What Treehouse governs

Treehouse (TREE) is a DeFi protocol governance token, currently ranked 595th by market capitalization among the assets we track. Treehouse sits at the center of a decentralized-finance application. The token coordinates governance, sometimes routes protocol revenue to holders, and ties its value to how much the underlying protocol is actually used.

Treehouse (TREE) is a decentralized platform designed for investing in real estate through tokenization, allowing users to buy, sell, and trade fractional ownership. It aims to make real estate investing accessible to everyone by leveraging blockchain technology.

How value is supposed to accrue

DeFi tokens are worth something when the protocol generates fees and routes value to holders — through revenue share, buybacks, or governance over a real treasury. Without that link, a governance token is just a vote.

Background & fundamentals

The project publishes a whitepaper documenting its original design, which is worth reading before sizing any position in TREE. In sector terms it is most often filed under Ethereum (ETH) Token (ERC-20), Binance Coin (BNB) Token (BEP-20), and DeFi.

Where Treehouse sits in the market

With TREE near $0.0435, Treehouse carries a market capitalization of $6.79M. Around $3.24M changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 47.79% of the float — unusually high, the kind of churn that accompanies major news or speculative spikes.

Almost the entire TREE supply is already in circulation (~100.0% of the 1B cap), so future dilution is effectively off the table. TREE remains -97% beneath its all-time high of $1.36, the kind of gap that historically takes a full cycle or a fresh catalyst to close.

What the price history shows

Across timeframes, TREE shows 24-hour -4.14%, 7-day -30.83%. TREE is currently trading near the bottom of its 308-day range (around the 1st percentile of recent closes).

Volatility profile

Recent action puts Treehouse in the Extreme-volatility band — it is in a high-volatility regime — these are the conditions where outsized gains and losses both become more likely.

How to evaluate a DeFi token like Treehouse

The honest checklist for TREE is short:

  • Protocol revenue — fees the application actually earns, and whether any of it reaches TREE holders.
  • Total value locked — how much capital trusts the protocol — and how sticky it is versus mercenary yield.
  • Token utility — whether TREE is load-bearing (governance over real value, fee rights) or decorative.

This page pulls live market data, on-chain stats where available, exchange-by-exchange volume, and our forecast model into one view so you can work through those questions in a single place. None of it is investment advice — it is a structured starting point for your own research.