Last month, real estate agent Taylor Parrino represented the buyer of a home in Gulfport that was listed as an a non-fungible token in a historic sale. Now, she’s preparing for another auction — a condominium in Tampa.
Parrino has been helping prepare a small condo in Hyde Park ahead of the April 7 auction. Bids will start at $185,000 for the 600-square-foot, one-bedroom Tampa condo, according to Propy, a real estate transaction platform that advocates for the use of blockchains.
Parrino, too, sees a future where traditional mortgages and closings will be a thing of the past. She will be one of the first real estate agents in the country to partake in both the buying and selling of a property sold as an NFT. This new niche within real estate is growing in Florida — and Tampa Bay is leading the charge — which integrates blockchain and cryptocurrency as a way to buy and sell seamlessly, she said.
Her focus right now is on marketing the technology.
“It’s primarily educational,” said Parrino, who is based in Miami with Premier Elite Realty. “So people understand what we’re doing.”
Tampa realtor Andrew Daniels described blockchain as a decentralized version of the county clerk’s office. Non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, are similar to a deed, but it doesn’t replace it. In theory, NFTs are certificates of authenticity that can’t be manipulated. Every action that’s logged on the…