Home moving platform duo sign up to join national logbook register
Decision by Homey and adoor marks next step of big push to make digital lobooks more widely used by public, conveyancers and estate agents.

Two more home moving platforms have signed up to the growing register of compliant logbooks-using organisations happy to integrate themselves with the logbook sector’s accepted ‘standard’.
This has been set up by the Residential Log Book Association as its ‘Register of Logbooks’ which both adoor and Homey have now joined.
Adoor is a digital house move tracking service while Homey is a recently-launched conveyancing platform.
“As part of our growing ecosystem connecting conveyancers, agents and brokers alongside their existing systems, it’s vital to have accurate, readily-available information about the property that is easily sharable between the systems and everyone connected to the the property,” says Michael Wadsworth, founder of adoor.
“Through the RLBA integration this information can be collated from an existing logbook.”
Wadsworth says the BASPI form has done a good job of collating property data both at the point of marketing and through the conveyancing process.
“Now with the BASPI expanding to searches and also identifying that a home has a growing list of digital assets to manage in a move.
“This is where with the RLBA register integration we can populate a Property Logbook instantly. We’re keen to support and promote the user of logbooks and integrate further when the RLBA’s Handover Pack is released.”
Sayinthen Vivekanantham, founder of Homey, adds: “Our RLBA integration has enabled us to join the Digital Deed Pack roll-out with some of our trial conveyancers.
“Our initial focus has been on registering logbooks created during home purchases.
“We have worked with the RLBA ‘document schema’ to ensure that we are exchanging recognisable document types between systems and logbooks”.








