After getting married, can I buy a house without including the woman’s name?

No, because these three situations will occur. The purchased house is registered in the name of one party. The property rights of the house belong to the registrant’s personal property before marriage. When divorced, the property rights of the house will not participate in the private property. If it is divided and distributed, it belongs to the registrant personally. If the other party is participating in the investment for house purchase, he can claim the creditor's rights against the real estate certificate registrant based on the capital contribution certificate and demand repayment.

Whether it is purchased by one parent before or after marriage, the property certificate bears the names of the couple, indicating that one parent donated it to the young couple, or one spouse donated half of the property to the other. Because without the consent of one parent or the approval of one spouse, it is impossible for two people's names to appear on the real estate certificate.

In the event of divorce, if the party whose name is on the real estate certificate does not admit that the other party contributed capital when purchasing the house, the house will be considered to be his/her personal property before marriage and will not be divided. If it cannot be proven that it has contributed capital and that it was not donated to one party, the court will be unable to protect the rights and interests of the other party. In other words, even if the other party contributes money, but cannot prove the contribution, the court cannot order one party to provide appropriate compensation.