
For decades, the title report has looked essentially the same: a static PDF, delivered by email, opened by a human, reviewed line by line, and manually interpreted before a loan could move forward. That model worked when loan volumes were lower, timelines were flexible, and risk tolerance was higher. Today, it is one of the biggest bottlenecks in modern lending. To address this, companies are beginning to Automate Titles in their workflows.
Lenders are under pressure to close faster, manage risk more precisely, and operate at scale without ballooning headcount. The result is a fundamental shift away from document-centric workflows toward data-driven ones. At the center of that shift is a simple but powerful change: moving from PDFs to structured formats like JSON, allowing companies to Automate Titles efficiently.
This transition is not cosmetic. It changes how title data is consumed, evaluated, and acted upon across the entire loan lifecycle.
PDFs are excellent for human reading. They are terrible for systems.
A PDF title report freezes information into a static snapshot. Every downstream step depends on a person opening the file, interpreting what they see, and deciding what happens next. That introduces delay, inconsistency, and risk—especially at scale.
Common operational issues tied to PDF-based title workflows include:
Industry surveys consistently show that 30–40% of post-close defects trace back to manual document handling. Title reports are a major contributor because they carry some of the highest legal and financial risk in the file.
When a process depends on humans reading documents, speed and consistency collapse as volume increases.
By adopting solutions that Automate Titles, organizations can enhance their operational efficiency and reduce bottlenecks in the title report process.
JSON transforms a title report from something you read into something your systems can use.
Instead of burying ownership, liens, and recording details inside paragraphs and tables, structured data delivers those elements as discrete, machine-readable fields. Systems no longer need interpretation—they apply logic.
This unlocks automation across multiple stages of lending.
Organizations that transition from document-based workflows to structured data routinely report 20–40% reductions in processing time for title-dependent stages.
PDF-Based Title Reports
JSON-Driven Title Data
The difference is not format—it is capability.

Some lenders assume that because aggregator data arrives in structured formats, it solves the problem. In reality, structure without freshness introduces a different kind of risk.
Aggregators ingest public record data on fixed batch schedules. Even in counties that update daily, aggregators may only pull that data once per day, once per week, or longer. Additional processing and normalization layers add more delay.
Key realities lenders often underestimate:
Independent analysis and real-world lender experience show 20–25% error rates in aggregated ownership or lien data, especially around vesting changes, APN mismatches, and recently recorded encumbrances.
Structured data that is not current is still dangerous—just faster at delivering assumptions.
True automation in title workflows depends on two conditions:
Most AI systems cannot meet the second requirement on their own.
The U.S. property recording system is fragmented across more than 3,600 counties, each with different access rules, indexing timelines, and technology. Many counties still rely on paper, microfilm, or in-person searches. API access is rare. Automated scraping is often prohibited.
This means AI can only process what has already been digitized and released elsewhere—usually by aggregators, and usually with delay.
Without direct public-record verification, automation becomes guesswork at scale.
This is where AFX Research stands apart.
AFX combines certified abstractors with AI-driven data extraction to deliver something most platforms cannot: same-day, public-record-verified title data in structured formats.
This hybrid approach bridges the gap between automation and accuracy.
Where aggregators rely on scheduled feeds, AFX relies on actual records. Where PDFs freeze information, AFX delivers data your systems can act on immediately.
Lenders adopting structured title data see immediate gains in high-risk, time-sensitive workflows:
In each case, JSON eliminates manual interpretation while preserving legal defensibility.
Title errors are not abstract risks—they are expensive ones.
Industry data shows:
By shifting from PDFs to structured, verified data, lenders reduce exposure at the exact points where losses occur.

Lenders who succeed with title automation eventually reach the same conclusion: speed without certainty is not automation—it is acceleration of risk.
AFX is not designed to replace title insurance or preliminary commitments. It exists to close the gap between those events, where aggregator data and static PDFs fail most often.
Key advantages include:
That combination is why AFX is increasingly viewed as the standard for data-driven title workflows.
