Tokenized real estate has quietly grown into a $392 million on-chain market, spread across 58 live assets, but the distribution is far from global.
The data shows a clear geographic imbalance, with the United States and the UAE accounting for roughly 80% of total value.
The current footprint of tokenized real estate remains narrow but measurable. Total asset value sits near $392.52 million, with 10,440 holders and just 396 monthly active addresses, highlighting that capital concentration remains high while user participation is still limited.
Activity spans 10 countries, though most regions contribute marginally to overall value.
From a structural perspective, this is not organic global adoption yet. It is targeted deployment in jurisdictions where legal clarity, property digitization frameworks, and investor appetite already overlap.
The concentration in the U.S. and the UAE reflects where tokenization solves immediate problems. In the U.S., tokenized structures often focus on fractional ownership, funds, and real estate–backed debt within established compliance regimes. In the UAE, especially Dubai-linked projects, tokenization aligns with a broader push toward digitally native property markets and international capital access.
Other regions appear on-chain mostly as experiments rather than scaled deployments, which explains why the asset count rises faster than active usage metrics.
The chart shows that growth has come primarily from new assets being added, not from a surge in address activity. Monthly active addresses remain below 400, even as total value has expanded sharply, indicating that tokenized real estate is still driven by a small group of issuers and investors rather than broad retail participation.
This matters structurally. Until usage scales alongside value, liquidity and secondary market depth will remain constrained.
Tokenized real estate is no longer theoretical, but it is not yet global infrastructure. The current $392 million footprint reflects where regulation and capital already work, not where adoption has fully arrived. For this sector to move beyond a regional niche, growth will need to shift from asset issuance alone toward sustained on-chain activity across a wider set of jurisdictions.
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