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Platter Introduces Co-Ownership Platform to Expand Urban Property Access

📅5 March 2026 at 10:32
📰This Day Live
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Property investment company Platter has launched a co-ownership platform aimed at widening access to rental real estate in major Nigerian cities, especially Lagos and Abuja.

The company said the model allows several investors to buy documented shares in a single income-generating property, with rental returns distributed according to each person’s contribution. Platter also said it will manage tenant screening, rent collection and property maintenance on behalf of co-owners.

Chief Executive Officer Unen Umeji said the platform was designed for people who cannot fund full ownership of premium urban property on their own.

“Real estate remains one of the most powerful tools for wealth creation in Nigeria, but access has been limited.For years, premium property ownership has been concentrated among high-capital investors. We believe more Nigerians should be able to participate in structured, income-generating assets,” she said.

Umeji said the company’s approach combines access with legal and operational safeguards so investors can track their holdings and performance.

“Our focus is not just accessibility,” she said. “It is structured. Co-ownership must be backed by clear legal frameworks, professional management and transparent reporting. Without that, people lose confidence.”

According to her, each property listed by the company passes due diligence, legal vetting and market review before it is opened for investment. She added that acquisition decisions are tied to infrastructure expansion, rental demand and expected long-term value growth.

“Strategic acquisition is key. We look at infrastructure expansion, rental demand and long-term appreciation potential. We are not just buying buildings; we are positioning for growth,” she said.

Platter said the product is targeted at young professionals, cooperatives and Nigerians in the diaspora who want exposure to the domestic property market without direct landlord management responsibilities.

On whether the concept could change ownership culture, Umeji said the company was not presenting it as a replacement for traditional ownership.

“We are not claiming to replace traditional ownership,” she said. “What we are offering is an additional pathway, one that is structured, documented and professionally managed. Over time, we believe more Nigerians will see co-ownership as a practical way to build wealth.”

Market watchers say co-ownership products are gaining attention in countries where property prices are rising faster than income, and Nigeria’s urban housing pressure could make such models more visible in coming years.

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