EuroPsy is a common European education and professional standard and certificate for psychologists in 26 countries in Europe. Since its launch 2009, many countries have used EuroPsy to develop academic and professional training programs, to create and adapt legal and professional regulations for the application of psychology by EFPA's full members, and to assess the quality of a psychologist as a professional. EuroPsy Regulations define minimum standards of academic education and supervised practice in specified fields of practice required for independent practice as a psychologist in that field, and more recently based on that for independent practice as a specialist psychologist in that field of practice (Psychotherapy, Work and Organizational Psychology were the first two specialisms). In recent years, these standards and the underlying conceptual competence framework have been revised. The new EuroPsy and EuroPsy Specialist competence framework builds on an adapted cube model, and defines generic functional competences (what a psychologist or a specialist does), generic foundational competences (how a psychologist and specialist psychologist works), and readiness for supervised, independent and advanced or specialized practice as three different stages of professional development. The introduction of Sport Psychology as a further field of practice in EuroPsy and as a specialist degree in 2023, and of the Specialist degree in Clinical Neuropsychology in 2025, has led to intensified efforts from other disciplines to be acknowledged as a field of practice and as a specialist degree. The requests to differentiate more fields of practice for both EuroPsy and EuroPsy Specialists have raised a number of questions for future developments regarding common or differentiated entry-level competence requirements for the different stages of professional development in the respective fields of practice, the assessment of these competences, and the consequences for psychologists working in these fields and their clients.