One stop shop for tech could save taxpayers £1.2 billion and overhaul how government buys digital tools
A first-of-its-kind digital marketplace is being built to help shake up how the UK public sector buys technology - hoping to unlock £1.2 billion in annual savings, save time and give public servants the power to rate suppliers.

New digital hub set to save taxpayers £1.2 billion.
- New platform to allow public sector to rate and review tech products, helping hospitals, schools and government departments avoid costly mistakes and make smarter, faster decisions on which tech to buy
- currently in early development, the platform is set to unlock £1.2 billion a year in savings and modernise how the public sector invests £26 billion-a-year on tech
- the National Digital Exchange will support the government’s Plan for Change - giving the UK public sector faster access to better deals, while boosting small business involvement by 40% within 3 years
A first-of-its-kind digital marketplace is being built to help shake up how the UK public sector buys technology - hoping to unlock £1.2 billion in annual savings, save time and give public servants the power to rate suppliers.
By making it faster and easier to buy the right technology, the National Digital Exchange (NDX) will aim to drive forward the government’s Plan for Change - helping to deliver simpler, smarter, and more responsive public services for the people who rely on them, while ensuring better value for taxpayers.
In a major shift, the platform hopes to allow teams across the public sector to access pre-approved tech deals at nationally negotiated prices, with an AI-powered engine that matches them with suppliers based on what they actually need - all in a matter of hours, not months.
The platform is designed to open the market to more UK tech firms, with a target to boost small business involvement in government contracts by 40% within 3 years.
It follows the State of Digital Government report which warned that 209 NHS secondary care organisations and 320 local councils go it alone when negotiating tech contracts, despite widely using similar tools – missing out on essential bargaining power. Only 28% of public sector leaders said their organisations were able to track and make sure that their tech suppliers were delivering proper value for their services.
Users will be able to rate and review what they’ve bought, lifting the lid on which tools have delivered, and where promises haven’t matched performance – creating a platform comparable to an app store for the technology that underpins the British state and essential public services.
The announcement comes ahead of London Tech Week, where the role of digital innovation in transforming public services will be in the spotlight.
Minister for AI and Digital Government, Feryal Clark said:
We’ve all heard the stories - months of red tape, tech that doesn’t deliver, and money wasted. That’s not good enough for the people we serve.
The National Digital Exchange aims to change that. It will make it faster, fairer, and focused on what works - with real reviews, upfront pricing and smart AI to match buyers with the right suppliers in hours.
It’s a clear example of our Plan for Change in action: cutting waste, boosting innovation, and backing British tech to deliver better public services.
The platform, which will be created under the revised Procurement Regulations to help shape a smarter, more open future for digital procurement, and is being developed alongside a “digital playbook” to guide officials responsible for buying technology towards best practice – making sure the long-term impacts of their decisions, and the social value of contracts are considered.
Today’s news also follows the government announcing plans to test new ways of funding AI and tech projects, aiming to bring a start-up mindset to testing the application and use of AI experiments on small budgets, and then building on proof of success.
DSIT is also working closely with organisations like TechUK helping to ensure the platform reflects the needs of both buyers and suppliers.
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