Introduction: Commercial real estate has always been wealth-heavy
Commercial real estate has traditionally been one of the most powerful wealth-creation assets. Office spaces, retail complexes, and warehouses generate long-term rental income and capital appreciation.
But there is a clear problem:
Access to commercial real estate has been restricted to high-net-worth individuals and institutional investors.
Tokenisation and fractional ownership are changing that structure.
What is fractional ownership through tokens?
Fractional ownership via tokens is:
A system where commercial real estate is divided into digital units (tokens), each representing a share of ownership and income rights.
Instead of buying an entire property, investors can buy small fractions digitally.
The Market Gap: High-value assets are locked behind high entry barriers
1. High capital requirement
Commercial properties require large investments.
2. Institutional dominance
REITs and funds dominate access.
3. Limited retail participation
Small investors are excluded from prime assets.
4. Low liquidity
Direct property investment is hard to exit.
How tokenisation changes commercial real estate
1. Fractional access
Investors can own small portions of premium properties.
2. Lower entry threshold
Investment becomes accessible at smaller amounts.
3. Income distribution
Rental income is shared proportionally.
4. Improved liquidity
Tokens can be traded in secondary markets.
How tokenised commercial real estate works
1. Asset selection
A commercial property is identified (office, retail, logistics).
2. Legal structuring
Ownership is divided into compliant digital units.
3. Token issuance
Tokens represent fractional ownership rights.
4. Investor participation
Retail and institutional investors buy tokens.
5. Income flow
Rental returns are distributed digitally.
Why this matters for wealth democratisation
1. Access to premium assets
Retail investors can invest in Grade A properties.
2. Portfolio diversification
Exposure to real estate without full ownership.
3. Passive income generation
Regular rental income at smaller scale.
4. Reduced inequality in asset access
Broader participation in wealth-generating assets.
Role of digital financial infrastructure
India already operates a highly scalable digital payments ecosystem that enables mass financial participation.
Platforms like
Unified Payments Interface (UPI)
have shown how financial systems can scale to millions of users with low friction. Tokenised real estate builds on similar principles but extends them into asset ownership and investment markets.
Tokenised real estate vs traditional REITs
REITs:
Centralized structure
Limited asset customization
Exchange-traded securities
Institutional dominance
Tokenised real estate:
Highly fractional ownership
Asset-specific exposure
Flexible trading models
Potentially broader retail participation
Key benefits of tokenised commercial real estate
1. Democratized investment access
Retail investors can enter premium markets.
2. Improved liquidity
Easier entry and exit compared to physical property.
3. Transparent ownership
Blockchain-based records increase trust.
4. Lower investment friction
Reduced dependency on intermediaries.
5. Global capital participation
Cross-border investment becomes easier.
Risks and challenges
1. Regulatory uncertainty
Clear legal classification is still evolving.
2. Liquidity dependence
Secondary markets must be active.
3. Asset valuation complexity
Ensuring fair pricing of tokenised shares.
4. Platform risk
Dependence on digital infrastructure providers.
5. Investor awareness gap
Understanding fractional ownership is still developing.
Why regulation is critical
For tokenised commercial real estate to scale safely, regulators must define:
Legal ownership rights of tokens
Investor protection frameworks
Trading platform regulations
Custody and settlement rules
Disclosure requirements for underlying assets
Without this, market trust cannot scale.
Future outlook: Real estate becomes a liquid digital asset class
Over the next 5–10 years, commercial real estate may evolve into:
1. Tokenised investment platforms
Retail access to institutional-grade properties.
2. Global fractional ownership markets
Cross-border real estate participation.
3. Secondary liquidity ecosystems
Active trading of property tokens.
4. Hybrid REIT-token models
Combination of traditional and digital structures.
5. Real-time income distribution systems
Automated rental payouts via smart contracts.
Conclusion: Wealth creation is shifting from ownership to access
Fractional ownership through tokenisation is not just a financial innovation. It is a structural shift in how wealth is accessed.
We are moving from:
Full property ownership → fractional digital participation
Exclusive asset classes → inclusive investment ecosystems
Illiquid investments → tradable real estate exposure
At its core, this transformation is about one idea:
Wealth is no longer defined by how much property you can buy, but by how much of it you can access.
For India, tokenised commercial real estate has the potential to reshape wealth distribution by opening one of the most powerful asset classes to a far broader investor base