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soc2 nis2 compliance european saas framework comparison audit

SOC 2 vs NIS2: Which Framework for European SaaS?

SOC 2 is voluntary and costs €30K+. NIS2 is mandatory with €10M fines. Which compliance framework should European SaaS companies prioritize in 2026?

ST
SaaSFort Team
· 7 min de lecture

A German SaaS CTO asked us last month: “We’re selling to enterprise in both the US and EU. Our budget covers one compliance initiative this year. SOC 2 or NIS2?”

The answer depends on where your customers are, what regulators can do to you, and whether your buyers care about voluntary certifications or mandatory compliance. Here’s the honest comparison.

SOC 2 and NIS2: Different Problems, Different Mechanisms

SOC 2 is a voluntary audit framework created by the AICPA (American Institute of Certified Public Accountants). It evaluates how your organization handles customer data across five Trust Service Criteria: security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy. You hire an auditor, they test your controls, and you get a report you share with enterprise buyers.

NIS2 is a mandatory EU directive. Member states transposed it into national law by October 2024. It requires organizations in 18 regulated sectors to implement 10 specific cybersecurity measures under Article 21. Non-compliance triggers fines — up to €10M or 2% of global turnover for essential entities. In Germany, §38 BSIG makes CEOs personally liable.

DimensionSOC 2NIS2
NatureVoluntary auditMandatory regulation
OriginAICPA (United States)EU Directive 2022/2555
Who it applies toAny organization choosing to certify~160,000 EU entities in 18 sectors + their supply chain
EnforcementMarket pressure (buyers require it)Government fines up to €10M / 2% turnover
Personal liabilityNoneCEO personally liable (§38 BSIG in Germany)
Cost€30,000-€100,000/year (audit + tooling)€0-€5,000/year (internal implementation + scanning)
Timeline6-12 months to achieveDeadline: October 2026 (full enforcement)
Geographic focusUS/global enterprise buyersEU-regulated entities
OutputAudit report (Type I or Type II)Compliance documentation + evidence

What SOC 2 Covers That NIS2 Doesn’t

SOC 2 is broader in some areas because it’s designed for customer trust, not just cybersecurity:

  • Availability criteria — uptime SLAs, disaster recovery testing, capacity planning. NIS2 touches business continuity but doesn’t prescribe availability metrics.
  • Processing integrity — data accuracy and processing validation. Relevant for fintech SaaS. NIS2 doesn’t cover processing quality.
  • Privacy criteria — personal data handling aligned with GDPR. NIS2 references GDPR but doesn’t audit privacy controls independently.
  • Third-party audit attestation — the SOC 2 report is a standardized trust artifact. NIS2 doesn’t produce an equivalent buyer-facing document.

When SOC 2 wins: Your buyers are US-based enterprises that require SOC 2 Type II as a procurement gate. Financial services, healthcare, and tech companies in the US almost universally require it. Without SOC 2, you don’t get past the first filter. See our SOC 2 readiness guide for the preparation timeline.

What NIS2 Covers That SOC 2 Doesn’t

NIS2 is narrower but more prescriptive on cybersecurity specifics:

  • Supply chain security (Art. 21(2)(d)) — mandatory assessment of supplier security. SOC 2 mentions vendor management but doesn’t require the depth NIS2 demands. See our Lieferkettensicherheit guide.
  • Incident reporting (Art. 23) — 24-hour early warning, 72-hour notification, 1-month final report to national CSIRT. SOC 2 expects incident response procedures but doesn’t mandate specific reporting timelines.
  • Cryptography requirements (Art. 21(2)(h)) — specific expectations for encryption implementation. SOC 2 requires encryption but doesn’t prescribe TLS configurations or cipher suites.
  • CEO oversight — management must approve and monitor security measures. SOC 2 expects governance but doesn’t create personal liability for executives.
  • Regulatory enforcement — NIS2 has teeth. The BSI can fine companies, suspend management, and conduct inspections. SOC 2 failure means you lose a customer, not your company.

When NIS2 wins: You sell to EU-regulated enterprises, you’re in one of the 18 NIS2 sectors, or your customers’ compliance obligations cascade to you as a supplier. The October 2026 deadline is not negotiable.

The Controls Overlap

Despite different origins, roughly 60% of the controls overlap. Implementing one framework gives you a significant head start on the other.

Control AreaSOC 2 TSCNIS2 Art. 21(2)Overlap
Risk assessmentCC3.1-3.4(a) Risk analysis policiesHigh
Incident responseCC7.3-7.5(b) Incident handlingHigh
Business continuityA1.2(c) Business continuityMedium
Supply chainCC9.2(d) Supply chain securityLow (NIS2 much deeper)
Network securityCC6.1, CC6.6(e) Network securityHigh
Vulnerability managementCC7.1(f) Effectiveness assessmentMedium
Security trainingCC1.4(g) Cybersecurity trainingHigh
CryptographyCC6.1, CC6.7(h) CryptographyMedium
Access controlCC6.1-6.3(i) Access controlHigh
Multi-factor authCC6.1(j) MFA/secure authHigh

Practical implication: If you’ve already invested in SOC 2, achieving NIS2 compliance requires adding supply chain assessment depth, implementing the specific incident reporting timelines, documenting CEO oversight, and producing the regulatory evidence. That’s 3-4 months of additional work, not a full restart.

