I was originally a rural hukou, and when I was in college, I moved to Suzhou and became a collective hukou. Later, after graduation, I returned to the original province because of work problems, so I had to move my account back. At that time, because of policy changes, we could not directly move back to the original village, but only relied on the collective hukou of township units, which was affiliated. Moving back to the original village requires the collective signature of more than 80% of the brigade where my father's account is still in the countryside (the specific number has been forgotten). At that time, the brigade disagreed, because my household registration moved out and the land was divided less. Going back to the next land redistribution requires more points. Later, I reluctantly signed it through the walk of the village chief. This signature is a necessary condition for you to move back to the countryside.
With the above conditions, you will start to move your account. First, you should transfer your file back to the original county (city), because the file has been transferred to the school where the household registration is located, so the file will follow the "registration card" when you graduate. Because it was written in Suzhou (internship) and the files were in Suzhou, I had to go to Suzhou talent market to transfer the files back (the file custody fee is very cheap), and the files would be processed only after being transferred back to the police station. Two, with the household registration book (issued with the registration card when graduation), with graduation certificate, degree certificate, village brigade signature certificate, to the local public security bureau. As long as the information is complete, the processing speed is very fast. It should be noted here that the account migration has proved to be effective. If it expires, you need to apply again at school.
Nowadays, rural hukou is valuable, and it is easier to move out than to move back. I belong to the university relocation, and the conditions are relatively wide. If it is difficult in other ways, you can consult the local police station, where there will be the latest account transfer policy. I hope the above can help you.
The urban hukou moved back to the original rural hukou. From this sentence, I know that my original hukou is a rural hukou. Now it is an urban hukou, and I want to move back to the rural hukou. Let me talk about my situation, just like this question. My family was originally a rural hukou. /kloc-bought a house in the urban area around 0/0 and moved the registered permanent residence to the urban registered permanent residence. Just around May in the first half of this year, I wanted to move my urban hukou back to my rural hukou, so I went to the police station to consult the registered police. The household registration police said that this situation can be moved back, but I need my rural household registration certificate, land ownership certificate, household registration book and ID card. Of course, the main ones are the house certificate and the land certificate. You must be able to show your homestead certificate to prove that you own a house in the countryside. Of course, this is not a real estate license, but a homestead certificate issued a long time ago. The other is the certificate of land ownership. This certificate requires you to own your own land in the countryside first, and then the township government or village Committee will confirm your land, and then issue a land ownership certificate. When these things are ready, you can move your hukou back to the rural hukou. Of course, this is only my personal situation, and there may be differences according to different regions.
This question is a bit difficult to tell you. There are many procedures to go through for account transfer. After the police station, but also after the village Committee. If both customs passes, the villagers must agree unanimously, otherwise it will be difficult to hit people when they are down.
A long time ago, I also applied for an account with my friends. She is slightly different from this question. Originally, she was a city hukou. Because of their marriage, she and her husband left their registered permanent residence in the countryside. Later, because of the divorce, she had to move her hukou back to the city.
Because she is married, the place where she got married is a relatively remote mountainous area. Although she is a town hukou, she can stay in the local village Committee.
At that time, the land was divided and the house was approved. He has become a veritable farmer and can enjoy any treatment in the village.
This matter of hers is a substantive issue of rural to urban transformation. It is necessary for the parties to apply, and the head of the household agrees, and then the competent department seals it, and then the people in the police station strictly investigate it.
Confirm whether the parties have lived in the local area for a long time and ask the surrounding people about the implementation. Only when the parties have to work or live in the place where they have settled for more than one year will the police station give approval. So I accompanied her back and forth many times, and it took me nearly a year to leave my account, which was very troublesome.
There are many benefits in rural areas now, and many people want to move their hukou back to the countryside. Due to different local management and regulations, some places can still settle down, but the premise is that they can't enjoy any treatment in the village.
For example, in our village, my cousin married someone from a company. Because she is a rural hukou, the hukou moved to the man's hometown. After the child was born, due to the problem of reading, the child's hukou fell to our village.
The village recognizes the child's hukou, but the child does not enjoy any treatment. The registered permanent residence is real, but it is actually empty. There are no bonuses and no substantial benefits during the Chinese New Year.
So the owner wants to transfer the hukou back to the countryside. If it's for profit, you don't have to. You won't get any money and waste your energy. If it's for the children to go to school, I think it's still feasible to lose the family!
Ha ha ha, I also want to know the answer to this question, but the answer is too difficult, very difficult.
I am a rural hukou, but a few years ago I was inexplicably directly classified as an urban hukou. Because we are a suburb, plus scenic spots, plus the needs of our city development, I inexplicably became a city dweller. Although I still have land.
I also want to return to the rural hukou, but it is difficult. We've already consulted. It's almost impossible.
