- rail industry innovation boosted as ninth round of the
First-of-a-Kind competition launched with entries aimed at
improving passenger experience on the railways
- government partners with Innovate UK to provide £4.8 million funding to
back ambitious new projects in lead up to the creation of Great
British Railways
- previous winners applauded for creating tech-led solutions
and utilising AI to
improve train performance and on-platform safety
Railway passengers and staff to benefit as the Department for
Transport (DfT)
funds the development of pioneering, tech-led projects aimed at
improving safety and reliability on Britain's rail network.
Opening today (11 May 2026) in partnership with Innovate
UK, the First-of-a-Kind
(FOAK) competition offers
£4.8 million grant funding to new projects so innovators can
bring their ideas to life and present them to industry, boosting
their chances of being rolled out on the network.
The competition aims to address persistent issues on the railway,
such as safety concerns, service reliability or anti-social
behaviour. This year, applicants will put forward ideas to help
deliver major projects on time and in budget, improve the
passenger service performance and reduce the industry's impact on
the environment.
Rail Minister, Lord , said:
Innovation is central to bringing Britain's railway into the 21st
century and our funding for the First-of-a-Kind competition puts
this principle into action, helping turn creative concepts into
real-life solutions.
Supporting new ideas is all part of our plan to modernise track
and train under Great British Railways, designing and adopting
world-leading technology that improves passenger experience while
supporting jobs, growth and homes.
Now in its ninth round, the FOAK competition has been backed with
£62.5 million in government funding to date. Previous winners
include Transmission Dynamics Ltd, 1 of 7 project entrants from
2025, who developed intelligent roadside warning and analysis
systems designed to prevent disruption following collisions
between large goods vehicles and low-clearance bridges or
tunnels.
See the list of FOAK
rail competition 2025 winners for more information.
Trials of the technology are underway, including in
Northumberland, where the detection system alerted Network Rail
when a bridge was recently struck, enabling the team to quickly
assess damage and minimise the likelihood of disruption for
passengers travelling on the East Coast Mainline.
Claire Spooner, Director of the Innovation Service at Innovate
UK, said:
Since 2017, Innovate UK has
delivered the Department for Transport-funded First-of-a-Kind
competition to accelerate the development, demonstration and
adoption of breakthrough technologies into rail innovation.
FOAK26
marks the next step, introducing more focused, industry-led
challenges aligned to DfT priorities and supported by
strong sponsorship across the sector. By working closely with
industry partners and stakeholders, FOAK26 will
maximise the impact of public investment, support the
commercialisation of innovation and drive economic growth by
helping new solutions reach the rail network faster.
Another of the FOAK
competition winners from 2025 developed an automated monitoring
system to track deliveries to an HS2 development site. The cameras worked
by integrating AI
software, alerting site workers to the delivery of time-critical
supplies, helping to keep projects on track.
Hao Zheng, Co-founder and CEO of Robok Limited, said:
Innovate UK's FOAK funding allowed us to develop
SiteFlow with EKFB on a live HS2 site, turning existing CCTV into supplier-assurance
and safety insight. That foundation is now enabling us to take
the product to the wider HS2
community and to scale this practical AI across UKinfrastructure.
Noel Dolphin, GB Managing Director of Furrer+Frey, said:
The FOAK competition has
allowed us to take risks and innovate further and faster than we
otherwise would. We've taken sound, but commercially risky
concepts and used FOAK
funding to develop and demonstrate them, working with a broad
range of partners, into real-world products.
Developing Lineform AI in the FOAK 2025 has already delivered cost
savings to Network Rail and UK infrastructure.
These projects will help to deliver better services for
passengers, encouraging more people to travel by rail as the
government rebuilds a publicly owned railway that the country can
rely on and be proud of under Great British Railways
(GBR).
As a single organisation, GBR will deliver lasting change
and build a railway fit for Britain's future, owned by the
public, for the public. The full public ownership programme is
expected to be completed by the end of 2027, with 8 out of the 14
train operators now publicly owned and operators managing more
than 1,100 stations. By bringing track and train under a single
directing mind, GBR
will drive up standards for passengers and make journeys easier
and better value for money.
Organisations have until 24 June 2026 to submit their
applications, with successful projects starting on 1 September
2026. See Innovate
UK's website to apply for
2026 competition.