3.5M+
Meublé rentals registered in France — the largest furnished rental market in Europe
€77,700
Micro-BIC threshold for long-term meublé and classified tourist meublé (unchanged 2025)
€15,000
New micro-BIC threshold for unclassified tourist meublé from January 2025 — down from €77,700
120 days
Maximum rental days per year for a primary-residence meublé de tourisme (reducible to 90)
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What Is a Furnished Rental in France?

Under French law, a dwelling qualifies as meublé when it contains all the furniture and equipment necessary for the tenant to live there immediately and normally. This is not a matter of aesthetic generosity: a statutory list of eleven categories of furnishings was established by decree in 2015. A property missing essential items from that list — bedding, kitchen equipment, window coverings, seating, storage — is legally unfurnished, regardless of what is actually present, and the unfurnished rental regime applies by default. The distinction matters enormously: the meublé and nu regimes differ on lease duration, notice periods, deposit cap, tax category, and the applicable regulatory framework.

Meublé à Usage de Résidence Principale
The tenant's primary home. Governed by loi ALUR 2014. 1-year minimum lease (or 9 months for students). Tenant notice: 1 month. Landlord notice: 3 months with limited grounds. Full statutory protections.
Meublé de Tourisme
Short-term tourist rental, not the tenant's main home. Governed largely by contractual freedom. Subject to mairie declaration, changement d'usage in many cities, 120-day annual cap, and national registration from 2026.
Bail Mobilité
A special 1-to-10-month furnished lease for people in training, on assignment, or studying. No security deposit. Cannot be renewed. Introduced by loi ELAN 2018. Maximum flexibility for medium-term lets.

The Expat Tenant: Core Rights Under French Law

Foreign nationals renting a furnished flat in France are entitled to exactly the same protections as French tenants when the property is their primary residence. The loi ALUR of 24 March 2014 extended to furnished primary-residence rentals the major protections that previously applied only to unfurnished lets. No landlord can contract out of these provisions, regardless of nationality. Since 2017, the lease must conform to a contrat type prescribed by government decree. Any clause that derogates from the mandatory provisions in favour of the landlord is deemed unwritten — the rest of the lease remains valid.

Feature Meublé (primary residence) Bail Mobilité Meublé de Tourisme
Minimum duration1 year (9 months — students)1–10 monthsNone (up to 90 days/stay)
Tenant notice1 month1 monthContractual
Landlord notice3 months (limited grounds)N/A (non-renewable)Contractual
Security deposit2 months' rent maxNoneContractual
Written lease requiredYes (contrat type)YesNo
État des lieux requiredYesYesRecommended
Loi ALUR protectionsFullPartialNo
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Expat Practical Note

The état des lieux (condition report) completed at the start of the tenancy is the single most important document you will sign as a tenant in France. Disagreements about the état des lieux are the source of the vast majority of deposit disputes. Take your time, photograph everything, and note every imperfection. If you cannot reach agreement with the landlord, a huissier (bailiff) can complete it for a fee shared between both parties. The security deposit must be returned within one month if no damage is noted, or two months if damage is identified — failure triggers a 10% monthly penalty.

The Non-Resident Landlord: Tax Regimes at a Glance

For foreign nationals who own a meublé property in France, furnished rental income is taxed as bénéfices industriels et commerciaux (BIC) — not revenus fonciers as for unfurnished lets. This single difference opens access to depreciation (amortissement) of the property and fittings, which can reduce taxable income dramatically, sometimes to zero. The first question is whether you are an LMP (loueur en meublé professionnel) or LMNP (loueur en meublé non professionnel). The second is which tax regime — micro-BIC or régime réel — applies or is optimal.

Quick Tax Regime Estimator
Enter your figures for an indicative comparison of micro-BIC vs régime réel. Not a substitute for professional advice.
Micro-BIC
indicative tax
Régime réel
indicative tax
Potential annual
saving

LMP vs LMNP: The €23,000 Threshold

You qualify as LMP — a professional furnished landlord — if two cumulative conditions are met: your annual meublé rental receipts exceed €23,000, and those receipts exceed all other professional income in your household. All other meublé landlords are LMNP. The distinction is consequential: LMP landlords can offset operating losses directly against their global income, are subject to SSI social contributions rather than prélèvements sociaux, and access the professional capital gains regime on sale. Full analysis of LMP vs LMNP status for foreign landlords here.

