As the saying goes, "Men should marry when they are older, and women should marry when they are older", and both men and women will look forward to forming a small family when they reach a certain age. However, when a man and a woman get married, there will be a hukou problem. In the traditional concept, after a man and a woman get married, they will move the woman's hukou to the man's hukou, thinking that the real family is in the same hukou book. However, in fact, there is no requirement in the mainland marriage law that marriage requires the transfer of household registration, which means that the transfer of household registration is based on the principle of individual voluntariness and has no direct legal connection with the marriage relationship. So is it better to move the hukou after marriage or not? What will happen if we don't move? I'm going to talk to you about this today.
1. The benefits of not moving the hukou
1. Enjoy the benefits of your mother's family.
Each place has a different policy, such as the rural hukou, which allocates land according to the list of people in the hukou. If the woman has a rural hukou, when her hukou is moved, then the corresponding land in her name will be taken back to the collective. In addition to land, she can't enjoy some other benefits and subsidies from her mother's family. Of course, after the woman's hukou moves into the man's side, she has become a person with a hukou on the man's side, although she cannot enjoy the policies of her mother's side, but she can enjoy the welfare policies of the man's family. This is a two-way street, so when considering moving your hukou, you don't need to deliberately follow it, as long as you judge according to your actual situation and choose a policy that is more beneficial to your life.
2. There are many choices for children's education.
After many friends get married, they are anxious to move their hukou, afraid that they will need to register their children. But in fact, it is not necessary to apply for a birth certificate for the child, and the child can only settle in one of the household registration books. From this point of view, it does not matter whether you move your household registration or not. However, there is a certain connection between moving and not moving and children's schooling. Because if the hukou is not moved, and both men and women are at two addresses, then the children have a choice when they choose to go to school. For example, if the school resources of the woman's household registration are better, then you can choose to enroll in the place where the woman's household registration is located. Of course, the man's school conditions are better, and he can also choose to go to school on the man's hukou. In terms of children's schooling, there are more options for not moving their hukou. However, the specific situation needs to be analyzed on a case-by-case basis, and the policies of each place may be different, and some places require both parents to be registered together in order to apply for enrollment. At this time, in order for our children to go to school, we need to consider whether to move or not.
3. Protect your own rights and interests.
Although it is said that after getting married, husband and wife are all running towards the common goal of growing old together, but the world is unpredictable, and sometimes marriage may lead to divorce for various reasons. At this time, if the woman's hukou has not moved into the man's place, the trouble of moving out of the hukou can be avoided. Divorce itself is a complex matter, involving many issues such as property division and child support. However, if the woman's hukou is with the man, she may face various difficulties in moving out of the hukou at the time of divorce. She needs to deal with the man's family, and she also needs to consider her own household registration problem.
2. The potential inconvenience of not moving the hukou
Hukou often needs to be used in our lives, such as applying for a birth permit for a child, although not moving the hukou does not affect the birth permit, but generally need to show the hukou of both parties, if the two sides are far away, you may need to go back and forth between the two places. For example, for ID cards, passports, provident fund withdrawals, etc., they also need to show their household registration books, and some also need to go back to the place of household registration to handle them. If today's article is helpful to you, then click a follow, a like, and thank you for your support.