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Independently verified · Quarterly re-audit
EU VETTED
Category 11 of 22

Forms & surveys

In short

Form and survey platforms collect structured data from respondents via web forms, questionnaires, and feedback tools. For EU buyers, the critical question is whether collected responses — often personal data — are stored and processed by an EU-owned operator under EU law. Top-rated EU options on EU Vetted include Formdesk (Netherlands, 5/5) and LimeSurvey (Germany, 5/5).

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the best EU-hosted form and survey platform?
On EU Vetted's editorial compliance score, Formdesk (Netherlands) and LimeSurvey (Germany) both reach 5/5 as EU-owned platforms with EU-based infrastructure and published DPAs. Tally (Belgium, 4/5) is a strong alternative with a modern interface and EU ownership. The right choice depends on whether you need a self-hosted open-source option (LimeSurvey), a managed cloud form builder (Formdesk), or a lightweight no-code tool (Tally).
Is there a GDPR-compliant form and survey platform?
Any form platform operated by an EU-incorporated company with EU-based infrastructure and a published DPA qualifies as GDPR-compliant in its processor role. Formdesk and LimeSurvey both publish detailed DPAs and document their sub-processors. Forms and surveys frequently collect consent, health data, or employee feedback — all regulated categories under GDPR; the legal basis for collection must be established by the controller (you), not the platform.
Does form response data fall under the US CLOUD Act?
If the form platform is operated or ultimately controlled by a US-incorporated parent, the CLOUD Act can in principle compel production of submitted response data, regardless of where it is stored. EU-owned operators such as Formdesk (Netherlands), LimeSurvey (Germany), Tally (Belgium), Tripetto (Netherlands), and Survicate (Poland) are not directly subject to this exposure. Typeform (Spain) and Formbricks (Germany) carry US-investor ownership signals that place them at a different risk level despite EU headquarters.
Can I self-host a form and survey platform in the EU?
Yes. LimeSurvey is an open-source platform that can be self-hosted on any EU infrastructure you control, giving you full data ownership with no third-party operator in the chain. Formbricks (Germany) also offers a self-hosted open-source version alongside its managed cloud offering. For organisations with strict data residency requirements, self-hosting LimeSurvey on a compliant EU server is typically the strongest posture available in this category.
How does EU-hosted Typeform compare to alternatives?
Typeform is incorporated in Spain and hosts data in the EU, but on EU Vetted's editorial score it rates 3/5 due to its US-investor ownership structure. It remains a widely used tool for its conversational survey format. For buyers whose primary motivation is strict EU-ownership compliance, Tally (Belgium, 4/5) offers a comparable modern form interface with a cleaner ownership signal.
Are there EU alternatives to Google Forms?
Yes. Formdesk (Netherlands, 5/5) and Tally (Belgium, 4/5) are the most direct functional alternatives. LimeSurvey (Germany, 5/5) is better suited to structured research surveys than ad-hoc data collection. Tripetto (Netherlands, 3/5) offers a conversational format. All four are EU-owned; none have the same breadth of Google Workspace integration, but all can embed in websites and export responses to CSV or connect to Zapier or n8n for automation.
Do EU form platforms support conditional logic and branching?
Most do. Formdesk, LimeSurvey, Typeform, and Tripetto all support conditional branching. Tally supports conditional logic on its paid plans. Survicate (Poland) specialises in product feedback with conditional flows built for NPS, CSAT, and CES use cases. Check the feature set at each pricing tier, as conditional logic is sometimes restricted to paid plans.