Decision Framework: Which One First?

Start with NIS2 if:

  • Your company is directly in NIS2 scope (50+ employees in regulated sector)
  • Your customers are EU-regulated entities requiring supply chain compliance
  • You’re a German SaaS company (§38 BSIG personal liability applies)
  • The BSI registration deadline is already past — you’re late
  • Budget is under €30,000 for compliance this year

Start with SOC 2 if:

  • Your primary market is US enterprise buyers
  • Prospects explicitly require SOC 2 Type II in RFPs
  • You’re not in a NIS2-regulated sector and your customers aren’t either
  • You have €30,000-€100,000 budget for audit + tooling

Do both if:

  • You sell to enterprise on both sides of the Atlantic
  • Start with NIS2 (mandatory, cheaper, faster) then layer SOC 2 on the overlapping controls
  • Timeline: NIS2 compliance by October 2026, SOC 2 Type I by Q1 2027, Type II by Q1 2028

The Budget Reality

SOC 2 requires an external auditor. NIS2 requires documented compliance evidence.

Cost ComponentSOC 2NIS2
External audit€15,000-€50,000/yearNot required (but recommended)
Compliance platform€10,000-€50,000/year (Vanta, Drata)€0-€108/year (SaaSFort)
Internal effort200-400 hours80-200 hours
Penetration test€10,000-€25,000€10,000-€25,000 (recommended, not required)
Total Year 1€50,000-€125,000€10,000-€30,000
Ongoing annual€30,000-€80,000€5,000-€15,000

For a 50-person SaaS company, NIS2 compliance costs 5-10× less than SOC 2. SaaSFort’s NIS2 compliance PDF maps scan results to all 10 Article 21 measures — the core evidence artifact.

How SaaSFort Helps With Both

SaaSFort isn’t a SOC 2 audit platform. It covers the external security layer that both frameworks require:

  • For NIS2: 60-check scan with compliance mapping to all Art. 21(2) measures. Export as NIS2 PDF. €9/month.
  • For SOC 2: External scan evidence for CC6.1 (network security), CC6.6 (external threats), CC6.7 (encryption), and CC7.1 (vulnerability monitoring). Attach the Deal Report to your SOC 2 evidence package.
  • For both: Continuous monitoring proves ongoing compliance, not just point-in-time assessment. CI/CD integration verifies security on every deployment.

For the full compliance tooling comparison: SaaSFort vs Vanta covers when you need a full GRC platform vs external scanning. For why external scanning is now a SaaS baseline beyond just pentesting, see our deep dive.

FAQ

Can SOC 2 satisfy NIS2 requirements?

Partially — about 60% of controls overlap. The gaps: NIS2’s incident reporting timelines (24h/72h/1mo), supply chain assessment depth, CEO oversight requirements, and BSI registration. Our NIS2 checklist identifies what’s needed beyond SOC 2.

Is NIS2 cheaper than SOC 2?

Yes — €10,000-€30,000 for NIS2 year one vs €50,000-€125,000 for SOC 2 Type II. Ongoing: €5,000-€15,000/year vs €30,000-€80,000/year.

Do European buyers accept SOC 2 instead of NIS2 compliance?

European enterprise buyers increasingly ask for NIS2-specific evidence alongside or instead of SOC 2. SOC 2 demonstrates security maturity, but it doesn’t satisfy the regulatory obligation. A NIS2-regulated buyer needs proof that their supply chain complies with Article 21(2)(d) — SOC 2 alone doesn’t provide that proof.

Which framework helps close deals faster?

For US enterprise: SOC 2. For EU enterprise: NIS2 compliance evidence + a strong security grade. For both markets: start with a free SaaSFort scan to establish your external security baseline — it takes 60 seconds and provides evidence usable for both frameworks.

Should we get ISO 27001 instead of both?

ISO 27001 is a middle ground — recognized globally and maps well to both SOC 2 and NIS2. But it’s expensive (€25,000-€80,000 first year) and takes 6-12 months. For most SaaS companies under 200 employees, the pragmatic path is: NIS2 compliance first (mandatory), then ISO 27001 or SOC 2 based on where your buyers are.


Check your compliance readiness now. Free scan — 60 checks, A-F grade, NIS2 + ISO 27001 mapping. Under 60 seconds. Export as NIS2 compliance PDF or attach the Deal Report to your SOC 2 evidence package. Download the SaaS Security Playbook 2026 for the complete framework.

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