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UK land registry historical data now available free online

This will allow developers and property related businesses to use and reuse one of the world's largest property datasets, comprising over 17 million residential cash and mortgage sales in England and Wales.

The raw data was previously only available as a commercial product, often seen on property websites. It is also used to calculate Land Registry's flagship monthly House Price Index.

The first phase released includes records of sales at full market value lodged for registration between January 2009 and January 2012. The remainder of the data covering the period January 1995 to December 2008 will be released by November 2013.
Collectively this represents over 17 years worth of valuable information on the country's housing market.

‘This move by the Land Registry is great news for people in the UK who will benefit from the increased openness of this information,’ said Minister for Civil Society Nick Hurd.

Ed Lester, chief land registrar and chief executive officer of the Land Registry explained that although it has been publishing this data for free since March 2012, this is the first time the complete historical set is going to be made available free of charge as open data.

‘This actively demonstrates our commitment to economic growth through greater transparency and open data,’ he added.

Heather Savory, chair of the Open Data User Group (ODUG) welcomed the move. ‘ODUG is delighted that Land Registry has made this dataset open data, free of charge under an Open Government License (OGL). The data will be valuable to many users. Land Registry is setting the standard here for the release of open data having responded quickly and positively to the requests for this data submitted by the data community,’ she said.

Meanwhile, Robin Lumley-Savile, chief executive officer of Locatable.com, a member of the Open Data Institute's Startup Programme, described is as a ‘ground breaking’ move which aligns directly with its business strategy of bringing greater transparency to the UK residential property market.
 
‘In doing so the UK government has really cemented pole position in the race to open the world’s data, setting a global example of how this process can be used to create economic opportunity,’ he added.

To coincide with the release Land Registry is launching its first open data challenge. Entrants are being asked to show the value of Land Registry's open data by demonstrating the potential of how it can be used, with up to £3,000 earmarked as prizes for successful entries.

‘We know that entrepreneurs and organisations use our data to support business decision making and develop innovative applications and services,’ said Lester.

‘However, with today’s price paid data release and our new open data challenge we hope more developers and SMEs will be encouraged to come up with some exciting ideas that will contribute to business innovation and economic growth,’ he added.

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