SEALSQ passes key security tests for post-quantum chip platform
SEALSQ Corp (NASDAQ: LAES) announced that its QS7001 Secure Element platform passed fault injection and side-channel attack resistance testing, marking progress toward Common Criteria EAL 5+ certification. Independent evaluator SERMA confirmed the platform's completion of what the company describes as the most stringent physical security assessments in the Common Criteria evaluation process.
The company's subsidiary IC'Alps also completed its Common Criteria certification renewal audit at its Grenoble design center, conducted by SERMA CESTI. SEALSQ stated this outcome confirms IC'Alps will formally renew its CC certification.
SEALSQ published a certification roadmap for its secure hardware product families. The QS7001 V1 has production samples available as of March 2026, while the QS7001 V2 is undergoing wafer manufacturing with fab-out targeted for April 21, 2026. Engineering samples for the V2 are expected in July 2026, with production samples targeted for October 2026.
For its QVault Trusted Platform Module products, the TPM 183 has production samples available as of March 2026, with FIPS 140-3 lab submission to NIST targeted for September 2026. The TPM 185, designed for IoT and PC/Server markets with post-quantum support, has engineering samples expected in July 2026.
"This certification roadmap reflects our commitment to delivering hardware-anchored post-quantum security on a predictable, transparent timetable," said Carlos Moreira, CEO of SEALSQ. He referenced the NSA CNSA 2.0 January 2027 compliance timeline as a factor driving demand for certified silicon.
The information is based on a company press release statement.
