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A new article has been published in our blog about how tokenization is bringing real estate and blockchain together in Georgia. It shows how property owners can use digital tokens to divide ownership, share income from properties, and open up investment to more people.
Georgia has been a pioneer in blockchain use in real estate. Since 2016 the National Agency of Public Registry (NAPR) has applied blockchain to land-title records. Extracts proving ownership are uploaded to a blockchain-based system anchored to the Bitcoin blockchain. This helps secure property documents and make them verifiable.
Regulation in Georgia is fairly friendly to crypto and blockchain businesses. The Georgian National Blockchain Agency supports adoption and works with government regulators and companies to build transparent public policies for tokenization. Also, legal guides note that buying property with cryptocurrency is becoming more popular there, helped by favorable tax and legal environment.
What this means: tokenization in Georgia can lower barriers for small investors. Instead of buying a whole building, people may buy tokens representing part of it. Owners and developers get funding faster, and more transparently. This fits global trends: reports suggest tokenized real estate could reach over $4 trillion by 2035 as asset tokenization grows.
With strong legal foundations, early blockchain land registry systems, and growing investor interest, Georgia looks like a model for how tokenization and real estate might combine in practice. Risks remain, especially around regulation details and liquidity, but momentum is clear.