Common Questions

01 — Is AVKI a marketplace?

No. We're infrastructure. Marketplaces connect buyers and sellers directly. AVKI provides the technology layer that enables other platforms — banks, brokerages, wealth managers — to offer tokenized real estate to their customers. We don't compete with our partners. We enable them. Think of us as the rails, not the storefront.

02 — How is tokenized ownership different from a REIT?

REITs offer diversified exposure to real estate through fund shares. You own a piece of the fund, which owns pieces of many properties. You don't own the real estate directly. Tokenized ownership is direct. You own a fractional interest in a specific property — the warehouse in Chicago, the multifamily portfolio in Texas. You receive your proportional share of cash flows and appreciation from that asset, not a blended return across a portfolio you didn't choose. REITs also cap dividends at 90% of taxable income. Direct ownership has no such constraint.

03 — What regulatory framework applies?

Tokenized real estate securities are regulated the same as traditional private placements. The token is the wrapper, not a loophole. AVKI structures offerings under: Reg D (506b/506c) — For accredited investors. The established framework for private real estate syndication, now with tokenized settlement; and Reg A+ (in development) — For retail investors. Allows non-accredited participation up to specified limits. We're building toward this pathway. Compliance isn't optional. It's core infrastructure.

04 — Who can invest through AVKI's partners?

Currently, most offerings are available to accredited investors — individuals with $200K+ annual income (or $300K joint) or $1M+ net worth excluding primary residence. As we deploy Reg A+ infrastructure, retail access will expand. Our architecture is built for both pathways. If you're a financial institution, you can offer tokenized CRE to your qualified customers through our white-label platform. We handle accreditation verification as part of the onboarding flow.

05 — How does liquidity work?

Traditional syndications lock investors for 7-10 years. Tokenized securities improve on this in two ways: Primary liquidity: Lower minimums mean smaller positions. You can build exposure incrementally rather than committing large sums to single investments. Secondary liquidity: Tokenized securities can trade on compliant secondary markets when available. We're building with this architecture in mind — positions designed to be transferable when regulations and market infrastructure support it. This isn't instant liquidity like public equities. It's meaningfully better liquidity than traditional private real estate structures.

Common Questions

01 — Is AVKI a marketplace?

No. We're infrastructure. Marketplaces connect buyers and sellers directly. AVKI provides the technology layer that enables other platforms — banks, brokerages, wealth managers — to offer tokenized real estate to their customers. We don't compete with our partners. We enable them. Think of us as the rails, not the storefront.

02 — How is tokenized ownership different from a REIT?

REITs offer diversified exposure to real estate through fund shares. You own a piece of the fund, which owns pieces of many properties. You don't own the real estate directly. Tokenized ownership is direct. You own a fractional interest in a specific property — the warehouse in Chicago, the multifamily portfolio in Texas. You receive your proportional share of cash flows and appreciation from that asset, not a blended return across a portfolio you didn't choose. REITs also cap dividends at 90% of taxable income. Direct ownership has no such constraint.

03 — What regulatory framework applies?

Tokenized real estate securities are regulated the same as traditional private placements. The token is the wrapper, not a loophole. AVKI structures offerings under: Reg D (506b/506c) — For accredited investors. The established framework for private real estate syndication, now with tokenized settlement; and Reg A+ (in development) — For retail investors. Allows non-accredited participation up to specified limits. We're building toward this pathway. Compliance isn't optional. It's core infrastructure.

04 — Who can invest through AVKI's partners?

Currently, most offerings are available to accredited investors — individuals with $200K+ annual income (or $300K joint) or $1M+ net worth excluding primary residence. As we deploy Reg A+ infrastructure, retail access will expand. Our architecture is built for both pathways. If you're a financial institution, you can offer tokenized CRE to your qualified customers through our white-label platform. We handle accreditation verification as part of the onboarding flow.

05 — How does liquidity work?

Traditional syndications lock investors for 7-10 years. Tokenized securities improve on this in two ways: Primary liquidity: Lower minimums mean smaller positions. You can build exposure incrementally rather than committing large sums to single investments. Secondary liquidity: Tokenized securities can trade on compliant secondary markets when available. We're building with this architecture in mind — positions designed to be transferable when regulations and market infrastructure support it. This isn't instant liquidity like public equities. It's meaningfully better liquidity than traditional private real estate structures.

Common Questions

01 — Is AVKI a marketplace?

No. We're infrastructure. Marketplaces connect buyers and sellers directly. AVKI provides the technology layer that enables other platforms — banks, brokerages, wealth managers — to offer tokenized real estate to their customers. We don't compete with our partners. We enable them. Think of us as the rails, not the storefront.

02 — How is tokenized ownership different from a REIT?

REITs offer diversified exposure to real estate through fund shares. You own a piece of the fund, which owns pieces of many properties. You don't own the real estate directly. Tokenized ownership is direct. You own a fractional interest in a specific property — the warehouse in Chicago, the multifamily portfolio in Texas. You receive your proportional share of cash flows and appreciation from that asset, not a blended return across a portfolio you didn't choose. REITs also cap dividends at 90% of taxable income. Direct ownership has no such constraint.

03 — What regulatory framework applies?

Tokenized real estate securities are regulated the same as traditional private placements. The token is the wrapper, not a loophole. AVKI structures offerings under: Reg D (506b/506c) — For accredited investors. The established framework for private real estate syndication, now with tokenized settlement; and Reg A+ (in development) — For retail investors. Allows non-accredited participation up to specified limits. We're building toward this pathway. Compliance isn't optional. It's core infrastructure.

04 — Who can invest through AVKI's partners?

Currently, most offerings are available to accredited investors — individuals with $200K+ annual income (or $300K joint) or $1M+ net worth excluding primary residence. As we deploy Reg A+ infrastructure, retail access will expand. Our architecture is built for both pathways. If you're a financial institution, you can offer tokenized CRE to your qualified customers through our white-label platform. We handle accreditation verification as part of the onboarding flow.

05 — How does liquidity work?

Traditional syndications lock investors for 7-10 years. Tokenized securities improve on this in two ways: Primary liquidity: Lower minimums mean smaller positions. You can build exposure incrementally rather than committing large sums to single investments. Secondary liquidity: Tokenized securities can trade on compliant secondary markets when available. We're building with this architecture in mind — positions designed to be transferable when regulations and market infrastructure support it. This isn't instant liquidity like public equities. It's meaningfully better liquidity than traditional private real estate structures.