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About Us

About Us

RADD America REIT (Summer 2023)

RADD America will be a regulation A+ REIT focused on the acquisition and revenue operations of all types of American land. This one-of-a-kind REIT is brought to you by the same RAD Diversified team that has delivered over 100% gains since launching our first REIT to the public in 2019.

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Right now, our team is on the road, scouring the country for the best RADD America parcels. When we find something we like, we run it through a rigorous due diligence process. If a property meets out passes, we negotiate a purchase price that will position RADD America for capital gains as the value appreciates and annual revenue increases.

Anticipated initial share price: $10 / share

Anticipated minimum investment: $5000

Hedge Economic Turmoil

Real estate investments (and land investments, specifically) hold up well in times of crisis, inflation, or recession because people need land for our basic needs: food, water, and shelter. Moreover, real estate that produces income creates a one-two punch when inflation strikes: price appreciation and a rise in income. Investments in income-producing properties like farmland, timberland, ranch land, and raw land can be used as bastions of safety and stability when the economy lurches, or the stock market fluxuates.

Build Wealth Through Fractional Ownership

American land investments have created many millionaires and even some mega-billionaires - creating generational wealth and a legacy for those who crave it. As of 2021, Donald Bren, the wealthiest real estate billionaire in the U.S., had a net worth of $16.2 Billion. To put that in perspective, assuming it was all liquid, he could spend $17.08M a month for 79 years before running out of money.

Protect Our Great Nation

As of 2019, 2.7% of farmland, or 35.2 million acres in the U.S. is owned by foreign investors according to the USDA. These foreign entities range from billionaires abroad to countries like China. The number of foreign-controlled US farmland grows each year, begging the question of how much American soil is too much for foreigners to own.

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