For Real Estate Professionals
If you list, broker, or close land transactions, Fabrica changes the mechanics of the deal, not the law behind it. A tokenized property still has a recorded deed and a real chain of title; what changes is that ownership moves with a token, so a sale can settle in minutes instead of weeks, without a new deed recorded for every transfer.
What changes for you
- Listings reach the buyers you already use. A tokenized property can be listed on the Fabrica marketplace and federated to the MLS, so it appears alongside conventional listings rather than only in a crypto venue. See Selling.
- Closings are faster. Settlement is onchain and near-instant, without the escrow and recording delays of a traditional closing. Title stays in the trust's name throughout, so each resale does not require re-recording a deed.
- You are working with a licensed counterparty, not a workaround. Fabrica's US validator holds 20+ title, escrow, and broker-related licenses and operates across all 50 states and 3,000+ counties. The structure retrofits existing property law rather than bypassing it (see Legal framework).
- Title work still applies. Tokenization follows a title review at on-ramp, and recorded title remains verifiable at the county. A national underwriter (First American) has already issued title insurance on a tokenized Fabrica property (see Title insurance after tokenization); broad availability is still developing and varies by underwriter and jurisdiction.
How to work with Fabrica
- Refer or list a property. Owners tokenize through the on-ramp; a property can then be listed for sale on the marketplace.
- Represent a buyer. Buyers can purchase with a card or stablecoins and receive the property token, which carries the property's metadata and a confidence score for due diligence. See Buying.
- Understand the legal structure. The Fabrica Trust and regulatory framework pages cover the trust, licensing, and how title is held.
For the full owner journey, see Owning a Fabrica Property.
