Anyone who owns a condominium, owns it with other owners. Each owner owns a unit, with boundaries defined in the CC&Rs between this property and the property owned by all owners. The boundary may be 'the paint/ wallpaper', 'the studs', 'sheet rock', or other.
Once you purchase a condominium unit, whether you are its first owner or subsequent owner, the condominium declarations will always be in force.
A resident owner owns the unit and lives there.
Someone who owns a condominium unit is called an owner.
When you purchase a condominium, your lender will determine the acceptable credit score. When you rent a condominium from an owner, the owner makes a similar determination.
Legally, a hotel is owned by a single owner and the property managed for the benefit of both the owner and guests. Each condominium unit is owned individually, and its association manages the business of the condominium.
Single owner title is the opposite of condominium title ownership, both of which are forms of owning real estate assets.
According to the Fairfax (Virginia) Yacht Club:"A condominium slip is similar to an apartment condominium in that the owner receives a deed (which is insurable and recorded in the County Land Records) which carries with it the exclusive right to the use of the slip (the slip is owned by the owner and not rented or leased from the marina)."
who's the owner?
Your answer depends on who you are and from whom you are collecting rents.If you are the owner of a condominium, and collect rent from your tenant, you shouldn't need a real estate license in any state.If you are serving as the owner's agent, and have a written agreement to rent out a condominium property and collect its rents, and pay yourself some kind of commission for this task, you probably need some kind of license -- in any state.
That depends on the rules and regulations of the condominium. You need to check the Master Deed and the Condominium Trust.
If Florida is like most other states, a condominium unit owner pays property taxes for the unit.
In some cases a condominium is like an apartment. However, a condominium is form of fee ownership ( each unit owner is the absolute owner of their unit) by which several owners share ownership of a building(s) by each owning their respective units. In a condominium scheme each unit owner also owns a proportionate interest in all other common areas of the project such as the grounds, pool, laundry facilities, community rooms, etc.An apartment is generally a rental unit in the US and Canada. In Europe, an apartment can be a rental unit or a unit in a building that is owned in fee much like a condominium.