A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Orrick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for real estate investors, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large publicly traded companies. Sign up to receive future editions directly to your inbox. Capital injections into real estate technology increased significantly in early 2026, even though overall deal volumes remained unchanged, according to a new report. According to the Center for Real Estate Technology and Innovation’s monthly report, 50 proptech companies and their neighbors raised about $1.7 billion worldwide in the same month. This is a 176% increase from January 2025, when 48 deals were completed for a total of $615 million. “This comparison highlights the key dynamics shaping today’s venture environment. While deal volume remains stable, capital deployment is rapidly accelerating,” said Ashkan Zandier, Founder and Managing Director of CRETI. “Data so far this year suggests that investor appetite is not broadly expanding across all stages, but is instead concentrated on fewer, larger, and more established platforms.” The average amount per deal increased from about $12.8 million in January 2025 to about $34 million in January 2026. A small number of very large deals are clearly having an impact, with no general inflation in early stage funding, suggesting an increased appetite among large investors to make bigger bets. Seed, pre-seed, and Series A funding represented a small percentage of total investment. The venture and enterprise round represents $459 million and “reflects continued support for companies beyond initial product market validation,” Zandi said. Examples in January included Muse, Property Finder and Span, which saw infusions from large multi-investor syndicates including growth equity firms, corporate venture arms and institutional asset managers. “One of the factors driving the increase in prop technology spending is that generative AI is accelerating the obsolescence schedule for many of the technologies that large real estate companies have only recently integrated,” said Brendan Wallace, co-founder and CEO of Fifth Wall, a venture capital firm that primarily focuses on real estate technology and manages about $3 billion in assets. “AI-native enterprise software is already beginning to lose ground as an established solution, and the traditional advantages of legacy systems and high switching costs are rapidly disappearing,” Wallace said. “This is unlike anything we’ve seen before at Fifth Wall.” At the same time, Wallace said the real estate-focused model in which the organization invests is being reshaped. Investment funds previously devoted to data warehousing, business intelligence, and large-scale consulting are being revisited and reallocated to AI models that can deliver the same insights faster and at lower cost. “As a result, real estate organizations are scrambling to reconceptualize their core technology infrastructure to accommodate the unprecedented changes that generative and agentic AI are bringing to the industry,” Wallace said. Private equity investments totaled $320 million in January, according to the CRETI report. Structural growth, strategic and non-traditional products represent $444 million. This highlights the increasing diversification and non-linearity of the proptech capital stack in early 2026, the report notes. Global proptech deals spread across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia, but companies in Europe and the Middle East were particularly active in both early- and late-stage deals. They preferred construction technology, energy infrastructure and real estate, the report said. While trends aren’t set in a single month, this sudden move suggests capital is becoming more active in favor of prop technology, especially as AI takes over the investment narrative. Bigger commitments are overshadowing startup investments. “For founders, this environment brings clarity to the durability and capital requirements of their business model. For investors, it highlights the importance of distinguishing between the headline total capital and the underlying deal structure,” Zandier said.
