Trust Infrastructure
How do strangers coordinate safely in low-trust markets?
A technology platform rebuilding trust infrastructure for Nigerian real estate.
Most markets fail not because of bad products, but because of broken trust. In Nigerian real estate — and across emerging markets — the infrastructure for trust is thin. Contracts are weak. Verification is expensive. Reputation doesn't travel between transactions.
When a buyer wires money to a seller they've never met, they are trusting an agent they can't verify, marketing a property whose documents they can't authenticate, on behalf of a developer whose track record is opaque. The entire chain is built on phone calls and prayer.
Llevra is the first layer of that infrastructure. It gives agents a verifiable digital identity and a shareable profile card. It gives developers a way to certify exactly which agents are authorised to market their properties — and revoke that authorisation in real time. It gives buyers a way to confirm they're talking to a legitimate, mandated agent before transferring any funds.
This is not a directory. Not a marketplace. It is a trust layer — the kind of thing that has to exist before the transaction can be trusted. The long ambition extends beyond real estate into employment verification, contract enforcement, credit scoring, and community coordination across Africa.
Llevra
Next milestone — Stage 2 — Shareable property links with OG preview and buyer interest tracking.