects that are transforming the future of data in Europe. If you are interested in participating, we invite you to read the complete rules of the competition on their website.