It may be related to the specific situation here. My locals have been designated as urban hukou. How can I get back? An account may not be able to move once, so the land in front may be gone.
So there is no way.
But the better situation now is that our family is still enjoying the treatment in the countryside.
It is not impossible to move the registered permanent residence back to the countryside, but there must be a premise.
1. You should have immediate family members in the village, such as parents and spouses. Then sign the account back to the original household registration, and it will be fine.
You still have a homestead in the village. There is a homestead, even if there is no immediate family member, there is a basis for returning to the country of origin.
3. This is very important. You know that.
Then, why do some people want to sign their hukou back to the countryside when the city is obviously more convenient?
Nothing more than starting from your own interests.
1. Rich rural scenery.
Especially the suburban rural areas of first-tier cities have undoubtedly become opportunities for urban development. Beijing's suburbs such as Changping, Daxing, Tongzhou, Shunyi and Chaoyang have been urbanized with the expansion of the city in recent years, and there are fewer and fewer rural areas within the Sixth Ring Road. Whether it is industrial parks, urbanization, real estate development or population evacuation, each will involve large-scale demolition. And you must know what demolition means.
In addition, even without demolition, first-tier cities like Beijing. With the migration of population, some rural areas in the urban-rural fringe have become the distribution centers of floating population.
In these villages, almost every household has built a small high-rise building and become a chartered woman. If anyone owns land, it is a real cash cow. Not to mention the rent of hundreds of thousands a year.
Of course, with the progress of urban management, these villages in the city and illegal houses with potential safety hazards will inevitably be demolished.
So it is not a long-term solution. But if you can rent it for one year, it is a year's net income. Besides, even if it is demolished, there will be compensation.
2. Good rural welfare.
At present, many rural collective enterprises have good benefits, so village committees continue to increase the welfare of villagers. Only children, widowed old people, young children, women and other festivals will be given some pensions or red envelopes, and even dividends will be paid according to household registration at the end of the year.
Compared with cities, the welfare in these rural areas is not very good.
From this perspective, it is not difficult to understand those who want to move their hukou from the city to the countryside.
A village in Changping, a suburb of Beijing where the author lives, was very popular before the 1990s, and many old houses were sold for tens of thousands of dollars. However, after 2000, with the increasing voice of demolition, many people who turned to non-household registration moved back, and every household changed bungalows into buildings. Those who have sold their old houses have gone back on their word and started a lawsuit with the buyer. In the end, they only paid the buyer twice the house price before settling, which is really surprising.
Very simple, as long as the village Committee is willing to accept it. It's really no big deal Don't need to find a big leader. As long as the village cadres nod, they can move their hukou back to the original village. Otherwise, the village Committee won't accept it, and it's useless to find anyone. It's better for the county magistrate to take charge now. However, it should be noted that even if your account moves back to the original village, the nature of the account cannot be changed, and you are still an urban account. Just because you moved your hukou back to the village doesn't mean you are agricultural registered permanent residence. In the past, when agricultural registered permanent residence turned to non-agricultural registered permanent residence, it was necessary to spend money through personal connections. It may not be easy to transfer from agricultural registered permanent residence to agricultural registered permanent residence now. Therefore, even if the hukou moves back to the village, it will not enjoy any treatment in the village.
So in rural areas, is it impossible for all people who have moved out of their hukou to move back? Of course, not exactly. Boys go to the countryside to be soldiers every year. When you are a soldier, you will move your hukou out of the village. Some people may stay in the army for a lifetime, and some people will return to the village after working in the army for a few years. This situation is acceptable in our village. Moreover, after the household registration is moved back, the treatment is the same as that of the original villagers. Because people who go out to serve as soldiers, as long as they are not promoted or admitted to military schools, will follow the principle of returning to where they came from after retirement, and children who serve as soldiers in rural areas will return to the countryside after retirement.
There is another situation in our village. Men work in the city, houses are in the countryside, and their wives and children live in the village. In this case, the registered permanent residence can still be moved back to the village after retirement. However, these retirees are different from veterans. They returned to the countryside after being discharged from the army, and received the same treatment as other villagers in the village, but retirees did not enjoy the treatment of villagers in the village. Neither the contracted land nor the homestead has anything to do with retirees. But one thing, they can enjoy the same rights as others in the village. Even if the retiree is party member, when the village chooses the secretary of the Party branch, the retiree can also exercise the right to vote. As long as you are party member, you can vote.
Even if you are still in agricultural registered permanent residence and want to move back to the original village, it will be more troublesome for people who have spent all their household registration in the past few years. After all, you abandoned your hometown in the past few years. Of course, it is natural for people to go up and water to flow down. But anyway, I'm afraid it's difficult to move the account back now. After all, the village Committee is also a first-class institution, not a vegetable market. Leave if you want, and come back if you want. If the whole family had registered their urban hukou in those days, then they would not have to think about it. The village will not accept you. To say the least, even if the village agrees to let you move back, you are still an urban hukou and cannot be changed.
