yuejihua Posted March 18, 2017 Report Share Posted March 18, 2017 hello everyone, my friend married an american citizen , she wants to buy a small apartment in china , but her husband has to work and cant go there with her, does anyone know how to deal with the process if he cant be there ? she has green card Link to comment
Randy W Posted March 18, 2017 Report Share Posted March 18, 2017 hello everyone, my friend married an american citizen , she wants to buy a small apartment in china , but her husband has to work and cant go there with her, does anyone know how to deal with the process if he cant be there ? she has green card They may not be willing to give her a loan because of the green card, but no husband is needed for any reason. It's all in Chinese - Seems like she would be the best person to deal with this - is there anything specific you are asking about? Link to comment
yuejihua Posted March 18, 2017 Author Report Share Posted March 18, 2017 thank you for your reply, she would like to know if her husband need to get any certified notary to authorize that she will be the one does all the paper work, and if so, where he cant get all the papers that she can use in china. Link to comment
Randy W Posted March 18, 2017 Report Share Posted March 18, 2017 thank you for your reply, she would like to know if her husband need to get any certified notary to authorize that she will be the one does all the paper work, and if so, where he cant get all the papers that she can use in china. She will be buying either in her name, or in his - if they want it in both names, my guess is that that will be a non-starter. If she is buying in her name, I don't think she will need anything from the husband. My wife's son here in Yulin did all the leg work for us in purchasing our home without any glitches whatsoever - we were living in Houston at the time. Any paperwork is supplied by the seller or agent. If a certified signature is needed from the husband, I'm sure he can go to the consulate for that - and that they will have any power of attorney or equivalent forms. I'm meaning the Chinese consulate in the U.S., of course. I doubt that an American notary would be useful Link to comment
chilton747 Posted March 18, 2017 Report Share Posted March 18, 2017 In my case, my wife and I bought a house in China and is in both of our names. I had to go to a notary office in China and was given a Chinese name. Using that name then I signed and finger printed all of the papers along with her. Link to comment
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