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Why Its Matter?

 

The Urgent Need for a Digital Backbone in UK Property

The UK property market is one of the largest and most valuable asset classes in the world, yet it remains one of the least digitised.
Government reports and industry bodies have repeatedly highlighted the same issues: slow transactions, fragmented data, fraud risks, and inefficiencies that cost the economy billions each year.

In February 2025, The Guardian reported that the UK government is prioritising the digitisation of property data and integrating AI to accelerate planning approvals and transactions. This is not a vision for the future – it is policy in motion.

The British Property Federation (BPF) has called for national standards, greater interoperability, and trusted digital infrastructure to connect all industry players.
Open Access Government has echoed these concerns, pointing to the risks of fragmented technology adoption and the need for a unified, secure platform.

Where HomePass Fits In

HomePass is not another dashboard or niche tool – it is the national infrastructure layer the UK market has been waiting for.
Our system directly addresses the core challenges outlined in government and industry reports:

  • Real-Time Data – no more chasing missing documents over email.

  • On-Chain Verification – tamper-proof records eliminate fraud at the source.

  • Full Integration – connects banks, solicitors, councils, insurers, and the Land Registry.

  • GDPR-Compliant – built to meet the strictest UK Data Protection standards.

  • AI-Ready – structured, verified data that can be leveraged for automation and decision-making.

 

 

Why the UK is the Right Starting Point

The UK has one of the most mature property markets and a government actively seeking digital transformation.
By implementing HomePass here first, the UK can set the global benchmark for real-time, fraud-proof property infrastructure – leading the way in innovation, compliance, and efficiency.

“If not this – then what? Another 10 years of fragmented PDFs and email chains?”

UK Patent Ref. No: GB2511526.2​​

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