Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Do you want to move your household registration back to your original place?

Do you want to move your household registration back to your original place?

Everyone has heard how many people have moved their accounts. After graduating from college, students who moved into the school collective account also had the idea of signing the account back to their hometown. This is the idea of moving the registered permanent residence back to the original place, but not everyone can move back to the original place, and there are conditions. So do you want to move your hukou back to your original place? On this issue, let me talk about the process of moving back.

Do you want to move your household registration back to your original place?

Yes, hukou is provided, provided that the conditions for migration are met.

First, the conditions for the household registration to move back to the place of origin.

1. After graduation, move back to the original residence directly. If your registered permanent residence is moved to the university when you are in university, you will generally return to your registered permanent residence by default within two years as long as you don't go to other places after graduation, that is, you will directly move back to your registered permanent residence with the registration card (also called dispatch card) issued by the school. But no matter whether your original account is agricultural or non-agricultural, it will be changed to non-agricultural, that is, it is basically a resident account.

2. After graduation, you didn't directly move back to your original residence. If you change your name in other places due to work or marriage after graduation, it depends on the household registration policy of the city where your household registration is located. Because different cities have different household registration policies, there will be two situations. One is to allow you to move in directly. The other requires you to own your own property in the place of origin of the household registration, that is, the real estate certificate must be your or your spouse's name, and other people's property, including parents' property, is invalid. No matter what kind of policy, the steps of moving in are basically the same. (If the police station where the household registration is located requires you to have a house in the local area, you must issue a real estate license when you apply for a certificate. The real estate license can only be your own name or the name of your spouse, and other people's names, including parents', are invalid.

Second, the steps of college students' household registration moving back to their original places

1. You must first go to the police station where your household registration is located to apply for a permit to move (you need to bring your ID card, household registration book and other documents. If you want to own your own house in the local area, you must also show the real estate license with your own name or spouse's name, but you will not accept the house of your parents or brothers.

2. Step 2: Go to the household registration office of the police station where your current household registration is located, show your permit to move, and ask them to help you transfer your household registration online.

3. Step 3: Go back to the police station where the household registration is located and confirm the household registration transfer (it is best to pull a new household registration book there, because the old household registration book cannot be used after the household registration transfer). The local police station will send you a contact form for account change.

4. Register with the change order to the neighborhood committee under its jurisdiction. Remember, this is the last step.

The restriction on the conditions of moving the registered permanent residence back to its original place is to standardize the registered permanent residence management and prevent the registered permanent residence from being confused. The conditions for the hukou to move back to its original place have blocked many people who intend to move back to their original place, but as long as they meet the conditions, they can handle it. Restricting those who do not meet the requirements is also to prevent these people from moving back to their hukou, and people cannot come back. Therefore, I suggest that you seriously consider the migration.