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CLC awarded £750,000 for pioneering partnership that will transform the property market

28 October, 2025

A groundbreaking project backed by the Council for Licensed Conveyancers (CLC) which aims to transform the homebuying and selling process has been awarded almost £750,000 in government funding.

In partnership with the Open Property Data Association (OPDA) and Raidiam, pioneers of Open Banking, the CLC will create what is believed to be the first framework for digitising property data and enabling the safe and secure sharing of information upfront among all parties involved in a transaction.

Early estimates suggest this approach, which would see conveyancers able to access the data they need in one place instead of multiple different sources, and see exactly where it has come from, could reduce the time, cost and risk involved in property transactions by up to two-thirds. 

The Property Data Trust Framework, which brings together data from bodies such as HM Land Registry, local authorities and conveyancers, follows a successful bid for £742,700 to the Regulators’ Pioneer Fund, a government initiative which awards grants to regulators trialling new, more efficient ways of working. It is also supported by the Digital Property Market Steering Group and, if implemented, would provide an open standard that will support interoperability across the property market.

The project will run for the next 12 months and include sandbox testing of the technical infrastructure needed to underpin the regulatory, security and governance standards for firms that need to access and share property data. This ‘proof of concept’ testing, to evidence the feasibility of the project, will be led by Raidiam, the team behind Open Banking which allows people to securely share their financial data with authorised third parties, and which now works with more than 1,000 banks globally.

OPDA, which developed the UK's first open-source schema for upfront property information, will lead the work on standards, industry engagement, and manage collaboration across all stakeholders to ensure end-to-end property lifecycle representation.

Sheila Kumar, Chief Executive of the CLC, says: “This is a significant and hugely exciting step forward in transforming the homebuying and selling process, which for far too long has been held back by inefficiencies including a lack of unified standards, contributing to around one in three transactions falling through.

“Like Open Banking, this project has the potential to deliver the blueprint for a seamless, efficient and truly transparent experience for consumers and with experts such as Raidiam and the OPDA working together, I have no doubt that it will.”

Maria Harris, Chair of OPDA, says: “Today’s announcement is a vital step in demonstrating how a smart data trust framework can streamline the way we buy and sell property. The homebuying process in the UK is one of the slowest and most painful in the world. Improving data standards and data sharing in the housing market will not only speed up transactions, building trust and confidence but it will also be a catalyst for economic growth.  

“OPDA has been campaigning for secure trust and open data standards since its inception in June 2023. Now, with this funding, we can start to evidence the impact and the improvements it will bring. This project will test and demonstrate data sharing in a safe, compliant, and cost-effective way, serving as a proof point for digital transformation in the property market. By embedding open standards and improving the way that data is shared between buyers, sellers, lenders, conveyancers, and estate agents, we can bring the housing market into the digital age.   

“I’m delighted to be partnering with the CLC in securing this funding through the Regulators’ Pioneer Fund and, alongside our members, we look forward to working with them and Raidiam to create a secure, transparent, efficient homebuying journey benefiting all stakeholders.” 

Barry O’Donohoe, CEO and Co-founder at Raidiam, says: “This collaboration with OPDA and the CLC marks a major milestone for the UK’s smart data ecosystem. By combining regulatory leadership with industry collaboration, and by using technology as a catalyst for progress, we’re turning innovation into real world infrastructure that benefits both markets and consumers. 

“Home buying in the UK remains far too manual and fragmented. Together with the OPDA and CLC, we’re proving how secure, consented data sharing – enabled by the Property Data Trust Framework – can make the process faster, safer, and more transparent, creating tangible value for everyone involved.” 

The project is being managed by the CLC and will conclude with the publication of a final report and recommendations for smart data implementation across not just the property sector but the wider UK economy.

Liz Kendall, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, adds: “Every day across the country new products are being invented that have the potential to transform lives and revolutionise public services. But all too often, we are held back from taking advantage of them by red tape that simply hasn’t kept pace with the scientific and technological advances.

“That’s why we’re backing our regulators to work together with industry, to make the rules fit for purpose, and unlock breakthroughs that will deliver national renewal by driving our economy forwards faster, easier, and safely.”

The funding

The UK Government’s Regulatory Innovation Office (RIO) funds regulators and local authorities to trial new and innovative regulatory approaches enabling businesses to bring innovative products to the market quicker. In October 2025, through the fourth round of the Regulators’ Pioneer Fund, the RIO has awarded the Council for Licensed Conveyancers, in collaboration with Open Property Data Association and Raidiam, a grant of £742,700 via the Regulators’ Pioneer Fund (RPF) to explore the impacts and benefits of a Smart Property Data Trust Framework on regulation, governance, and trust standards. The project will assess how to use regulatory change and standardisation to drive innovation, enhance trust, and shape recommendations for future government and industry strategies on digital property market transformation and smart data.