PRYPCO Takes UAE’s Regulated Tokenization Playbook to Georgia

The UAE is exporting its real estate tokenization expertise to Georgia as PRYPCO partners with the Georgian government to build a compliant and transparent framework.

PRYPCO Takes UAE’s Regulated Tokenization Playbook to Georgia
UAE’s Tokenization to Georgia

The UAE is steadily emerging as a global exporter of real-world asset tokenization expertise, particularly in real estate. After building a regulated and compliant framework at home, the country is now sharing its experience with governments abroad. The latest example of this growing influence is Georgia, which has partnered with UAE-based PropTech platform PRYPCO to develop its own real estate tokenization model.

Georgia’s decision reflects a broader shift in how countries are approaching blockchain-based asset digitization. Rather than allowing unregulated experimentation, governments are increasingly seeking proven frameworks that balance innovation with legal clarity. The UAE’s approach, built through close coordination between regulators and private companies, has positioned platforms like PRYPCO as reference points for compliant real estate tokenization.

As part of this collaboration, PRYPCO has entered into a formal cooperation agreement with Georgia’s Ministry of Justice. The agreement was signed in the presence of senior Georgian leadership, including Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze and Minister of Justice Paata Salia, alongside PRYPCO’s founder and CEO Amira Sajwani and the company’s leadership team. The presence of top government officials underscores the strategic importance Georgia places on this initiative.

Under the agreement, PRYPCO and Georgia’s Ministry of Justice will work together to advance legal and technological innovation in the real estate sector. The partnership aims to improve regulatory clarity, strengthen investor confidence, and create conditions that attract both domestic and international investment into Georgia’s property market.

A key focus of the collaboration is the secure and compliant tokenization of real estate-related rights. This includes exploring how ownership interests and property rights can be digitally represented while remaining fully aligned with Georgian laws and regulatory requirements. The emphasis is on transparency, legal certainty, and investor protection rather than speculative use of blockchain technology.

PRYPCO’s leadership has described the partnership as part of a longer-term strategy to support governments that are open to responsible innovation. According to the company, Georgia’s willingness to modernize its legal and real estate infrastructure makes it a strong partner as PRYPCO expands its international government collaborations. The goal is to create frameworks that allow global investors to participate confidently in tokenized real estate markets.

From Georgia’s perspective, the cooperation is seen as a step toward modernizing its real estate and legal systems. Georgian authorities have highlighted that exploring tokenization within a clear regulatory structure can help position the country as a secure, transparent, and forward-looking investment destination.

This agreement also aligns with PRYPCO’s broader expansion plans. In 2025, the company raised pre-Series A funding led by General Catalyst, with the stated aim of scaling its operations across the Middle East and into new international markets. The Georgia partnership reflects how that strategy is now moving from funding to execution.

At a global level, this development shows how real-world asset tokenization is entering a more institutional phase. Countries are no longer asking whether blockchain can be used in real estate. Instead, they are looking for trusted partners who have already navigated regulation, compliance, and real market deployment. The UAE, through platforms like PRYPCO, is increasingly filling that role.

For emerging markets, including Pakistan, this case highlights an important lesson. Leadership in tokenization is not about launching fast or making headlines. It is about building regulated systems that others are willing to adopt. The UAE’s growing role as an exporter of tokenization expertise suggests that compliance-first innovation is becoming the global standard.