
Real-world assets (RWAs) were originally a far-fetched concept, discussed at conferences and written about in papers.
In 2025, RWAs are quietly becoming one of the most important components of blockchain’s institutional use case. With tokenization being governed by actual regulatory frameworks and involving multibillion-dollar transactions, speculative enthusiasm is giving way to structural utility.
Why does this matter? Because traditional markets—real estate, finance, and private equity—are fraught with inefficiency. Tokenization enables these illiquid and opaque assets to be exchanged transparently, compliantly, and quickly. It enables 24/7 settlement, worldwide investor access, and programmable financial products.
Instead of focusing on hype cycles or transient storylines, now is the moment to investigate where compliant, large-scale tokenization is taking place—and whose ecosystems are quietly developing the architecture of real-world finance on-chain.
A New Wave of Infrastructure
Tokenization is no longer only a DeFi experiment. It is being integrated directly into existing financial systems. Take Securitize as an example. This isn’t a startup attempting to innovate; it’s the SEC-registered transfer agent used by BlackRock to tokenize funds and Hamilton Lane to bring private equity to blockchain. For years, the platform has functioned in accordance with US regulations, providing primary issuance and secondary trading through a registered broker-dealer.
Meanwhile, in Canada, a modest but significant transformation is occurring. T-RIZE converts whole-home projects into tokenized securities. Their flagship project in Quebec, a 960-unit development, is valued at $300 million and tokenized using the ERC-3643 standard, which is meant for compliant securities.
What distinguishes it is not just the real estate, but also the infrastructure: each token can be traded through an SEC-registered ATS, giving institutional investors a familiar and regulated entry point into blockchain-based assets.
Layer 1s Are Competing for RWA Utility
Not only are platforms rushing to fulfill institutional norms, but so are base-layer blockchains. Quai Network is a standout in this area, having built a high-throughput Proof-of-Work chain with a novel consensus architecture optimized for scalability.
In early 2025, Quai added Frictionless Markets, allowing tokenized US Treasury MMFs and institutional-grade cash instruments to trade on-chain.
Similarly, Plume Network has positioned itself as the first L1 designed for “RWAfi”—a new type of financing that combines real-world collateral with DeFi mechanisms. It began with tokenized gold (XAUm) and now allows for flows into commodities, carbon credits, and credit instruments. It is backed by significant institutional funds and leverages Fireblocks’ MPC custody to provide banks and funds with a safe entry point into blockchain-based yield products.
Dubai’s Institutional Play
Middle Eastern markets are also active. One of the biggest public RWA transactions occurred in Dubai, as MultiBank Group and real estate developer MAG collaborated to tokenize $3 billion worth of premium real estate. This wasn’t a blockchain pilot but a financial business with cross-border compliance and institutional reach, thanks to VARA regulatory approval and licenses in 17 nations.
Mavryk’s infrastructure facilitates the issuance and lifetime management of these assets, while the secondary market is optimized for institutional liquidity.
Beyond Pilots: A Test of Scale
These initiatives no longer rely on theoretical frameworks. They are working with authorities, integrating with legacy finance, and overcoming previously intractable operational challenges. The transition from tokenized homes to blockchain-native MMFs has already begun.
However, success will not be defined by market capitalization or headlines but by how efficiently these platforms handle audits, secondary market activity, and the legal plumbing that distinguishes traditional securities. That is where the real shift is taking place—and where the future of RWA resides.