LMNP — Non-Professional
Below €23,000 or majority income test fails
Losses carry forward on meublé income only (10 years). Social levies at 17.2% (or 7.5% EU/EEA). Capital gains: immobilier regime (19% IR + social levies, taper relief after 22/30 years).
  • No SSI contributions
  • Amortissement not deductible from other income
  • Most non-resident landlords fall here
High-earner regime
LMP — Professional
Over €23,000 AND majority income
Losses immediately offset against all income. SSI social contributions (maladie, retraite, allocations familiales). Capital gains: professional regime — exoneration if receipts <€90,000.
  • SSI replaces flat prélèvements sociaux
  • IFI professional exoneration possible
  • Dutreil transmission potentially available

Micro-BIC vs Régime Réel: The Core Choice

Within each status, the landlord chooses — or is assigned — a tax computation regime. The micro-BIC applies automatically below the relevant threshold and taxes a flat percentage of gross receipts. The régime réel taxes net income after actual deductible charges, including depreciation. The January 2025 reform drastically reduced the micro-BIC attractiveness for unclassified tourist rentals by cutting both the threshold (from €77,700 to €15,000) and the allowance (from 50% to 30%). Full comparison of micro-BIC and régime réel here.

Regime Threshold (2025) Allowance / Method Depreciation? Accounting?
Micro-BIC (long-term / student)€77,70050% flat allowanceNoNo
Micro-BIC (classified tourist)€77,70050% flat allowanceNoNo
Micro-BIC (unclassified tourist)€15,00030% flat allowanceNoNo
Régime réelAbove thresholds (or by election)Actual charges + amortissementYesYes (accountant required)

Non-Resident Tax: Cross-Border Considerations

Every non-resident meublé landlord faces the same foundational question: in which country is the income taxed, and is double taxation possible? France has treaties with most OECD countries. All of them follow the OECD model in allocating primary taxing rights over real property income to the country where the property is located — meaning France always taxes French rental income. The treaty then prevents the country of residence from taxing the same income a second time, either by exemption (with progression) or credit.

Cross-Border Tax: How It Works Step by Step
1
France Taxes First
Non-resident landlords file with the SIPNR (Service des Impôts des Particuliers Non-Résidents) in Noisy-le-Grand. Income is declared on Forms 2042 + 2042-C-PRO (LMNP) or Form 2031 (LMP). The flat non-resident IR rate of 20% applies to taxable income up to €28,797 (2024 threshold), then 30%.
2
Social Levies
EU/EEA residents pay only the solidarity levy of 7.5% (not the full 17.2% prélèvements sociaux) following the de Ruyter ECJ ruling and its French implementation. Non-EU/EEA residents, including UK residents post-Brexit, pay the full 17.2%.
3
Treaty Relief in Home Country
The country of residence applies the treaty: exemption with progression (the French income is exempt but raises the applicable rate on other income) or tax credit (the French tax is credited against home-country tax on the same income). The treaty article to check is typically the "Immovable Property" article.
4
Tax Representative (if required)
Non-EU/EEA landlords must appoint an accredited French tax representative (représentant fiscal accrédité) for property disposals above €150,000. EU/EEA residents are exempt from this requirement.
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UK Landlords Post-Brexit

Since 1 January 2021, UK residents are no longer EU/EEA residents for French social levy purposes. They are subject to the full 17.2% prélèvements sociaux, not the 7.5% solidarity levy. The UK–France double-tax treaty (1968, updated) continues to apply for income tax purposes. Full treaty analysis for non-resident landlords here.

Ownership Structures for Foreign Investors

The vehicle through which a foreign national holds a French meublé property has significant consequences for tax, succession, IFI, and exit. The three main options are direct personal ownership, an SCI (société civile immobilière), or a commercial company (SARL or SAS). The most important warning for foreign investors: placing a meublé property inside a standard IR-transparent SCI triggers automatic commercial reclassification to IS (corporate tax) — one of the most frequent and costly errors made by foreign investors. Full analysis of the SCI meublé trap here.

Direct / Personal Ownership
The default and most common structure. Income taxed as BIC in the landlord's hands. Amortissement available under régime réel. Capital gains taxed as immobilier (LMNP) or professional (LMP). Simplest structure for a single property.
SCI — The Meublé Trap
An SCI is transparent for IR by default, but meublé rental (a commercial activity) triggers automatic reclassification to IS. Retroactive, permanent, and one of the most common costly mistakes for foreign investors.
SARL / SAS (IS)
Corporate IS at 15% (up to €42,500 net profit) then 25%. No taper relief on capital gains inside the company. Dividend distributions subject to PFU at 30%. Effective for high-volume landlords; complex for single properties.

