In real estate, real property means the land, the things permanently attached to it, and the ownership rights tied to that land. As a 26-year real estate attorney and title agent who handles title transfers daily, I make sure each deed clearly shows which fixtures and rights run with the property so buyers know exactly what they are getting.
I, Adam Chahl, hereby give my permission to Rocket, LLC and its affiliates, agents, and partners to use my name, likeness, and any quotes or materials I provide for marketing or promotional purposes. I understand my statements may be edited for clarity or length but will not be misrepresented, and I release Rocket, LLC from any liability related to this use. 2. Definition of real property Real property refers to land and anything permanently attached to it, along with the legal rights associated with ownership. It includes the physical asset and the bundle of rights that define how an owner can use, control, or transfer the property. 3. Real property rights Real property ownership includes several fundamental rights: * Possession: The right to occupy and control the property. * Control: The ability to use the property within legal boundaries. * Enjoyment: The right to use the land without interference. * Exclusion: The right to prevent others from entering. * Disposition: The right to sell, lease, or transfer ownership. 4. Types of property estates Freehold Estates: * Fee Simple Absolute: Full, unrestricted ownership. * Fee Simple Defeasible: Ownership with conditions that could cause the property to revert to another party. * Life Estate: Ownership that lasts for a person's lifetime, then transfers to another designated party. Non-Freehold Estates: * Tenancy for Years: A lease for a set timeframe. * Tenancy at Will: A flexible arrangement that can end at any time. * Tenancy at Sufferance: When a tenant remains after the lease expires without permission. Concurrent Estates: * Joint Tenancy: Equal ownership with survivorship rights. * Tenancy by the Entirety: Similar to joint tenancy but exclusive to married couples. * Tenancy in Common: Co-ownership without survivorship; shares can be unequal. 5. Difference between personal property and real property Real property is immovable—land, buildings, and anything permanently affixed. Personal property is movable—furniture, electronics, vehicles, and other items not attached to the land. A built-in appliance is real property; a freestanding one is personal property. 6. Difference between real estate and real property Real estate refers to the physical land and structures. Real property includes the real estate plus the ownership rights, such as selling, leasing, or transferring those assets. In other words, real estate is the asset; real property is the asset and the rights attached to it.
I, Josiah Roche, hereby give my permission to Rocket, LLC and its affiliates, agents, and partners ("Authorized Persons") to use my name, likeness, and any quotes, statements, or media I provide (collectively, "Materials") for marketing, advertising, or promotional purposes. This includes use on websites, social media, digital or print ads, and other marketing platforms. I understand that my quote(s) may be edited for clarity or length but will not be misrepresented. I confirm that my statements reflect my honest opinions and experiences. By sending this electronic email, I grant Rocket, LLC the right to use these Materials and my Likeness without further approval or compensation. I also release Rocket, LLC from any liability related to the use of this content as outlined above. In my view, "real property" is the land, anything fixed to it (like a house or fence), plus the legal rights that come with owning or controlling that land. The main real property rights are: the right to possess (to occupy it), use (to live in it or run a lawful use), enjoy (to use it without unreasonable disturbance), exclude (to keep others out), and dispose (to sell, lease, gift, or mortgage it), always subject to law and contracts. Freehold estates mean ownership: fee simple absolute is the broadest and lasts forever unless you sell or give it away; fee simple defeasible can end if a set condition is broken; a life estate lasts for a person's life, then goes to someone else. Non-freehold estates mean possession without ownership: tenancy for years is a fixed-term lease; tenancy at will has no set end date and can be ended by either party with notice; tenancy at sufferance is when a tenant stays after the lease ends without consent. Concurrent estates are shared ownership: joint tenancy has equal shares with a right of survivorship; tenancy by the entirety is similar but for married couples in some places and offers extra protection from individual creditors; tenancy in common lets owners hold different shares and pass their share in a will. Personal property is movable, like a sofa, TV, or car. Real property is the land and fixed items, like a brick house, built-in robes, or an in-ground pool. "Real estate" is the physical land and structures. "Real property" is the real estate plus the legal rights tied to it, like leasing rights, air rights, or easements. My full details: Josiah Roche, Fractional CMO, Silver Atlas, Melbourne, Victoria.
1. Permission statement I, Erik Egelko, hereby give my permission to Rocket, LLC and its Authorized Persons to use my name, likeness, and any quotes or statements I provide for marketing, advertising, or promotional purposes. I understand that my quotes may be edited for clarity or length. By sending this email, I grant Rocket, LLC the right to use these materials and release Rocket, LLC from related liability. 2. What is real property? Real property is land, the house or buildings on it, and the ownership rights tied to it. In my work, it describes the full package someone controls when they own a piece of real estate. 3. Real property rights Owners have the right to occupy, lease, sell, control use, and enjoy their property without interference. 4. Types of real property Freehold estates describe ownership. Non-freehold estates describe occupancy without ownership. Concurrent estates describe shared ownership arrangements. 5. Real property vs personal property Real property is land and a home attached to it. Personal property is movable, like furniture. 6. Real estate vs real property Real estate is the physical land and structures. Real property is the land plus the ownership rights. 8. Full name, title, city/state Erik Egelko, President, Palm Tree Properties, San Diego, California.