Property-Linked Identity Infrastructure

MyHOME ID Network

The Identity Layer for the Modern Home

Every home already has an address, a parcel number, and a listing history.

But none of those systems were designed to manage the home as a connected, evolving digital environment.

MyHOME ID Network introduces a persistent identity framework for the modern property era - designed to support continuity, coordination, and verification across the lifecycle of the home.

From Smart Device Fixtures (SDFs) and metadata records to future interoperability standards, MyHOME ID Network is being built as foundational infrastructure for the next generation of residential systems.

Every home is smart. It just doesn't know it yet.

Explore the Network
Property Identity Mesh
135M+
residential identity model
SDF
fixture metadata continuity
KODA
coordination layer
Property-linked metadata continuity
Smart Device Fixture documentation
Neutral coordination for modern residential systems
Market Reality

Homes Have Changed. The Infrastructure Hasn't.

Today's homes contain connected thermostats, smart locks, cameras, hubs, lighting systems, voice assistants, wireless protocols, automation rules, and cloud-linked permissions.

Yet during most real estate transactions, almost none of this transitions in a standardized or verifiable way.

The result is fragmented ownership, lingering permissions, cyber and privacy risks, disconnected device ecosystems, and uncertainty for buyers, sellers, agents, and service providers.

The modern home became digital faster than the industry evolved around it.

MyHOME ID Network exists to help bridge that gap.

Persistent Identity

A VIN for the Home

Think of it simply:

The address tells you where. The listing tells you what's for sale. MyHOME ID helps establish what the home actually is over time.

Just as VIN systems brought structure and continuity to vehicles, MyHOME ID is designed to support continuity for the modern connected home.

The goal is not surveillance. The goal is coordination.

A persistent identity framework allows structured metadata continuity, verifiable transfer records, infrastructure interoperability, future standards alignment, and long-term digital coordination.

Infrastructure Posture

Built as Infrastructure, Not a Listing Tool

MyHOME ID Network is not designed as a listing portal, brokerage CRM, smart home marketplace, or monitoring platform.

It is being developed as an infrastructure-oriented coordination layer capable of supporting property-linked metadata continuity, Smart Device Fixture documentation, standardized verification flows, future interoperability between stakeholders, and long-term digital property coordination.

Potential future alignment includes real estate, insurance, lending, builders, service providers, and digital infrastructure ecosystems.

National Model

Built for Long-Term Scale

The MyHOME ID framework has already been architected around a nationwide identity model covering more than 135 million U.S. residential properties, with future inventory expansion planned over time.

The long-term vision is simple:

Create a persistent, neutral identity framework capable of supporting the evolving digital lifecycle of the home.

Not just during a transaction.

But across decades of ownership, upgrades, devices, transitions, and infrastructure evolution.

Ecosystem Coordination

KODA Coordination Layer

KODA access layer coming soon

KODA operates as a coordination layer within the broader MyHOME ID Network ecosystem.

Rather than functioning as a traditional retail token model, KODA is positioned to support infrastructure coordination, metadata issuance, network reconciliation, ecosystem interoperability, and long-term digital coordination mechanisms.

The emphasis is not speculation.

The emphasis is durable infrastructure coordination across a growing ecosystem of property-linked digital systems.

Governance Posture

Neutral by Design

MyHOME ID Network is being developed with a long-term infrastructure mindset emphasizing neutrality, interoperability, verifiable coordination, privacy-conscious architecture, point-in-time records, and structured metadata standards.

The system is intended to support responsible digital continuity for the modern home while avoiding invasive monitoring models or unnecessary data collection practices.