The real estate license has not been completed yet. Can I change my name?

No, under normal circumstances, the name of the real estate license cannot be changed at will before the real estate license is completed. After you can do it, you can change the name of the real estate license by means of transfer.

Property ownership transfer process:

Go to the "Registration Information and Verification Agreement" window to go through the formalities of information registration, China and agreement verification;

Two, to the "real estate valuation" window for valuation procedures;

Three, to the "notarization" window for notarization procedures;

1. The applicant's resident identity card or household registration book and its copy;

2. If China people apply on their behalf, the entrusted China people need to submit the power of attorney, ID card and its copy; Other China people need to submit proof that they have the right to come to China;

3. Proof of the property right of the inherited property;

4. The death certificate of the deceased;

5. If the legal heir has died, a death certificate and a certificate of kinship shall be submitted;

6. Proof of the decedent's marriage, parents, children and related relatives;

7. Other certificates and materials that the notary believes should be submitted;

Four, to the "private transaction" window for transaction procedures;

Five, to the "deed tax, stamp duty" window to pay stamp duty;

Six, to the "property registration and certification" window for the "all of housing" renamed procedures.

Materials required for transfer of real estate license:

(1) application for registration;

(2) the identity certificate of the applicant;

(3) The house ownership certificate or the real estate ownership certificate;

(four) proof of the transfer of ownership of the house;

It can be a sales contract, an exchange contract, a gift contract, a legacy certificate, an inheritance certificate, a division agreement, a merger agreement, a legal document that comes into effect by a people's court or an arbitration commission, or other materials that prove the transfer of house ownership.