Job Recruitment Website - Property management company - The delivery contract is not signed, and the key is not taken. Do I have to pay the property fee?

The delivery contract is not signed, and the key is not taken. Do I have to pay the property fee?

"Property Management Regulations" stipulates that "the property that has been built but has not been sold or handed over to the property buyer shall be paid by the construction unit", which means that the construction unit failed to sell or notify the owner to take over the house according to normal procedures, or the house did not meet the delivery conditions due to the seller of commercial housing, so the buyer did not buy or take over the house (not for his own reasons) and did not enjoy the property service, so the previous property service fee was borne by the construction unit. Of course, this provision does not mean that property buyers can use this provision to deliberately delay repossession. Under normal circumstances, if the buyer refuses to take over the house without justifiable reasons, the delivery date of the house is the date when the seller gives a written notice to take over the house, and the property service fee thereafter shall be borne by the buyer, and the related risks shall also be borne by the buyer.

Second, only after the check-in handover can the owner become the service object, and then the property management fee and other related expenses need to be paid according to the contract. Strictly speaking, the delivery in the sale of houses should be based on the registration of the property right certificate as the final delivery standard. According to the law, only the property right certificate is the only legal certificate for the property owner to enjoy and exercise relevant property rights. Check-in handover has become an important link in the delivery of housing sales, and buyers and sellers often regard this link as the main procedure to check whether the housing meets the statutory and agreed delivery conditions.