Registration without ownership

Housing issues spoil many. So many battles sometimes flare up due to the notorious square meters! And one of the most burning topics is always registration. Often people are afraid to register their closest relatives, who find themselves without a specific residence, fearing subsequent sharing for a share in the apartment. This is especially true for minor children, which are then extremely difficult to write out.

Let us consider in more detail in which case a registration is registered without the right of ownership, and what are the nuances when registering tenants in an apartment.

Most often, registration without a right of ownership means registration at the place of stay (temporary or permanent), in which the registered will not have any property rights to housing. This registration is most often issued by visitors from the CIS countries and China, Vietnam, who come to the capital (and not only to the capital) to work. However, Russian citizens registered on its territory may also need to register at moving and get a job. Permanent registration (or temporary, but for a long period of time) is required for a decent job in the slightest. Not to mention the fact that without registration, visitors can be expelled from the country.

If the apartment is owned, that is, privatized, then the people registered in it do not have rights to a part of this apartment for sale. Even if the owner is one, and 10 people are registered there. In this case, registration in the apartment (i.e. registration) is made without the right to housing.

Difficulties may arise if the apartment is municipal. If a person was registered in municipal housing, and then they decided to privatize housing, then the registered one can claim a share in the apartment - or he will have to be evicted. In this case, the state acts as the owner, and only it can be evicted from the apartment by a court decision. Moreover, the court can make a positive decision only in some cases:

  1. When a person does not live at the place of residence for six months or more.
  2. When he does not pay utility bills for 6 months.
  3. When he used housing not for his residence.
  4. When he regularly violates the regime and peace of his neighbors (violations must be officially recorded).

As a result, registration without the right to property in municipal housing is fraught with huge difficulties. Accordingly, registration with a high probability can lead to parting with part of the living space.

A separate item is registration without the right to property of the child. This refers to a minor child. There are also certain difficulties. A child registered in municipal housing will have a share in privatization. In an apartment that has already been privatized (that is, in someone elseโ€™s property), a registration is made without ownership, but despite the fact that the child will not have rights to meters, it will be quite difficult to evict him on occasion. Accordingly, difficulties will arise in the sale of an apartment, its exchange for a larger / smaller one, etc. The only thing that can be done is to discharge the baby into the territory of his second parent. True, there are pitfalls here too - if a new apartment is smaller in size than the previous one, custody may not give the go-ahead for eviction.

There is one more nuance. As already mentioned, when registering an adult, registration is registered without ownership. But a registered person, in turn, can register his child without the consent of the owner. Neither he nor the baby will have rights to the living space, of course, but it is rather difficult to discharge a child, if necessary, as already mentioned.

So at least during registration a registration is made without ownership, but there are a number of nuances that must be taken into account in advance.


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