Legria
Legria is a technology company.
Financial History
Legria has raised $4.0M across 1 funding round.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much funding has Legria raised?
Legria has raised $4.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Legria is a technology company.
Legria has raised $4.0M across 1 funding round.
Legria has raised $4.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Legria has raised $4.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Legria's investors include Ataria Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Silence, Wayra Hispam, Ariel Lambrecht, Guilherme Bonifacio.
Legria is not a technology company in the traditional sense of software, hardware, or tech product development. Instead, it operates as a real estate co-ownership platform enabling fractional ownership of vacation homes, primarily in premium locations in Chile and the United States. It serves families and investors seeking efficient access to second homes without full ownership costs, solving problems of high investment barriers, underutilization, maintenance burdens, and illiquidity through shared 1/8th shares, an app for scheduling stays (e.g., ~6 weeks/year in Chile with guaranteed high-season weeks, or 44 days/year in the US), and a secondary market for individual exits.[3]
Growth momentum stems from its pandemic-era launch, attracting major venture capital funds for scaling operations across destinations like Marbella, Pucón, and Miami, with flexible management tools differentiating it from traditional real estate.[3]
Legria was founded by Ignacio Del Río in Chile, driven by his personal quest for a family second home amid pandemic-induced remote work flexibility. He identified inefficiencies in full ownership—high costs relative to limited use and ongoing maintenance—leading to the idea of co-ownership "as if buying with friends, but with clear rules" managed via technology.[3]
This resonated quickly, drawing VC backing to formalize the model: buyers acquire 1/8th shares with defined usage rights (e.g., fixed high-season weeks plus flexible scheduling), professional handling of all logistics, and a platform for liquidity. Early traction focused on Chilean beach and lake properties, expanding to the US.[3]
Legria rides the fractional ownership and proptech wave, accelerated by post-pandemic demand for flexible second homes amid remote work, rising real estate prices, and wealth transfer to younger generations seeking shared assets over sole ownership. Timing aligns with proptech maturation—apps democratizing high-end real estate like yacht or art shares—fueled by low-interest VC in experiential investments.[3]
Market forces favor it: tourism rebound in Chile/US vacation spots, inflation hedging via property, and tech's role in trust-building (e.g., blockchain-adjacent liquidity platforms). It influences the ecosystem by normalizing co-ownership, pressuring traditional real estate toward digitization and potentially expanding to urban short-term rentals or global markets.[3]
Legria's VC-fueled expansion positions it to dominate Latin American vacation co-ownership, potentially entering Europe or Asia as remote work persists. Trends like AI-optimized scheduling, tokenized shares for true liquidity, and climate-resilient properties will shape its path, amplifying influence in proptech's shift from ownership to access.
This model redefines vacation real estate efficiency, echoing Ignacio Del Río's original insight into shared joy without solo burdens.[3]
Legria has raised $4.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $4.0M Seed in April 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 1, 2022 | $4.0M Seed | Ataria Ventures, Plug & Play Ventures, Silence, Wayra Hispam, Ariel Lambrecht, Guilherme Bonifacio |