From 17 January 2025, the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) applies to banks, insurers, investment firms, payments/e‑money, market infrastructures and more. The law harmonises five areas: ICT risk management, incident reporting, resilience testing, ICT third‑party risk, and information sharing. If you’re a small or mid‑size financial entity, the fastest way to make this real is to get your document management system (DMS) to capture the evidence regulators and auditors will ask for.  

This article shows what to file, where to file it, and when—with references to the official Level‑2 acts now in force.

What changed on 17 January 2025 (and why it matters to your evidence)

The three evidence hubs to build in your DMS

FIRST: Major incident binder (classification → 24h → 72h → 1‑month)

Why: DORA’s RTS/ITS define what you report and when—and supervisors will want to see the paper trail, not just the final form.

What to capture in the DMS:

How Folderit helps: Audit trailsversion historyapproval and acknowledgement workflows let you prove who did what and when; export the audit trail if your supervisor asks.  

SECOND: ICT third‑party register & contract library

Why: DORA requires a Register of Information at entity/sub‑consolidated/consolidated levels, including subcontractors that underpin critical or important functions. Templates and instructions are in (EU) 2024/2956.  

What to capture in the DMS

How Folderit helps: Use metadata and templates for the register; store contracts and due‑diligence packs; rely on retention automation to keep contracts and change logs for as long as your policy requires.  

THIRD: TLPT readiness file (for entities that are identified)

Why: Under (EU) 2025/1190, authorities will identify which entities must perform TLPT; the RTS sets scope/methodology, including when internal testers are allowed and conditions for mutual recognition.  

What to capture in the DMS

How Folderit helps: Keep all TLPT artefacts together with versioningapprovals, and global audit log for an end‑to‑end story on scope → execution → remediation.  

Map DORA measures to DMS capabilities (quick reference)

Folderit features to switch on:

SSO (Okta/Entra/Google), approvalsacknowledgementsretention automationaudit trailsversion history—these create the evidence auditors expect.  

A 30‑day setup plan for smaller teams

Week 1 – Foundations

Week 2 – Registers & templates

Week 3 – Incident drill

Week 4 – Third‑party & TLPT readiness

Frequently asked questions

Do small firms have to do TLPT?

Only if identified under (EU) 2025/1190. The RTS sets criteria for selection and the required methodology; many smaller entities won’t be selected initially. Your supervisor will confirm.  

Is DORA’s incident reporting the same as NIS2?

DORA is lex specialis for the financial sector. Timelines are aligned in effect but not identical; under DORA you submit an initial within 24h (or 4h after classification if later), an intermediate within 72h of the initial, and a final within one month of the latest intermediate.  

We outsource almost everything—do we still need a register?

Yes. (EU) 2024/2956 requires a maintained Register of Information, including subcontractors that underpin critical/important functions; templates and instructions are published.  

When do supervisors need our register?

The ESAs expect competent authorities to submit RoI by 30 April 2025, so many supervisors asked firms to provide data ahead of that date. Keep your DMS export‑ready.