PDFs belong to an era when lending was slower, smaller, and less automated. JSON belongs to an era where systems decide, workflows trigger automatically, and humans focus on judgment—not transcription.
The lenders pulling ahead are not just digitizing documents. They are restructuring how information moves through their organizations.
From PDFs to JSON is not a formatting upgrade.
It is the difference between managing paperwork and running a decision-driven operation.
And for lenders who care about speed, scale, and certainty, that difference defines the future.
{
"your_order_number": "1663232-1212",
"afx_property_id": "79-275248-47",
"file_name": "1663232-1212-TS.pdf",
"public_url_to_file": "https://ourfileurl.com/files/download/431365FR2aPVJhUTIs6K4emWn7LPN5RGDvrT1WtQAHRKE3g",
"report_data":
{
"productID": "116",
"productName": "Current Owner Search w/ Taxes",
"propertyID": "79-275248-47",
"yourReferenceNumber": "ABCD1234",
"yourOrderNumber": "1663232-1212",
"yourMortgageeSiteName": "ABC MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"dateComplete": "08/19/2024",
"dateEffective": "08/16/2024",
"propAddress": "123 SE TEST ROAD",
"propCity": "ESTACADA",
"propState": "OR",
"propZip": "97020",
"propCounty": "CLACKAMAS",
"propAPN": "111025371-012",
"propAltAPN": "R-3-4E-21-C-A-01500",
"propLegal": "SUBDIVISION VISTA TEST 4366 TRACT C",
"propOwner": "CORY TIPTON",
"landValue": "100000.00",
"buildingValue": "250000.00",
"propValue": "350000.00",
"overallTaxNotes": "",
"taxesExists": 1,
"taxes": [
{
"year": "2023",
"period": "",
"status": "PAID",
"date": "",
"amount": "3141.26"
},
{
"year": "2024",
"period": "",
"status": "DUE",
"date": "",
"amount": "3721.10"
}
],
"deedsExists": 1,
"deeds": [
{
"type": "WARRANTY DEED",
"dated": "03/13/2024",
"recorded": "03/13/2024",
"instrument": "2024-008696",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"torrens": "",
"grantorName": [
"NORTHWEST CORE HOLDINGS, LLC"
],
"granteeName": [
"CORY TIPTON"
],
"notes": ""
},
{
"type": "DEED",
"dated": "01/31/2024",
"recorded": "02/02/2024",
"instrument": "2024-003832",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"torrens": "",
"grantorName": [
"VISTA TEST HOMEOWNER'S ASSOCIATION"
],
"granteeName": [
"JOHN DOE"
],
"notes": ""
}
],
"mortgagesExists": 1,
"mortgages": [
{
"type": "DEED OF TRUST",
"dated": "04/20/2024",
"recorded": "04/30/2024",
"instrument": "2024-015037",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"amount": "312000.00",
"mortgagorName": "JOHN DOE",
"mortgageeName": "ABC MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"trusteeName": "FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON",
"mersName": "EVERGREEN MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY",
"mersMIN": "1000235-0023016999-7",
"mersStatus": "ACTIVE",
"relatedDocsExists": 1,
"relatedDocs": [
{
"type": "ASSIGNMENT",
"desc": "UMB BANK NATIONAL",
"recorded": "02/28/2024",
"instrument": "",
"book": "1130",
"page": "415"
}
],
"notes": ""
},
{
"type": "HELOC",
"dated": "06/25/2024",
"recorded": "06/30/2024",
"instrument": "2024-016054",
"book": "",
"page": "",
"amount": "30000.00",
"mortgagorName": "JOHN DOE",
"mortgageeName": "TRUST CREDIT UNION",
"trusteeName": "",
"mersName": "",
"mersMIN": "",
"mersStatus": "",
"relatedDocsExists": 0,
"notes": ""
}
],
"liensExists": 0,
"overallLienNotes": "",
"miscsExists": 0,
"reportNotes": "",
"dateSubmitted": "08/19/2024 10:14:31 AM",
"currentDeedRecordDate": "03/13/2024"
}
}