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A new article is live on our blog. Tokenizer.Estate has published article on how Indonesia—and Bali in particular—are opening a new era for real estate tokenization.
Indonesia is building clearer rules for digital assets. The Financial Services Authority (OJK) has issued regulation that brings crypto and other digital financial assets under its supervision. This step creates a pathway for compliant token offerings linked to real estate, with stronger investor protection and licensing standards.
What does tokenization change? Instead of buying a whole villa or office, people purchase small digital shares. These tokens can carry rights to rental income or sale proceeds. For developers and owners, tokenization can speed up fundraising and widen the pool of backers. Records on a distributed ledger also help reduce paperwork and make ownership easier to verify.
The model suits Bali’s global audience and active rental market. Resorts and residential projects can reach investors abroad without demanding large minimums. If secondary markets expand, holders may sell their tokens faster than traditional property shares. Still, projects must follow local rules on securities, land use, and foreign participation.
“Clear rules and simple terms help turn interest into trust,” said Tokenizer.Estate Editorial Team, research and insights unit. Their point reflects the country’s effort to balance innovation with safeguards while attracting new capital to property.