Fee Structures in Tokenized Real Estate

February 2026 - 10 min read

Fees determine the gap between gross asset returns and what investors actually receive. In tokenized real estate, where fractional positions and multiple intermediary layers are common, understanding the full cost structure is essential for setting realistic return expectations and comparing offerings effectively. This article examines every fee category investors are likely to encounter.

Why Fees Matter More in Fractional Structures

In a traditional direct property investment of $500,000, a 1% annual management fee costs $5,000 - a meaningful amount, but one that is clearly visible and understood in context. In a fractional tokenized investment of $5,000, the same 1% fee costs just $50 annually, which may seem negligible. However, the percentage impact on returns is identical.

The challenge with tokenized real estate is that multiple fee layers can stack on top of each other: platform fees, asset management fees, property management fees, compliance costs, and technology charges. Each may appear modest individually, but their combined effect can significantly erode returns. A gross rental yield of 6% can be reduced to a net yield of 3% or less after all fees are deducted.

Fee drag: The cumulative reduction in investment returns caused by all fees and costs. In tokenized real estate, fee drag is often underestimated because costs are distributed across multiple categories and charged by different entities. Calculating the total expense ratio provides a clearer picture of the true cost of investment.

Issuance and Setup Fees

Issuance fees are one-time charges incurred when a tokenized offering is created. These fees cover the costs of structuring the investment, creating the legal framework, developing the token infrastructure, and marketing the offering. Typical components include:

Total issuance fees typically range from 1% to 5% of the total offering amount, though some structures charge up to 8% or more. These fees are usually embedded in the token price, meaning an investor who pays $100 for tokens may be acquiring an interest in $95 to $99 of actual property value.

High issuance fees create an immediate unrealized loss for investors. A 5% issuance fee means the underlying property must appreciate by more than 5% just for the investor to break even on capital, independent of any income received.

Ongoing Management Fees

Management fees are charged annually for the ongoing operation and oversight of the investment. They are typically deducted from rental income before distributions reach token holders.

Asset Management Fee

The asset management fee compensates the entity responsible for strategic oversight of the investment - making decisions about leasing strategy, capital improvements, refinancing, and eventual disposition. This fee typically ranges from 1% to 2% of asset value per year, charged regardless of property performance.

Property Management Fee

The property management fee covers day-to-day operations: tenant relations, maintenance coordination, rent collection, and lease administration. This fee is typically 5% to 10% of gross rental income. For properties with high vacancy or tenant turnover, the effective property management cost may include additional leasing commissions.

Platform Fee

Some tokenized offerings include a separate platform fee for technology infrastructure, investor services, and compliance management. This fee may range from 0.25% to 1% of asset value annually. Not all platforms charge this as a separate line item - some bundle it into the asset management fee.

Cumulative Impact

Consider a property with a gross rental yield of 7%. After deducting costs:

Nearly half of the gross yield is consumed by fees and operating costs. This is not necessarily unreasonable - property management and oversight have real costs - but investors should calculate these figures before investing, not discover them after.

Performance and Incentive Fees

Performance fees are charged when returns exceed a specified threshold, or hurdle rate. The theory is that performance fees align the manager's incentives with investor outcomes, rewarding above-average results. In practice, the structure of performance fees matters as much as their existence.

Common Structures

A performance fee without a high water mark allows the manager to earn fees on recovery from a loss - effectively being paid twice for the same performance. Insist on high water mark provisions as a basic protection.

Transaction and Transfer Fees

Transaction fees apply when tokens are bought, sold, or transferred. These may include:

For investors who trade frequently, transaction fees compound. For long-term holders, they are primarily relevant at entry and exit.

Platform Fees vs Asset-Level Fees

It is important to distinguish between fees charged at the platform level and those charged at the asset (SPV) level, as they serve different purposes and may be disclosed in different documents.

Platform-level fees are charged by the technology operator for infrastructure, compliance, and investor services. These fees are typically consistent across all offerings on the platform.

Asset-level fees are charged by the SPV manager, property manager, and other service providers specific to the individual property. These fees may vary by offering based on property type, location, and management complexity.

Both fee levels reduce investor returns. Review both the platform fee schedule and the offering-specific documents to understand the total cost structure.

Hidden Costs

Some costs in tokenized real estate are not presented as fees but still reduce investor returns:

Hidden costs are not necessarily improper - they often represent legitimate expenses required to operate the investment. The concern is when they are not disclosed upfront, preventing investors from accurately assessing the total cost of ownership before committing capital.

Fee Transparency Standards

A well-run platform should provide fee transparency that enables investors to understand the total cost of their investment. Best practices include:

If a platform cannot or will not provide a clear total expense ratio, treat the fee structure as opaque and factor in additional cost risk.

Comparing Fees to Traditional Alternatives

Fee comparison should account for the full investment lifecycle and the services included:

Tokenized real estate fees are generally comparable to private real estate funds for similar services but higher than public REITs. The additional cost reflects the technology layer, the fractional structure, and the compliance overhead of the tokenized format. Whether these additional costs are justified depends on the value the tokenized structure provides to the specific investor.

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