Crypto payments are changing the way European real estate transactions are conducted. It is reported that over the past year, hundreds of high-net-worth investors have used digital assets to purchase property in Europe, with the crypto payment platform Brighty facilitating more than 100 transactions.
Where are these transactions mainly concentrated? The UK, France, Malta, Cyprus, and Andorra have become hotspots, with individual transaction amounts generally ranging from $500,000 to $2.5 million.
An interesting change is that clients' preferences for stablecoins are quietly shifting. In the past, everyone was used to settling with USDC issued by Circle, but now more and more people are starting to use euro-pegged stablecoins (such as EURC). The reason is simple—using euro stablecoins directly can avoid multiple conversion costs, keep the ledger clean, and settle quickly. This reflects that as crypto payments become more integrated into real-world scenarios, investors are becoming smarter and are beginning to optimize the cost structure of each transaction.
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GateUser-bd883c58
· 20h ago
European real estate settles with stablecoins, this is really happening now
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EURC replaces USDC, this is the pragmatic approach
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Sounds good, but do these high-net-worth players really have that much...
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Malta and Cyprus, these two places, have long been crypto paradises
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Single transactions ranging from 50 to 2.5 million USD, this scale is indeed significant
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Optimizing cost structure? Basically, saving on gas fees and exchange rate differences
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EURC is gaining momentum, Circle might be a bit embarrassed by this move
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Real-world application implementation is definitely better than just hyping concepts every day
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Brighty has over 100 transactions, then how many transactions must there be across Europe
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Europe is really starting to take crypto payments seriously
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Direct settlement with euro stablecoins, the logic makes sense
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Wait, is this real data or self-promotion?
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Property on the blockchain, this is what Web3 should be doing
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MetadataExplorer
· 01-11 01:57
Really? EURC is on the rise, and finally someone thought of localization.
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CoffeeNFTrader
· 01-11 01:56
Are European real estate markets becoming so competitive now that they are starting to settle transactions with stablecoins...
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EURC is gaining popularity, finally someone realizes the pitfalls of currency exchange costs
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Malta is on the list again, this place has really become a crypto paradise
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Wait, Brighty has only around 100 transactions? The numbers don’t seem that big
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Choosing stablecoins to exchange USDC for EURC—that’s true optimization
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Properties ranging from 50 to 2.5 million USD... I don’t even qualify to view them haha
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Again, it’s in places like the UK, France, and Cyprus. Are traditional financial players getting anxious?
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On-chain settlement of real estate transactions, I don’t quite understand this
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Using euro stablecoins directly to save gas fees and transaction costs, that’s something
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High-net-worth individuals are starting to play this game, we retail investors just watch
View OriginalReply0
MEVictim
· 01-11 01:53
Euro stablecoins are really a winning move, saving those annoying exchange fees, keeping the ledger clean... this is the real-world level of gameplay.
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TxFailed
· 01-11 01:52
ngl brighty moving 100+ deals is wild, but honestly? watched people get rekt on stablecoin slippage before. eurc pivot makes sense tho—literally saved you a few ETH on cross-border fees. classic mistake staying married to usdc when local rails exist...
Reply0
JustHereForAirdrops
· 01-11 01:35
I've been saying that localized stablecoins like EURC are the future. Otherwise, you have to pay extra exchange fees every time. Are you thinking?
Crypto payments are changing the way European real estate transactions are conducted. It is reported that over the past year, hundreds of high-net-worth investors have used digital assets to purchase property in Europe, with the crypto payment platform Brighty facilitating more than 100 transactions.
Where are these transactions mainly concentrated? The UK, France, Malta, Cyprus, and Andorra have become hotspots, with individual transaction amounts generally ranging from $500,000 to $2.5 million.
An interesting change is that clients' preferences for stablecoins are quietly shifting. In the past, everyone was used to settling with USDC issued by Circle, but now more and more people are starting to use euro-pegged stablecoins (such as EURC). The reason is simple—using euro stablecoins directly can avoid multiple conversion costs, keep the ledger clean, and settle quickly. This reflects that as crypto payments become more integrated into real-world scenarios, investors are becoming smarter and are beginning to optimize the cost structure of each transaction.