Updated:
LifeSite
LifeSite delivers encrypted data vaults and real-world asset tokenization for family offices, combining Web2 privacy with Web3 verification.
LifeSite
LifeSite emerged from Mountain View to solve a custody problem that traditional family offices often neglect: how to securely store, permission, and transfer sensitive holdings records — from health directives to tokenized deed structures — across multiple jurisdictions. The firm sells software, not advisory hours, offering turnkey SaaS vaults for PII and financial documents alongside a TokenX module that authenticates and validates ownership of real-world assets on-chain. Strategy spans data protection, compliance, and on-chain verification. The Vault product encrypts and organizes client files for businesses and families, emphasizing global regulatory readiness. TokenX takes the same custody logic into Web3, letting users tokenize physical assets — critical minerals supply chains earned a mention in TIME — without requiring blockchain fluency. LifeSite also operates a Wellness vertical that tracks COVID-19 testing and vaccination, demonstrating the platform's ability to pivot into operational health logistics for enterprises and live events. Confirmed technology partners or portfolio companies are not publicly disclosed. The platform's flexible API allows institutions to layer LifeSite's vaulting and tokenization primitives into existing systems rather than replacing core infrastructure. While headcount, founding year, and capital raised remain undisclosed, the product suite suggests a lean team of engineers and compliance specialists. The firm's website references an advisor who is an NFL Hall of Famer, hinting at a network that includes sports and entertainment wealth, though this affiliation is not formally detailed. LifeSite's structural distinction is its treatment of custody as a product, not an advisory wrapper. Most family-office technology stacks bolt on document portals or rely on custodial banks for asset verification; LifeSite provides white-label vaulting and tokenization that leaves the data and keys with the client. That posture makes the firm a candidate for embedded infrastructure inside larger RIAs and multi-family offices that want a single source of truth for both traditional documents and tokenized hard assets.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Mountain View
Corporate office
Mountain View, CA, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
How does LifeSite source its clients?
LifeSite markets directly to businesses, families, and event operators through its website and product demos. The firm positions TokenX as a tool for supply-chain provenance and asset authentication, attracting commodity traders, logistics firms, and family offices holding physical assets. The Vault product targets wealth holders and advisors who need to organize estates, healthcare directives, and sensitive financial records. No formal intermediary program or referral network is publicly disclosed.
Does LifeSite operate as a family office or a technology vendor?
LifeSite is a technology vendor — a SaaS company selling data vaulting, compliance, and tokenization software — not a family office. It does not manage or allocate capital. Its customers include family offices, businesses, and individuals who use the platform to secure, share, and verify ownership of sensitive documents and tokenized real-world assets.
What is LifeSite TokenX and what assets can it tokenize?
TokenX is LifeSite's Web3 module that lets users mint on-chain representations of real-world assets, including legal documents, goods, and critical minerals. The TIME mention highlighted its capability to bring provenance and transparency to critical minerals supply chains. The platform abstracts away blockchain complexity so users can authenticate ownership and validate documents without managing wallets or writing smart contracts.
How does LifeSite handle regulatory compliance across jurisdictions?
The Vault product is built to support global data-sharing rules, with explicit emphasis on PII and health-data regulations. LifeSite's marketing points to compliance readiness for fintech and healthtech use cases, though the firm does not publish specific audit reports or certifications. The API and custom-configuration options suggest that enterprises can adapt the vault's permissioning logic to local requirements.
Who runs investment or strategic decisions at LifeSite?
LifeSite does not publicly name its leadership team. The website's Team page features an employee appreciation event but no executive biographies, organizational chart, or named principals. Ties to an NFL Hall of Fame advisor are mentioned but the individual is not identified, leaving the firm's governance structure opaque to outside allocators.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
Need institutional-grade insight on asset managers?
Altss delivers:
Prefer a guided tour?
We’ll walk you through: