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The commercial real estate industry, long resistant to digital disruption, is finally embracing blockchain technology in a way that could fundamentally transform how buildings are bought, sold and financed.
While Bitcoin made headlines in residential transactions a decade ago, it’s the underlying blockchain infrastructure that is now attracting the attention of investors and commercial real estate developers – and experts predict the entire industry will be running on the technology within just 10 years.
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Blockchain serves as a secure platform and what industry insiders describe as a “big, big virtual filing cabinet” capable of storing billions of documents — titles, deeds, cryptocurrency holdings and mortgage bonds — in perpetuity without risk of loss or manipulation, according to CNBC.
But the applications go far beyond simple record-keeping. Blockchain-based smart contracts are linked to utilities, enabling automated billing for water, waste management, energy and even smart parking systems. This integration promises more efficient, data-driven urban management and real estate operations.
One of the most innovative uses of cryptocurrency in CRE is to mine digital assets without liquidating them. Investors are increasingly using crypto as collateral for residential and commercial real estate loans, allowing them to acquire real estate while retaining ownership of digital currencies that often appreciate faster than property values.
Trend: Moxy hotels worth $12 billion in real estate – The company behind New York’s hottest properties is letting individual investors in.
This strategy addresses a critical problem: forcing investors to choose between their crypto holdings and their real estate investments. Now they can have both.
Perhaps the most transformative blockchain application is tokenization, which involves converting ownership rights to commercial properties into tradable digital tokens. This process allows for fractional ownership and makes it much easier to exchange shares in individual properties, according to CNBC.


