Carbon Title

Carbon Title’s mission was to make every building carbon neutral. Founded in 2021 by Trevor Dryer and Miles Haladay, its decentralized platform offered radical transparency into the carbon emissions of all buildings, empowering stakeholders to understand, manage, and take action to reduce emissions across their portfolios. Carbon Title joined the Procore App Marketplace in 2023.

Blog Posts

  • A close-up of a dried, curvy twig on a textured concrete surface.

    The Cost of Inaction: “Brown Discounts” in Real Estate

    Learn how “brown discounts” are motivating property owners to update their buildings to meet sustainability emands, even more than “green premiums.”

  • A rustic wooden house with a steep gable roof, three windows on the front, and a small porch with stairs, set in a grassy yard surrounded by green trees under a blue sky.

    This Old House: In Defense of Older Homes as Carbon Savers

    Reducing carbon must happen in both new construction & existing buildings. Learn how older houses can be more environmentally friendly with the right retrofits.

  • Looking up at a modern high-rise building with geometric patterns on its facade, converging towards the sky at the center.

    Small Investments in Green Materials Pay Big Dividends

    The gap in supply & demand for low-carbon concrete & steel prevents net-zero building today. “Carbon insets” would invest in the supply chain to speed scale.

Website Copy

Screenshot of a website homepage for Carbon Title, a service to track and claim your home's carbon footprint. The page features a headline, a call-to-action button labeled 'Get Started,' and a side panel showing a property details and carbon emissions data.
An informational webpage about carbon footprint tracking for buildings. It features a section titled 'Introducing Carbon Title Explorer,' with guidance on finding and exploring a building's carbon footprint, including a visual mockup of an app showing a building's carbon balance of 3,350 tCO2. There is also a prompt to claim the building to share its carbon story.
Chart comparing carbon emissions of different buildings in San Francisco, CA, and Atlanta, GA, including a single-family home and an office building, with estimated CO2 balances and per square foot emissions.