Job Recruitment Website - Property management - Is there any basis for the main former owners of new houses not to pay property fees for 7 or 8 years?

Is there any basis for the main former owners of new houses not to pay property fees for 7 or 8 years?

Buying a house is generally an overall transfer of creditor's rights and debts, so the new owner should bear the responsibility, and after taking the responsibility of advance payment, he can recover from the other party according to the purchase contract.

1. As long as you buy a house, you have to pay the property fee regardless of whether you can't live there (the property law stipulates that you can't give up your rights and fail to perform your corresponding obligations). The Property Management Regulations clearly stipulate that it is the obligation of every owner to pay property fees on time;

2. When the house is traded, the buyer and the seller should negotiate and agree in detail on the problems existing in the house itself. If the old owner defaults on the property fee, the sales contract does not stipulate who will bear the responsibility, both the buyer and the seller are responsible, and the buyer is jointly and severally liable;

3. The statute of limitations for property fees is two years. If the property company makes a reminder within 78 years (usually by mail, and the property company keeps the reminder stub as one of the basis for prosecution and one of the elements for filing a case), the limitation of action can be extended.