Egypt’s Nawy Secures Majority Ownership of UAE-Based SmartCrowd – Brains of Africa

Egypt’s Nawy Secures Majority Ownership of UAE-Based SmartCrowd

Egypt’s Nawy Secures Majority Ownership of UAE-Based SmartCrowd

Egypt’s proptech leader Nawy has taken a majority stake in UAE-based SmartCrowd, marking its first foray into the Gulf real estate market.

Egypt’s proptech leader Nawy has taken a majority stake in UAE-based SmartCrowd, marking its first foray into the Gulf real estate market.

The move comes on the heels of Nawy’s $52 million Series A round backed by a broad syndicate, including e& Capital, Partech, March Capital, Endeavor Catalyst, DPI’s Nclude Fund, Shorooq, VentureSouq, Outliers, Verod-Kepple Africa Ventures, HOF Capital, and Plug and Play.

SmartCrowd, founded in 2018, is a Dubai Financial Services Authority–regulated platform that lets investors buy shares in income-generating properties starting at $150. To date, it has facilitated $110 million in transactions and paid out over $40 million in rents and gains to users.

The UAE’s property investment market is expected to reach $33 billion by 2030, driven by innovations such as fractional ownership and tokenization trends Nawy hopes to tap through SmartCrowd’s established infrastructure.

By combining SmartCrowd’s regulated investment engine with Nawy’s suite of services, home financing via Nawy Now, fractional investing through Nawy Shares, after-sales support with Nawy Unlocked, and B2B brokerage tools under Nawy Partners, the group now offers a pan‑MENA real estate ecosystem.

Also read, Egyptian Proptech Nawy Acquires ROA to Drive Real Estate Solutions 

Mostafa El‑Beltagy, Nawy’s CEO, described SmartCrowd’s platform as a natural complement to Nawy’s data‑driven approach.

In his view, the acquisition paves the way for a seamless, technology‑powered experience that spans buying, managing, and profiting from property across both North Africa and the Gulf.

Nawy’s move highlights a growing maturity in African proptech players seeking growth beyond local markets. By acquiring rather than building from scratch, Nawy fast‑tracks access to both a sizable GCC investor base and a regulatory framework that many startups struggle to navigate alone.

The challenge now will be integrating two distinct cultures, Egyptian innovation speed and Dubai’s compliance rigor, while maintaining user trust on both sides. If they succeed, Nawy could set a blueprint for cross‑regional expansion among emerging‑market tech firms.

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