We exist to help professionals who work near the real estate crowdfunding sector understand what they need to know, without overstepping into regulated advice.
When Ley 21.521 came into force, it created a formal framework for crowdfunding in Chile. Platforms began operating. Projects began raising capital. Clients began arriving at architecture studios, law offices and accounting firms with questions about structures, obligations and implications that their advisors had never been trained to handle.
That gap is the reason Caltrionyx Academia exists. Not to turn architects into financial advisors. Not to have lawyers give investment guidance. Rather, to give every professional who works adjacent to this sector the foundational knowledge they need to navigate client conversations with clarity and confidence.
Understanding the regulatory framework is not the same as providing regulated advice. Knowing how a crowdfunding platform is authorized by the CMF helps a lawyer review contracts more effectively. It helps an accountant understand the reporting context. It helps an architect manage client expectations around financing timelines.
Our content is developed specifically for professionals who are not financial advisors but need sector knowledge.
We explicitly define what is and is not investment advice, helping professionals stay within their professional scope.
Chilean regulatory context is central to every module. Ley 21.521, CMF guidance and sector practice are all covered.
Every concept is anchored to scenarios that professionals actually encounter in client work.
We don't teach finance. We teach how finance intersects with the professional work you already do.
Each course is divided into focused modules that can be taken in sequence or individually, depending on what each professional needs most.
Real scenarios drawn from the Chilean real estate and crowdfunding sector anchor every conceptual explanation to practical application.
All regulatory content references primary sources: Ley 21.521, CMF normativas and official guidance documents, so participants can locate information independently after training.
Architects, lawyers, accountants and project managers each follow a track calibrated to their professional context, though shared fundamentals connect all tracks.
Regulatory environments change. Our course materials are reviewed and updated as CMF guidance and sector practice evolve.
See how each training path is built for your specific professional discipline.