Why we exist.
Where we are going.

Mission

TARE exists to reshape how construction and development works in Nigeria.

We build quality residential developments and open up co-ownership of those projects to individuals and institutions alike, making it possible for anyone to participate in the asset class that has always generated the most reliable wealth on this continent.

Nigeria faces a housing deficit of over twenty million units. We are building toward closing that gap — not through government intervention or charity, but through a model that makes construction financially attractive for investors at every level.

Through fractional ownership, we reduce concentration risk, create genuine housing supply, and build a system where the people funding the buildings and the people living in them both win.

20M+

Housing units Nigeria needs

₦300M

Pilot project value

14.7%

Estimated annual return

"A model that makes construction financially attractive for investors at every level — where the people funding the buildings and the people living in them both win."

Vision

To be Nigeria's most trusted and innovative construction company.

A platform where residential developments across the country are co-owned, transparently managed, and collectively profitable.

We are building toward a future where construction is no longer a closed industry accessible only to a few, but an open, technology-driven ecosystem that meaningfully contributes to closing Nigeria's housing deficit while distributing wealth.

And setting the standard for how construction and investment work together in Africa.

Open co-ownership

Residential developments across Nigeria that are fractionally owned, transparently managed, and collectively profitable for every investor regardless of stake size.

Technology-driven construction

A platform where every project is documented, tracked, and reported in real time — removing the opacity that has historically made Nigerian real estate inaccessible.

Closing the deficit

A meaningful contribution toward Nigeria's twenty million unit housing gap — not through subsidy, but through a model that makes building genuinely attractive for private capital.

The African standard

A blueprint for how construction and investment work together on the continent — proving that quality, transparency, and accessibility are not trade-offs.

"Construction is no longer a closed industry accessible only to a few — but an open, technology-driven ecosystem that distributes wealth and sets the standard for how construction and investment work together in Africa."