ID Card · An Insurance Application

How to redact your ID card for an insurance application

Sending an ID card to an insurer or broker? Here's exactly what to black out, what to keep, and how to redact it in under a minute — fully offline on your iPhone.

Coming soon to the App Store Updated 2026-06-03
Quick answer

Black out the iD / document number and date of birth on your ID card, and keep your photo visible so an insurer or broker can still verify you. Stamp the copy "For this insurance application only", then export a flattened PDF — all on your iPhone, nothing uploaded.

Why an insurer or broker asks for your ID card

Insurers verify who and what they're covering before issuing a policy. A national or state ID card shows your photo, full name, date of birth, home address, and a unique ID/document number.

An insurer or broker needs only the facts being underwritten confirmed — not your full ID, account, or medical detail beyond what's asked. The catch: with your ID number, name, and date of birth, a thief can open accounts and pass identity checks as you. That's why you should hand over a redacted copy — see the full ID card redaction guide or what to redact for an insurance application.

What to redact on your ID card

  • ID / document number The unique number is the main key for impersonation and account fraud.
  • Date of birth Combined with your name, it unlocks most identity-verification checks.
  • Home address Exposes where you live and enables address-based fraud; rarely needed for an identity check.
  • Signature Can be copied onto forged paperwork.

What to keep visible (so it's still accepted)

  • Your photo
  • Your full name
  • The expiry date, if validity must be confirmed

The watermark to add

Stamp a purpose watermark so the copy can't be reused beyond an insurance application:

Recommended For this insurance application only — [your name], [date]

Redact your ID card in 4 steps

  1. Pick the photo. Open Cachera and choose the photo of your ID card with the system picker — only that photo is read, never your whole library.
  2. Black out the sensitive fields. Drag a black block over the id / document number and date of birth. On export those pixels are destroyed — there's no hidden layer to recover underneath.
  3. Add a purpose watermark. Stamp "For this insurance application only" so the copy can't be reused beyond an insurance application.
  4. Export and send. Lay it out on A4, export a PDF, and share it with an insurer or broker. Everything happened on your iPhone — nothing was uploaded.

Is this OK to do?

Best practice: Brokers handle many applicants’ files. Redact everything outside what is being underwritten and watermark it to the specific policy. Redacting non-essential fields and adding a purpose watermark is a widely accepted way to share documents safely. When an organization is legally required to see an unredacted field, provide it in person rather than as a stored copy.

FAQ

Will an insurer or broker still accept a redacted ID card?

Yes. Keep your photo and your full name visible so they can confirm what they need, redact only the sensitive fields, and add a clear "For this insurance application only" watermark. A watermarked, partially-redacted copy is normal, accepted practice.

What should I never show on a ID card?

Hide iD / document number, date of birth, home address, signature. With your ID number, name, and date of birth, a thief can open accounts and pass identity checks as you.

Can the black bars be removed from the copy later?

No. Cachera flattens the redaction into the image on export — there is no hidden layer beneath the black blocks, so the covered text cannot be recovered from the PDF.

Should I send the original ID card instead?

Brokers handle many applicants’ files. Redact everything outside what is being underwritten and watermark it to the specific policy. A redacted copy with a purpose watermark is usually the safer choice.

Redact it now — on your iPhone, nothing uploaded

Cachera blacks out the pixels for good, stamps a purpose watermark, and exports a print-ready PDF. Fully offline.

Coming soon to the App Store