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Mr. Liu from Beijing is 24 years old and has been working for five years since he graduated from university. Now, he wants to start living independently and consider buying his own house.

However, Mr. Liu is not married. As an only child, his household registration is still on the same household registration book as his parents. According to Beijing's purchase restriction policy, Beijing families can only buy two houses, but now Mr. Liu's parents have two houses. What Mr. Liu wants to know is, is he still qualified to buy a house? If you can buy a house, is it the first set or the second set?

Answer:

Mr. Liu's parents already have two houses. According to Beijing's purchase restriction policy, their family can no longer buy a house in Beijing. Then, the focus of the problem is, when evaluating the qualification of buying a house, is Mr. Liu evaluated with his parents as a family or separately?

In this regard, wheat field real estate professionals pointed out that Beijing's purchase restriction policy is divided into married families and single families when evaluating the qualifications for buying houses, of which the latter includes unmarried, divorced and widowed. For married families, the total number of properties under the names of both husband and wife and minor children is assessed; Single unmarried families only need to evaluate the number of properties in their own names.

As far as Mr. Liu's family is concerned, when evaluating the qualification of buying a house, they actually evaluate it according to two families-Mr. Liu's parents are married and have two suites under their names, so they are no longer qualified to buy a house in Beijing; Mr. Liu is an adult and unmarried. He can be counted as a single unmarried family. He only needs to evaluate the number of properties in his own name. Because there is no room under his name, it meets the requirements of Beijing's purchase restriction policy.

Mr. Liu, who is qualified to buy a house, can undoubtedly buy a house in Beijing. So, can the house he bought be regarded as the first suite? Wheat field real estate professionals said that although Mr. Liu and his parents are a family, they assessed the qualifications for buying a house according to two families. Similarly, if Mr. Liu wants to buy a house, it has nothing to do with the two properties under his parents' names. According to the regulations, it is his "first suite". From another perspective, according to the purchase restriction policy, Mr. Liu, as a single unmarried family, can only buy a house in Beijing, so the house he bought can only be the "first suite".