Before building a house in rural areas, it must be approved by the villagers' committee, reported to the township people's government for review, and finally reported to the people's government at the county level for approval before building a house.
Rural housing regulations:
1. Article 62 of the Land Management Law. A rural villager can only own one homestead, and the area of the homestead shall not exceed the standards set by provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the central government.
2, rural villagers to build houses, should comply with the overall land use planning of the township (town), and try to make use of the original homestead and village homestead.
3, rural residential land, by the township (town) people's government audit, approved by the people's government at the county level; Among them, those involving the occupation of agricultural land shall go through the examination and approval procedures in accordance with the provisions of Article 44 of this Law.
4, rural villagers to sell, rent housing, and then apply for homestead, not approved.
Extended data:
land laws
Article 8 Urban land belongs to the state. Land in rural areas and suburban areas belongs to farmers' collectives, except for those that are owned by the state according to the law; Homestead, private plots and private hills are collectively owned by farmers.
Article 9 State-owned land and land collectively owned by peasants may be designated for use by units or individuals according to law. Units and individuals that use land have the obligation to protect, manage and rationally use land.
Article 10 Where the land collectively owned by peasants belongs to the village peasants according to law, it shall be managed by the village collective economic organization or the villagers' committee; Farmers who have been collectively owned by more than two rural collective economic organizations in the village shall be managed by the rural collective economic organizations or villagers' groups in the village; Farmers who have returned to their hometowns (towns) are collectively owned and managed by rural collective economic organizations in townships (towns).
Article 74 Anyone who, in violation of the provisions of this Law, occupies cultivated land to build kilns and graves, or builds houses, digs sand, quarries, mines and borrows soil on cultivated land without authorization, which damages the planting conditions, or causes land desertification and salinization due to land development, shall be ordered by the land administrative department of the people's government at or above the county level to make corrections within a time limit and may also be fined; If a crime is constituted, criminal responsibility shall be investigated according to law.
References:
Hualvwang-Land Management Law