It is really difficult to move the urban hukou back to the village and turn it into the original rural hukou. I haven't done it, or maybe I'm ignorant. Moving the hukou back to the countryside requires the consent of two kinds of people, one is the village Committee and the other is the villagers. In short, there is no reason to secretly move back to the rural hukou.
In the past, people thought that urban hukou was good and moved to cities one after another through relationships. Now, if they want to move back to the countryside, I'm afraid it won't be so easy. This kind of household registration needs the approval of the village secretary and director, and a villagers' representative meeting is also held. They can only move if they agree, but do you think they can agree? If you move back, you will become a member of the collective economic organization. If we "carve up" the interests again, it is estimated that no one will agree.
So far, no one has moved their hukou back to the village? It seems that there are some urban workers who work in the unit and stay in the unit, but they still eat and live in the village. After retirement, these people usually move their registered permanent residence back to the village, but they are only empty households and can't enjoy the welfare in the countryside.
I remember a while ago, a woman made a lot of noise about moving accounts. She moved her registered permanent residence to the city not because of work, but because of the good treatment in the city at that time. Now that her hometown has become an economic and technological development zone, she is obsessed with moving her hukou back to her original village. When the village committee disagreed, she called the complaint hotline to report this and that, but it didn't help. The answer is very professional: a villagers' representative meeting was held in accordance with local regulations. If the villagers don't agree, of course she can't move back.
The household registration department is not run by her family, so there is no reason to go wherever you want. This reminds us even more that if there is still a strong local plot, then we should be cautious in moving accounts, and don't move out and move in repeatedly, which is not so casual. The hukou moved to the city, and even if it was painstakingly moved back to the countryside, its nature changed, which affected the enjoyment of rural welfare in the future, the sale and transfer of rural houses and a series of other issues.
Coming back is nothing more than reluctant to land, and now everyone thinks that rural hukou is better than urban policy, so many people want to move back. I have moved back. ...
First, correct the problem. In the past, the hukou was only divided into non-agricultural registered permanent residence and agricultural registered permanent residence, and there were no urban hukou and rural hukou in the hukou book. Now in order to narrow the gap between urban and rural areas, it should be collectively referred to as household registration. Having said that, there is still a difference in essence.
In fact, it is not difficult for you to sign back to the countryside. If you go to the police station and ask him, you will answer. You can sign it back as long as the local household registration police station agrees. If the nature of your household registration remains unchanged, it will be very simple, but if you want to sign back and enjoy the same treatment as the villagers, it will be a lot of trouble. I don't know how many times I ran to finish it.
Tell me about my experience.
1998 admitted to the university and moved out of the account. I graduated from 200 1. I didn't have a job, so I found an acquaintance to move back from school and stay in the institution in the county. It seems that we are a generation abandoned after 80. We were free before we went to college, but we started charging after we went to college. The era of package delivery is over. Our primary school and junior high school charge, and nine-year compulsory education is free after school; Then the house price soared and I couldn't afford to buy a house. In fact, I hate that song: "Glory belongs to our new generation in the 1980s." Haha, I think it's ridiculous. In this way, the account has been hung in that unit. In fact, they are not from that unit at all and do not enjoy any non-agricultural registered permanent residence benefits. It should be 16, when land ownership is considered; I'm going to move my hukou back to the village.
At that time, I went to the police station to ask, there is no policy that people like us who have been out for so long can move back. Unless all the brothers and sisters under their parents' accounts are removed, they can move back to follow their parents in the name of caring for the elderly. That's how I moved back to my rural hukou. I didn't come back until I drove away all my brothers and sisters. Haha, this policy is ok! ! ! And it needs the seal of the village Committee, and the villagers' representatives (5 people, or 9 people don't remember) sign and agree. Otherwise, even if you sign back, you won't enjoy the same treatment as the villagers. Remember to write "enjoy equal treatment for villagers" when writing applications and issuing certificates! However, it seems that after 2005 (or after 2008), college graduates should have a policy to sign back their non-agricultural accounts directly. For those who just graduated, the police station directly asks you whether you want agriculture or non-agriculture.
I don't know when you moved out. If you really want to move back to the countryside, I suggest you go back to the police station under the jurisdiction of your village to find out. There may be different policies in different places, and there may be new policies. What you know online can only be used as a reference. ...
Only a few people really want to move their urban hukou back to their hometown and countryside:
One is the old people who went out to work in those years. Now that I have reached retirement age, I want to move my hukou back to the village. People also go back to their hometown and live in the countryside, becoming a veritable fallen leaf.
