The European property technology sector is experiencing unprecedented growth, driven by digitisation demands from homeowners managing shared properties. Berlin-based Dotega has secured €13 million in funding to expand its proptech platform that enables homeowner self-management of shared residential properties across European markets.
The round positions Dotega to capitalise on the fragmented European property management market, where traditional solutions often fail to address the specific needs of shared ownership structures prevalent across Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.
High-Tech Gründerfonds leads proptech funding round
High-Tech Gründerfonds, Germany’s seed investor with a strong track record in proptech ventures, led the €13 million round. The investor’s thesis centres on the significant digitalisation gap in European property management, particularly for shared ownership scenarios that require sophisticated coordination tools.
“Dotega addresses a genuine pain point in the European property market where homeowners struggle with the complexity of managing shared properties,” said a representative from High-Tech Gründerfonds. “Their platform transforms what has traditionally been a bureaucratic nightmare into a streamlined digital experience.”
The funding round reflects growing investor confidence in European proptech solutions that tackle region-specific challenges, particularly around shared ownership models that differ significantly from Anglo-Saxon property structures.
Platform targets European shared property management gap
Dotega’s platform specifically addresses the complexities of managing properties with multiple owners, a common scenario in German-speaking markets where shared ownership structures are deeply embedded in property law. The solution provides tools for expense tracking, maintenance coordination, and decision-making processes that traditionally required expensive property management services.
The company plans to use the €13 million to expand beyond its core German market into Austria and Switzerland, where similar regulatory frameworks and ownership structures create natural expansion opportunities. Dotega’s European-first approach recognises that property management solutions cannot simply be transplanted from other markets due to varying legal and cultural contexts.
“We’re building for European property owners who need solutions that understand local regulations and ownership structures,” noted Dotega’s leadership. “Our platform isn’t just translated software – it’s built from the ground up for European property law and customs.”
This funding signals the maturation of European proptech beyond simple rental platforms towards sophisticated solutions for property ownership complexity. Dotega’s focus on shared ownership management could establish a blueprint for addressing similar challenges across Europe’s diverse property markets.