Answers and advice from Crowdious team
Crowdious is a Palestinian platform that lets multiple participants co-own a single piece of real estate through a dedicated legal entity. For each property listed, we set up a single-purpose entity that holds that asset. Participants contribute toward its acquisition, ownership is documented and pro-rata, and proceeds are distributed when the project exits (sale, development, or planned hold).
$500 on most listings. A few of our smaller plots allow entry at $500 even as the per-investor maximum varies. Each listing page shows its specific minimum and maximum participation amount.
Palestinians inside the country and abroad, including diaspora participants, can join. Non-Palestinians can participate subject to standard KYC and any applicable restrictions tied to the underlying property. We verify identity at sign-up; we do not require residency in Palestine.
Returns come from the asset's appreciation in value and, where applicable, from any income the asset generates during the hold (e.g., agricultural yield). The primary distribution happens at exit, when the entity sells or otherwise realizes value from the property. Expected holding periods are 2–5 years for most current listings.
Real estate is not risk-free. Markets can move, exits can take longer than expected, and not every project will deliver the projected return. The structure ensures that whatever value the entity ultimately realizes is distributed pro-rata. Participants share both the upside and the downside in proportion to their stake. We list expected returns; we do not guarantee them.
No annual fees during the hold period. A one-time platform fee of 1.5% is applied at exit, deducted from the distribution. Some projects may have direct project-level costs (e.g., surveying, legal documentation) that are clearly disclosed on the listing page and are paid from the project bank account, not as additional charges to participants.
Your ownership is recorded as equity in the project's legal entity, reflected in that entity's shareholder ledger and reflected on your account dashboard. You receive copies of the entity's incorporation documents and the participation agreement when you join. The plot title (Tabu) remains in the entity's name, registered through the official Palestinian land registry.