1. Buying a house in full with personal property before marriage, and writing your name, belongs to personal property.
2. If you buy a house with a loan before marriage, the name of the payer is written on the house book, and the loan will be repaid after marriage. If the divorced house belongs to the named party, the outstanding loan shall be repaid by the named party, and the repayment amount and the corresponding value-added part of the other party shall be compensated.
3. One party buys a house with personal property before marriage and writes it in his own name, plus the name of the other party. Unless otherwise agreed, the house belongs to two people in the same property.
4. If both parties * * * invest in buying a house in full before marriage, write the name of one party. If the other party has no proof of capital contribution, the writer will not admit that the house can only be owned by the writer.
5. If two people jointly contribute before marriage and repay the loan after marriage, and the name of the house is written by one person, then the part of * * * repaying the loan and increasing the value after marriage belongs to * * *, and the rest belongs to * * *.
6, buy a house before marriage, write two names, both parties * * * with all.
Buying a house after marriage?
1. Buying a house with * * * property after marriage belongs to * * * property no matter how many names are written.
2. After marriage, one person buys a house with the full amount of pre-marital property and writes two names, which belong to the same property and are a gift from the investor to the other party.
3. After marriage, one party buys a house in full with pre-marital personal property (with relevant certificates) and writes it in his own name, which belongs to the transformation of pre-marital personal property and will be recognized as personal property. But this is basically impossible, because it is difficult to prove that it is one party's premarital property, and it is extremely harmful. . .