
HID has released its 2026 State of Security and Identity Report, outlining seven trends reshaping identity management, access control and trust across converged physical and digital environments.
The report is based on responses from more than 1,500 security and IT professionals, end users and industry partners. According to the findings, organizations are modernizing identity infrastructure while placing increased emphasis on governance, protection and user choice.
“Security leaders are clearly under pressure to modernize access and identity infrastructure, but our research shows they’re equally focused on the governance, protection and transparency that build lasting trust,” said Ramesh Songukrishnasamy, Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer at HID. “The organizations succeeding in 2026 are those giving stakeholders meaningful solution choice while maintaining robust security.”
In the report, HID outlines the following seven interconnected trends shaping security strategy in 2026, describing how each is influencing identity and access decisions:
1. Identity management now dominates strategic planning
Nearly three-quarters of respondents (73%) identified identity management as a top priority, the highest category in the study. Organizations are moving beyond standalone credential systems toward unified identity governance that spans physical access and digital systems.
The shift reflects a market-wide consensus: the question is no longer whether to consolidate identity platforms, but how to do it in ways that reduce friction, ensure compliance and deliver measurable return on investment (ROI).
- Mobile credentials have reached critical mass
Mobile credentials adoption is now driven by security improvements (50%) rather than convenience (34%), a notable shift as organizations recognize the protection advantages of mobile credentials. Hybrid credential environments remain standard, with 84% of end users maintaining physical credentials within their mobile deployment, reflecting diverse user groups and operational needs that require flexibility over time.
- Biometrics are expanding beyond MFA into core access control
Biometric technologies continue to gain traction (45% view them as strategic), with fingerprint (71%) and facial recognition (50%) leading modalities. Yet, ethical and privacy concerns more than doubled year-over-year from 31% to 67%. This is driving organizations to implement safeguards and reinforces the need for transparency and compliance during deployment.
- Real-time location solutions are moving into mainstream use cases
RTLS adoption continues to expand, particularly in healthcare, manufacturing and logistics. About 42% of end users identify RTLS as a strategic priority, while 40% report active deployments. Yet barriers persist: costs (33%), privacy concerns (29%) and integration complexity (29%) slow progress, while 38% of partners report customers remain unfamiliar with RTLS capabilities, signaling substantial education needs.
- Physical and digital identity convergence is accelerating
Unified identity solutions are moving mainstream, with 75% of organizations either having deployed (29%) or actively evaluating (46%) unified identity solutions. While single credentials spanning buildings, networks and applications deliver efficiency and stronger security, budget constraints (51%), complexity (37%), and expertise gaps (34%) remain persistent barriers.
- RFID adoption continues to grow steadily
RFID is now infrastructure, not innovation. RFID adoption is growing steadily, with 54% of respondents reporting active use for asset tracking, inventory management and loss prevention. Once viewed as niche technology, RFID is now increasingly treated as core infrastructure for asset visibility, inventory control and operational intelligence. Security leaders cite faster tracking (62%) and improved visibility (41%) as key benefits.
- Investment patterns are shifting decisively toward integrated platforms
The era of point solutions is ending. Organizations are prioritizing integrated identity and security platforms over standalone point solutions to improve visibility, efficiency, and resilience across increasingly complex environments. Yet integration complexity persists as the primary barrier (52% for identity systems, 37% for physical-digital convergence).
Beyond the seven trends, ethical considerations and privacy concerns emerged as a defining theme of the 2026 report. Sixty-seven percent of end users expressed moderate to high concern about biometric privacy implications. Organizations report developing governance frameworks and technical controls to balance protection with individual rights.
The research spans industries including healthcare, education, government, finance, manufacturing and critical infrastructure, offering perspectives from both end users and partners involved in system deployment.
The full 2026 State of Security and Identity Report is available for download at hidglobal.com here: https://hid.link/3sK
