TYTL Corp Raises Seed Funding to Expand Residential Real Estate Equity Tokenization Platform
Wall Street has a funny habit. Capital moves fast when it smells yield, but trillions can sit frozen inside the very assets people live in every day. More than $35T in U.S. homeowner equity is locked inside residential properties, part of a housing market pushing past $110T in total value. Yet tapping that equity still feels like signing up for another mortgage payment and a stack of paperwork thick enough to stop a bullet. That tension is exactly where TYTL Corp decided to plant its flag.
The Newport, Rhode Island based proptech company just closed a seed round led by Strobe Ventures with participation from Fifth Era. No circus music, no chest pounding. Just capital moving toward a sharp idea at the right moment. The timing matters because the mechanics behind TYTL are not just financial engineering. They are structural. The company is building a platform that converts real, deed recorded residential equity into blockchain based fractional ownership using Solana infrastructure. Real property. Real deeds. Tokenized with a 1:1 structure.
Now the interesting part. Every property sits on its own Solana Program Derived Address. That means each home gets its own on chain footprint tied directly to the fractional equity recorded in municipal deed records. The chain publishes the details investors actually care about. Deed references. Purchase price. Ownership percentages. Even consensus fair market value metrics that update nightly. Transparency is not a marketing slogan here. It is literally written into the ledger.
Execution matters, and TYTL is not building alone. The platform connects directly with Beeline Holdings, the NASDAQ listed mortgage platform, along with Beeline Title handling title, escrow, settlement, and recording. Anchorage Digital Bank brings institutional grade custody into the picture and handles token distribution and liquidation flows that route U.S. dollars directly into escrow accounts. The machine is already moving. 11 fractional equity transactions have closed through this system so far, quietly proving the plumbing works.
The real story here is not just tokenization. It is the shift from debt to ownership dynamics. Traditional home equity access usually means borrowing against the house and adding another monthly obligation. TYTL approaches the equation differently. Fractional equity is sold rather than borrowed. No loan balance creeping upward. Just shared exposure to the value of the property.
Strobe Ventures and Fifth Era clearly saw the signal. When serious investors back infrastructure instead of hype, it tends to mean the groundwork is stronger than the headlines. A debt free path into homeowner liquidity, backed by recorded deeds, real transactions, and a blockchain ledger that never forgets.
There are over $35T reasons this idea is starting to resonate. And if the early transactions are any indication, the intersection of property records, blockchain rails, and institutional custody might turn out to be one of the more interesting corners of proptech to watch as the decade unfolds.









