Many property buyers have heard the words "full five", "full two" and "less than two" when buying second-hand houses. Most of them know that a house full of five pays the least tax, but they don't know how it is different from other houses that are not full of five.
In the consciousness of many property buyers, it is right to buy a second-hand house. You must buy a "five-only" house, but the only house with five years is very scarce. In fact, as long as the house is full of two, it is also very good, which is not much different from only one five-year period. Let's look at the differences between them.
Second-hand housing transactions mainly produce three taxes, deed tax, individual tax and value-added tax. Houses that are normally bought and sold do not have the conditions for exemption from deed tax. Houses over five years are exempt from tax, and houses over two years are exempt from value-added tax.