Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Can you buy a house built in the new countryside?

Can you buy a house built in the new countryside?

Houses built in the new countryside are collective land property rights, which can only be lived, but not bought or sold. But this aspect is closely related to the daily life of farmers, and the law is constantly being adjusted and improved.

According to the provisions of the Property Law and the Measures for Housing Registration, houses within the scope of collective land can go through the formalities of property registration.

If the land for housing construction in new rural areas is state-owned land, it can be bought and sold freely and go through the formalities of property right registration; If it is collective land, there are certain restrictions on buying and selling houses.

"Measures for the Registration of Houses" Article 86 Where the ownership of houses within the scope of collective land is transferred according to law, the following materials shall be submitted to apply for the registration of the transfer of ownership of houses:

(1) Application for registration;

(2) the identity certificate of the applicant;

(3) Certificate of ownership of the house;

(four) the certificate of the right to use the homestead or the certificate of the right to use the collectively owned construction land;

(five) materials to prove the transfer of housing ownership;

(6) Other necessary materials.

To apply for the registration of the transfer of ownership of villagers' housing, it shall also submit the certification materials of the rural collective economic organizations agreeing to the transfer.

Where a rural collective economic organization applies for the registration of house ownership transfer, it shall also submit the certification materials approved by the villagers' meeting or authorized by the villagers' meeting and approved by the villagers' representative meeting.

Eighty-seventh applications for registration of the transfer of ownership of rural villagers' houses, and the transferee is not a member of the rural collective economic organization where the house is located, unless otherwise stipulated by laws and regulations, the house registration agency will not accept it.