Tokenized RWAs Reach $33.78 Billion in Distributed Asset Value

Tokenized RWAs Reach $33.78 Billion in Distributed Asset Value

The latest data shows tokenized real-world assets (blockchain-based claims on traditional assets) are held by 800,067 wallets, highlighting continued growth in on-chain representations of off-chain value.

Fact Check
The $33.78 billion distributed asset value figure is directly confirmed by the RWA.xyz analytics dashboard (app.rwa.xyz), which is the authoritative primary data source for tokenized RWA metrics. The CoinDesk X post (status/2057611144995700955) explicitly cites both the $33.78B figure and 800,067 holders. A secondary source (MoonPay/RWA Times Substack) also references the same $33.78B figure from RWA.xyz. The claim's use of 'wallets' instead of 'holders' is a minor terminological variation that does not affect the substance. The only minor uncertainty is that the Substack article mislabels the figure as 'trading volume' rather than distributed asset value, but this appears to be an error in that secondary source, not in the original claim. Overall, the claim is well-supported by primary and secondary sources.
    Reference123
Summary

Tokenized real-world assets (blockchain-based claims on traditional assets), often called RWAs, have reached $33.78 billion in distributed asset value, according to the provided data. The same update says the sector now has 800,067 total holders. The figures indicate continued expansion in one of crypto’s most closely watched segments, where blockchain infrastructure is used to represent assets tied to traditional finance, credit, commodities, or other off-chain instruments.

Terms & Concepts
  • Tokenized real-world assets: Blockchain-issued representations of traditional assets, allowing ownership or exposure to be recorded and transferred on-chain.
  • On-chain: Activity or records that exist directly on a blockchain, where transactions and holdings can be tracked transparently.
  • Holders: Wallet addresses or users that hold a tokenized asset, often used as a measure of adoption and distribution.