Real estate tokenization: how it works

Tokenization turns rights connected to a real-world asset into digital tokens recorded on a blockchain. For real estate it means one property — or a portfolio — can be represented by many digital units, so participation no longer requires buying a whole apartment or building. This page explains how the model works, what role the M2C token plays in the GREM ecosystem, and what to check before you commit money.

What is real estate tokenization?

Tokenization is the process of issuing blockchain tokens that represent rights related to an asset: a share of ownership, a claim on income, or access to a product built on top of the asset. The token itself is an entry in a distributed ledger — transparent, transferable and difficult to forge.

For real estate this solves two classic problems: the high entry ticket (a property costs hundreds of thousands of dollars, a token can cost a few) and slow, paper-heavy transfers. The legal wrapper matters as much as the technology: serious projects define precisely what right each token carries in which jurisdiction.

How the model works step by step

A typical tokenization pipeline looks like this:

  • An asset (property, development project or market product) is selected and audited.
  • A legal structure defines what exactly the token holder gets.
  • Tokens are issued on a blockchain and distributed — via sale, presale or exchange.
  • Holders can keep tokens, use them inside the ecosystem, or trade them where a secondary market exists.

Tokenization in the GREM ecosystem: the M2C token

GREM is an international real estate ecosystem: a marketplace with verified listings, AI tools and a CRM for professionals. Within it, M2C is the ecosystem's utility token, connected to the tokenization of the global real estate market that GREM is building. The token presale runs at m2c.grem.capital, where supply, stages and tokenomics are published.

Unlike buying a single apartment, the M2C model is tied to the growth of the platform and its market products — which also means its dynamics depend on the project's execution, not on one building's rent.

What to weigh before investing

Tokenized real estate is still an early market. Evaluate it the way you would any early-stage instrument:

  • Regulation differs by country — check how tokens are treated where you are tax-resident.
  • Liquidity is not guaranteed: a secondary market may be thin or absent.
  • The value of a utility token depends on the ecosystem's real usage, not promises.
  • Only invest money you can afford to lock for a long horizon.

Frequently asked questions

What is real estate tokenization in simple terms?
It is turning rights connected to real estate — ownership share, income claim, or product access — into digital tokens on a blockchain. Tokens are cheap to transfer and allow fractional participation.
How is it different from buying property?
Buying property gives you a registered title to one object with a high entry ticket. Tokens give fractional exposure with a low ticket and easier transfer, but the exact rights depend on the token's legal structure — always read it.
What is M2C?
M2C is the utility token of the GREM ecosystem, linked to the tokenization of the real estate marketplace GREM operates. Its presale, stages and tokenomics are published at m2c.grem.capital.
What are the main risks?
Regulatory differences between countries, limited liquidity of young tokens, and dependence of utility-token value on actual ecosystem usage. Tokenized real estate is an early-stage market — invest accordingly.
How do I start?
Study the documentation at m2c.grem.capital, create a free GREM account at cabinet.grem.capital, and start with an amount you are comfortable holding long-term.

Explore the M2C token

Tokenomics, presale stages and documentation are published on the M2C site. A free GREM account gives access to the marketplace and tools.

This page is for information only and is not investment, legal or tax advice. Digital assets involve risk, including loss of capital. Always do your own research and consider local regulation.