Short-Term Rental and Airbnb: The 2025 Landscape

The key obligations for Airbnb hosts as of 2025: (1) declaration at the mairie (always required outside primary-residence exemptions); (2) in 251+ communes including Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, and many coastal towns, prior changement d'usage authorisation is required; (3) the 120-day annual cap on primary-residence rentals, reducible to 90 days by municipal deliberation since January 2025; (4) mandatory registration on the national télé-service (no later than 20 May 2026); and (5) reduced micro-BIC threshold and allowance for unclassified tourist meublé (€15,000 / 30% from 1 January 2025).

2025 Reform: Critical Change for Airbnb Hosts

The January 2025 reform cut the micro-BIC threshold for unclassified tourist meublé from €77,700 to €15,000 and the allowance from 50% to 30%. Landlords who earned between €15,000 and €77,700 previously using micro-BIC must now file under régime réel — meaning a French accountant and proper books. Classified tourist meublé (1–5 star Atout France classification) retains the €77,700 threshold but allowance dropped from 71% to 50%. Full analysis of the 2025 Airbnb tax reform here.

Capital Gains and Exit Tax

Selling a French meublé property as a non-resident triggers capital gains tax in France regardless of the seller's tax residence. For LMNP landlords, the gain falls under the régime des plus-values immobilières des particuliers: 19% IR plus 17.2% social levies (or 7.5% for EU/EEA sellers), with taper relief extinguishing IR after 22 years and social levies after 30 years. Critically, from 1 January 2025, the acquisition price used to calculate the gain must be reduced by the total depreciation deducted during the rental period under régime réel — significantly increasing the taxable gain for landlords who benefited from amortissement. The full capital gains guide for non-resident meublé landlords is here.

IFI, Succession, and Estate Planning

French property owned by a foreign national is subject to French succession law for the French assets, regardless of the owner's nationality or country of domicile (subject to the EU Succession Regulation for EU residents). The impôt sur la fortune immobilière (IFI) applies to French real property net assets above €1.3 million. LMP landlords may claim a professional asset exemption from IFI where their activity qualifies as the principal occupation. The pacte Dutreil — reducing the taxable base by 75% for donations and successions of professional assets — is potentially available to qualifying LMP landlords. Full guide to IFI, Dutreil, and estate planning for foreign meublé owners here.

Furnished Rental in France for Foreigners: The Essentials
A meublé dwelling must contain all furnishings on the statutory 2015 decree list; a missing category may invalidate meublé status and trigger reclassification. Expat tenants of primary-residence meublé enjoy full loi ALUR protections: written contrat type, 2-month deposit cap, 1-month tenant notice, and mandatory état des lieux.
All meublé rental income — regardless of the landlord's nationality or residence — is taxed in France as BIC, not revenus fonciers. LMP status (receipts >€23,000 AND majority income) unlocks immediate loss offset, professional CGT regime, and potential IFI exemption — but triggers SSI social contributions.
From 1 January 2025, unclassified tourist meublé micro-BIC threshold drops to €15,000 (from €77,700); allowance drops to 30% (from 50%). EU/EEA residents pay only 7.5% social levies; all others (including UK residents post-Brexit) pay 17.2%.
Placing a meublé property inside a standard IR-transparent SCI triggers automatic commercial reclassification to IS — one of the most frequent costly errors made by foreign investors. Direct personal ownership or an SCI explicitly opting for IS from creation are the safe alternatives.
From January 2025, depreciation deducted under régime réel is recaptured on sale, increasing the taxable capital gain for LMNP landlords who benefited from amortissement. Short-term Airbnb hosts face the 120-day cap, changement d'usage in 251+ communes, and mandatory national registration (no later than May 2026).
Need Advice on Your French Meublé Property?

Whether you are an expat tenant navigating a French rental contract, a non-resident landlord choosing the optimal tax regime, or a foreign investor planning your acquisition structure, our team of English-speaking French lawyers provides clear, actionable advice on every aspect of meublé law in France.

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This article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The 2025 tax reform figures are based on legislation in force as of January 2025. Always seek qualified French legal advice before making decisions about meublé rental, acquisition, or disposal.