The other is the person who has a relationship with rural urbanization in those years. In the past, rural urbanization was an honor, and the hukou was pulled out through the back door by relationship. Boys and girls, who have non-agricultural registered permanent residence in those years, can even get to a higher level when looking for a partner.
Another way is to let children receive a better education in the city. When they buy a building in the city, they can take out their registered permanent residence and let their children study in the city.
Now, in addition to retired workers who simply want to be veritable farmers, some people want to go back to the countryside because they see good welfare in the village, and some people are more directly compensated for village relocation or land transfer.
Then, can the relocated hukou be moved back to the countryside? According to our village rules and regulations, it is not possible, but sometimes it meets the conditions and can be returned to the countryside without going through the village Committee.
For example, Xiao Wang, the son of Lao Wang in our village, moved his hukou from the village to the city because he bought a building in the city. Xiao Wang went to work in the mine in the village. A few years later, he felt that it was meaningless to put his hukou in the city, and he had the idea of moving back to the countryside.
In our place, account transfer, account cancellation and even account cancellation are all handled at the police station, so Xiao Wang directly received the township police station, and the relevant personnel told Xiao Wang that he needed to go through the examination and approval. According to the workers, there are two conditions for the hukou to move back to the countryside. One is that there must be immediate family members in the village who take refuge and move back to their hukou, and the other is that they must have real estate.
Xiao Wang's parents are immediate family members. When Xiao Wang got married, his parents applied for a homestead and built a house in the village. The name of the house is Xiao Wang's, so the two met. Without going through the village Committee, the police station directly transferred the account back to the village.
There are also villagers in the village who have transferred their accounts back after retirement. Their hukou is actually hung in the village and they can't enjoy all kinds of benefits issued by the village Committee.
Now rural hukou seems to be more popular than urban hukou, because rural hukou can inherit homestead and rural land use rights, and there should be no big difference between rural hukou and urban hukou in the future.
In the past, people thought that urban hukou was good and moved to cities one after another through relationships. Now, if they want to move back to the countryside, I'm afraid it won't be so easy. This kind of household registration needs the approval of the village secretary and director, and a villagers' representative meeting is also held. They can only move if they agree, but do you think they can agree? If you move back, you will become a member of the collective economic organization. If we "carve up" the interests again, it is estimated that no one will agree.
So far, no one has moved their hukou back to the village? It seems that there are some urban workers who work in the unit and stay in the unit, but they still eat and live in the village. After retirement, these people usually move their registered permanent residence back to the village, but they are only empty households and can't enjoy the welfare in the countryside. I remember a while ago, a woman made a lot of noise about moving accounts. She moved her registered permanent residence to the city not because of work, but because of the good treatment in the city at that time. Now that her hometown has become an economic and technological development zone, she is obsessed with moving her hukou back to her original village. When the village committee disagreed, she called the complaint hotline to report this and that, but it didn't help. The answer is very professional: a villagers' representative meeting was held in accordance with local regulations. If the villagers don't agree, of course she can't move back.
The household registration department is not run by her family, so there is no reason to go wherever you want. This reminds us even more that if there is still a strong local plot, then we should be cautious in moving accounts, and don't move out and move in repeatedly, which is not so casual. The hukou moved to the city, and even if it was painstakingly moved back to the countryside, its nature changed, which affected the enjoyment of rural welfare in the future, the sale and transfer of rural houses and a series of other issues.
I was originally a rural hukou, and when I was in college, I moved to Suzhou and became a collective hukou. Later, after graduation, I returned to the original province because of work problems, so I had to move my account back. At that time, because of policy changes, we could not directly move back to the original village, but only relied on the collective hukou of township units, which was affiliated. Moving back to the original village requires the collective signature of more than 80% of the brigade where my father's account is still in the countryside (the specific number has been forgotten). At that time, the brigade disagreed, because my household registration moved out and the land was divided less. Going back to the next land redistribution requires more points. Later, I reluctantly signed it through the walk of the village chief. This signature is a necessary condition for you to move back to the countryside.
With the above conditions, you will start to move your account. First, you should transfer your file back to the original county (city), because the file has been transferred to the school where the household registration is located, so the file will follow the "registration card" when you graduate. Because it was written in Suzhou (internship) and the files were in Suzhou, I had to go to Suzhou talent market to transfer the files back (the file custody fee is very cheap), and the files would be processed only after being transferred back to the police station. Two, with the household registration book (issued with the registration card when graduation), with graduation certificate, degree certificate, village brigade signature certificate, to the local public security bureau. As long as the information is complete, the processing speed is very fast. It should be noted here that the account migration has proved to be effective. If it expires, you need to apply again at school.
Nowadays, rural hukou is valuable, and it is easier to move out than to move back. I belong to the university relocation, and the conditions are relatively wide. If it is difficult in other ways, you can consult the local police station, where there will be the latest account transfer policy. I hope the above can help you.