You can add one or more of your certificates to your phone wallet in the same way that you can add tickets and boarding passes.
This is a convenient way of storing and showing people your certificate when you are on the move; for example, if you need to show your membership certificate to access a venue, your health & safety certificate to access a site, or your training certificate to operate machinery or your qualification to lead an activity.
If you are logged in to the platform, you are the accredited entity (recipient) of the certificate and the certificate in question is not archived, you will see 'Add to Google Wallet' and 'Add to Apple Wallet' buttons on your digital certificate page. One way to reach such certificates is to access them via the 'Received Certificates' button on your dashboard.
The certificate that is saved to the wallet shows the certificate's badge (certification mark), the certification scheme name, the entity (name of individual, organisation or thing) that the certificate has been issued to, and our unique certificate id. The QR code directs those that scan it to the digital certificate page where all the details can be seen and checked as appropriate.
You need to be on a mobile device that supports Google Wallets, such as an Android mobile phone or tablet, or be using a browser like Chrome. When you press the 'Add to Google Wallet', this should create a pass containing some of the details of your certificate that you can save / add to your Google Wallet or if in a browser, your Google Account.
Accessing your Google Wallet in the usual way (on your phone or tablet) should enable you to find and display your certificate, as you would a boarding pass or ticket.
You need to be on a mobile device that supports Apple Wallets, such as an iPhone, iPad, Watch or Macbook.
On an iPhone or iPad that hosts an Apple Wallet, pressing 'Add to Apple Wallet' should show you the certificate in the form of a pass and confirm you'd like to save it directly to your wallet.
We haven't tested this widely yet on different browsers on an iPhone or iPad. However, it works well with Safari. With Chrome just downloads the .kpass file rather than sending it to the wallet. Unfortunately iOS doesn't seem to recognise this as a wallet file in the file folder it saves it to, but a workaround is to email the .kpass file to yourself and then it is recognised in your message by Apple Wallet and can be added in the usual way.
If you are on a laptop or desktop such as a Macbook, pressing 'Add to Apple Wallet' will download and save a .kpass file named after the unique certificate id. If you open this file, it will display the certificate as a pass. If your device is connected via the iCloud to a mobile Apple device such as an iPhone, you can then add it directly to that wallet.
Accessing your Apple Wallet in the usual way (on your iPhone, Watch, etc) should enable you to find and display your certificate, as you would a boarding pass or ticket.