UAE Leads $500B GCC Opportunity in Real-World Asset Tokenization
New analysis by Kearney and Ctrl Alt highlights $500B potential for GCC real-world asset tokenization by 2030

Nearly $500 billion in addressable value could be unlocked across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) by 2030 through real-world asset (RWA) tokenization, according to a new analysis by global management consulting firm Kearney, in collaboration with Ctrl Alt, a leading provider of end-to-end tokenization solutions for financial institutions and governments.
The report highlights that tokenization is rapidly moving from concept to execution, with the on-chain RWA market (excluding stablecoins) expanding from approximately $1.1 billion in early 2023 to nearly $20 billion by January 2026.
GCC Tokenization Opportunities: Private Markets, Public Equities Lead the Way
Kearney’s analysis shows that the GCC’s strongest tokenization potential lies in private markets and public equities, reflecting the region’s robust participation in alternative investments and sizable listed markets. Tokenizing these asset classes can:
- Expand investor access
- Enhance market liquidity
- Modernize investor engagement across regional capital markets
Beyond equities and private assets, the report identifies additional tokenization opportunities in bank deposits, funds, real estate, and commodities, each offering distinct benefits:
- Real-time settlement and more efficient fund structures
- Fractional property ownership
- Greater transparency in commodity trading
Collectively, these opportunities underpin the GCC’s projected $500 billion tokenization potential by 2030.
Pilot Projects Demonstrate Practical Impact
“Tokenization is gaining traction where it addresses clear market frictions,” said Elias Aad, Partner at Kearney Middle East & Africa – Digital & Analytics Practice. “In private markets, real estate, and funds, investors face illiquidity, high minimum thresholds, and complex servicing. Tokenization enables fractional ownership, more efficient structures, and streamlined onboarding and settlement.”
Several live, regulated initiatives already illustrate this impact:
- Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC): tokenized funds and a tokenized money market fund
- Dubai Land Department: national real estate tokenization project targeting AED 60 billion in assets by 2033
- Saudi Arabia: national real estate tokenization infrastructure aligned with upcoming foreign ownership reforms
- Bahrain & Qatar: expanding digital asset activity through central bank-led frameworks and innovation labs
“Institutions are moving beyond pilots because tokenization delivers tangible value in regulated market environments,” Aad added.
UAE Leads the Region with Regulatory Clarity
The United Arab Emirates has emerged as the GCC’s leader in execution and adoption, thanks to one of the world’s most advanced and clearly segmented digital asset regulatory frameworks. This clarity has enabled institutional-grade tokenization initiatives to scale beyond pilot projects, attracting both global innovators and regional capital.
“Across the GCC, and particularly in the UAE, regulatory openness and institutional engagement are accelerating real adoption of digital assets,” said Robert Farquhar, recently appointed Chief Executive Officer, MENA at Ctrl Alt. “Clear frameworks, proactive regulators, and collaboration with industry are enabling tokenization to operate at scale, positioning the region as a hub for next-generation capital market infrastructure.”
Infrastructure and Regulation Must Evolve in Tandem
“Tokenization will scale where market infrastructure and regulation evolve together,” said Jeroen Gillekens, Principal at Kearney Middle East & Africa. “Issuance, custody, settlement, and secondary trading must function as an integrated system. Embedding digital asset capabilities into core operating models is key to building durable, institutional-grade markets.”
GCC Enters a Defining Phase in Capital Markets
The report concludes that with regulatory momentum, maturing infrastructure, and early live use cases, the GCC is entering a critical phase in financial market evolution. Tokenization is set to play an increasingly central role in how capital is issued, accessed, and exchanged across the Middle East in the coming years.



