About PropXpert

Property data,
assembled clearly.

PropXpert is a small-area data product built around public records. The current public site focuses on postcode-area pages, bringing together sold prices, EPC records, the local housing mix and transport access for one outcode at a time. A free account adds who lives there — demographics and household income — alongside local risk such as crime, flood and air quality.

The aim is not to tell a user what a property is worth. The aim is to make the underlying public record easier to inspect before someone decides to buy, sell, lend, insure or investigate further.

Public area pages

PropXpert currently publishes free area pages for postcode outcodes in England and Wales. These pages combine sold-price history, EPC records, the local housing and council-tax mix, and transport access. Planning context — listed buildings and conservation areas — is a planned addition.

Account access for sectors

Postcode sector pages are available behind a free account. This keeps the public directory open while limiting bulk scraping of the smaller-grain pages.

Property reports

Property-level reports are still in development. Where the site refers to them, it is describing planned functionality rather than a live paid product.

What the site is for

Area-level context before you go deeper.

The area pages are useful when you want a quick, source-backed view of a postcode district: how prices have moved, the EPC profile of the housing stock, how well-connected the area is by public transport, who lives there, and the local risk picture — crime, flood and air quality. They are not intended to replace a survey, valuation, legal review or lender-specific underwriting.

Working rules
  • Build on public data and show the records behind each metric.
  • Keep area pages descriptive rather than predictive.
  • Show dates, refresh windows and coverage limits wherever possible.
  • Avoid modelled valuations or invented figures when the source data is missing.
Sources and licensing

Dataset coverage and attribution live in one place.

The site uses multiple public and licensed datasets, each with its own coverage and licence terms. The full source list, attribution notices and copyright statements are on the data page.