A commercial skyscraper usually costs tens of millions of dollars, takes a team of lawyers, and a lot of patience that lasts longer than most people’s investment timelines. There has always been an invisible wall around business property that most people never get close enough to touch. There is a change happening in the way ownership is set up, not because the buildings got cheaper, but because that gate is starting to open.
Tokenization of real estate is what makes that change possible. At its core, it means using digital tokens recorded on a blockchain to show a portion of ownership in a real property, like an office building, a shopping mall, or a hotel. One million $50 tokens could be used to pay for a $50 million building. If someone in Lahore or Lagos buys one of these tokens, they will get a share of the rental income. It sounds almost too easy. That’s one reason why serious observers are wary, even though the number of people who support it keeps going up.
The blockchain part is more important than it might seem at first. County courthouses, paper files, and private databases hold traditional real estate records that are often disputed by different parties. Once a transaction is recorded in the blockchain, it can’t be changed without being seen. There is a public ledger that keeps track of every change in ownership and token transfer. That level of openness isn’t just helpful in an industry where buyers have long been annoyed by title disputes and hidden fees. It’s built differently than anything that came before.

Another problem that tokenization is trying to fix is the lack of cash. A share of an office building can’t be sold on a Tuesday afternoon when you need cash. This is what investors mean when they say that commercial real estate is “illiquid.” Tokenized real estate should be able to trade on secondary markets like stocks. It’s still really hard to say if those markets are strong enough. But I can see how the model works. If an investor owns tokens in a commercial property, they only need to find someone willing to buy their token. They don’t need to find a buyer for the whole building. That is a difference that matters.
In a different way, developers are interested in it. A developer doesn’t have to negotiate with just one bank or a small group of institutional investors. Instead, they can sell tokens online and get money from people all over the world. One office building project in Florida reportedly got money this way so they wouldn’t have to go through a traditional bank. As this model grows, it might change not only who invests in commercial real estate but also how those buildings get paid for in the first place.
It still doesn’t feel safe in the regulatory environment. Tokens that are used as securities, like most real estate tokens, have to follow securities laws, which are very different from country to country. Platforms that work in this area have to deal with a patchwork of rules that aren’t fully in line with the technology. It’s still not clear how much legal trouble small investors will face when they try to trade across borders or get out of positions in markets that aren’t very liquid. These aren’t just hypothetical worries; they’re the kinds of things that have kept blockchain from being widely used in finance many times.
The way the industry seems to be going is harder to ignore. Commercial real estate has been resistant to digital changes for a long time, but now it’s starting to use blockchain tools in ways that it didn’t a few years ago. Smart contracts take care of automatically distributing rental income. Records of who owns what are being moved to decentralized ledgers. Brokers and developers who used to think of cryptocurrency as a novelty are now thinking about how the technology behind it could be used to build things.
It’s still not clear if tokenization does everything that’s being said about it. Real estate is real, local, and deeply human. A skyscraper is not just a piece of paper; it’s a place where people work, eat lunch, and take elevators every day. That won’t change because of the tech. However, it looks like who gets a seat at the table is slowly but surely changing.

