Here comes the problem. My husband and I now live in a house that he bought with a loan before he got married, and the house is registered in his name. After the woman gets married, the house she bought with her own money is counted as the same property after marriage, and the husband also enjoys a part. Then, what should I do if I want to own the house I bought after marriage and don't want the house to be divided into half by my husband?
There are three ways:
1. If the husband and wife enter into a property agreement before marriage and it is notarized, the property after marriage will be executed according to the property agreement, but many people don't have this. This is also the reason why many female stars marry wealthy businessmen and notarize their property before marriage.
2. Give money to parents. After marriage, the parents can give the full amount to the woman to buy a house and write her name, which is a gift from the parents to their children. In this case, even after marriage, it is not the common property of husband and wife, but the personal property of the woman.
The premise is to buy the property in the name of the woman's parents and then give it to the woman to do so. The purchase behavior is the woman's parents, the name of the woman's parents is registered in the real estate, and then the gift formalities are handled. The recipient is the woman. The bad thing about this way is that there are more taxes and fees for real estate gifts, or parents can make wills. After death, the house will be inherited by the woman, and the taxes and fees for property inheritance will be less.
3. Article 1065 of the Civil Code stipulates that husband and wife may agree that the property acquired during the marriage relationship and the pre-marital property shall be owned by themselves, * * * shall be owned in whole or in part, and * * * shall be owned in part. The agreement shall be in writing. The agreement between husband and wife on the property acquired during the marriage relationship and the property before marriage is binding on both parties.
Husband and wife can agree on which house to buy. It is suggested that before buying a house, the woman can sign an agreement with her husband, stating that the property right of the house belongs to the woman personally, and then go to the local notary office for notarization. When handling the real estate license, just hand it over to the real estate license handling authority, and the house will always be the woman's.
House has always been a sensitive topic, and talking about "house" hurts feelings. Many young couples get married because of the problem of buying a house, and even ruin their marriage; There are also couples who go to court for the house when they divorce. Buying a house alone after marriage, if you want the property right of the house to be completely owned by individuals, you need both husband and wife to discuss and understand each other and avoid hurting both husband and wife because of the house.