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Investors can join Dubai’s next click-to-own drop tomorrow at 11 a.m., after Prypco Mint tweets that a rented Dubai Marina apartment and a Mohammed bin Rashid City unit will open from AED 2,000 per slice inside its web wallet. The company says both titles will settle through the Land Department’s blockchain gateway, giving every token the same legal weight as a paper deed.
Two new #tokenised #properties drop tomorrow at 11 AM! 🏙️
— PRYPCO Mint (@PRYPCOMint) July 15, 2025
Get ready to invest in #DubaiMarina and #MBRCity, two of the most iconic locations in #Dubai, soon.
Stay tuned, top up your wallet, and don’t miss your chance to own a piece of Dubai 🔗 https://t.co/aBQx00aLuv pic.twitter.com/vlpSAvFr1J
A LinkedIn update from the company shows countdown banners, wallet-top-up tips and a promise that both assets are pre-rented, so holders begin earning income from the first day. The post also notes that title deeds will settle through the Land Department’s blockchain gateway, giving tokens the same legal force as paper shares.
“Double the drop means double the opportunity—be ready,” wrote founder and CEO Amira Sajwani on X, urging followers to set phone reminders before the sale window opens. Her previous launches attracted buyers from more than forty countries, proving, she said, that “fractional ownership is now routine, not theory.”
The buzz follows Prypco’s July 13 villa sale, when Times of India reports that a Dh 1.75 million listing sold out in under five minutes, attracting 169 backers with an average ticket of Dh 10,355. That result pushed total platform volume past Dh 25 million.
Regulated observers are watching closely. Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority licences Prypco, and Gulf News notes the emirate wants tokenised property to reach Dh 60 billion by 2033. Scheduled “exit windows” twice a year already give holders a chance to trade their slices without waiting for a full building sale.
Tokenisation breaks a property into hundreds of digital units recorded on a transparent ledger. Supporters say this trims paperwork, widens access and lets regulators track ownership in real time. If tomorrow’s dual launch funds as fast as past drops, Dubai’s road to a click-to-own housing market will look even shorter.