Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - I don’t know whether to change my household registration. I hope you can tell me the pros and cons of moving your hukou there.

I don’t know whether to change my household registration. I hope you can tell me the pros and cons of moving your hukou there.

Don’t move, because you are not sure. You will still be able to take postgraduate entrance examinations and work in the future, and then move after you are stable.

You must know that your household registration is not a real move. You have moved there, but it is a collective household registration. The household registration falls on your school. This person who has truly settled in the local area and has a local household registration is There is an essential difference. If you change your household registration when you graduate, your household registration will follow you. If you don't find a job, your household registration will be transferred back to your place of origin, but usually it will be transferred back to the provincial capital city (this is quite troublesome for For fresh graduates), then you have to get it back within the specified time and land it in your own city. If you find a job, for example in Shanghai, then your household registration will be brought to Shanghai, and the school (actually the Public Security Bureau) only gives you one month to settle in. At this time, you need to transfer your household registration to your Go to your work unit. If your work unit is too small and is not eligible to receive residence, you need to register your hukou in Shanghai’s talent market and pay a certain fee every year. However, you still need to understand that your hukou is fundamentally different from that of local residents. , or the collective household registration cannot do anything in the real sense.

After you change your household registration as a college student, you usually apply for an ID card locally when you arrive there. This is good for things like taking the driver's license test, and it will be much cheaper than registering elsewhere, but basically That's all. I really haven't found any other benefits. All I see are troubles, especially after graduation and struggling with household registration. So I don't think you have any special needs, so don't move. If you really have it, If you have any plans, you can ask the school's household registration management department (usually at the security office or something) whether local household registration is required to do what you want to do (usually it should not be required), and that's it.