Tools · Raise Planner

Which jurisdiction and exemption fits your raise?

The hardest first question in tokenization isn't the technology — it's where you raise and under which rule. Answer four questions and we'll point you to the likely route and the full guide behind it. Orientation, not legal advice.

Plan your route

Four questions

Your investors drive almost everything — where they are and who they are decide the jurisdiction and the exemption. Size and asset refine the structure.

Where are your investors?
Who can invest?
How much are you raising?
What are you tokenizing?
Likely route
United States · Reg D 506(c)
Typical structure
Read the full rules

Orientation only — not legal advice, and not the only route. Real structuring depends on your facts; the guides linked above carry the dated, sourced detail and each carries its own disclaimer. Rules current as of July 10, 2026.

How to read the result

Almost every tokenized raise is a securities offering, so the same logic applies as for any private placement — the token just enforces the rules on-chain. Your investors' location picks the regime; who may invest picks the exemption (accredited/professional routes are lighter than public ones);size decides whether a small-offer exemption fits or you need a fuller disclosure; and the asset shapes the holding structure. The planner points at the most common route for each combination — the guides behind it cover the alternatives, the licensed intermediaries, and what's still in flux.

Know the route? See if your asset is ready.

The route is only half the answer — the other half is whether your company and asset are raise-ready. Score yourself across the seven AXIS pillars in about five minutes, no card.

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