10 years
Carry-forward period for LMNP operating losses from non-amortissement charges
Indefinite
Carry-forward for LMNP suspended amortissement — no time limit
Year 1
When LMP losses can offset global income — immediately in the year incurred
€23,000
Annual receipts threshold above which LMP status becomes possible

How BIC Losses Work for Meublé Landlords

A furnished rental landlord operating under régime réel may find that deductible charges — including amortissement — exceed their rental receipts in a given year, producing a BIC deficit. What happens to this deficit depends critically on whether the landlord is LMNP or LMP, and on the source of the deficit.

The rules are not intuitive. There is a fundamental distinction between losses generated by amortissement and losses generated by other charges (mortgage interest, repairs, management fees, insurance, taxe foncière). These two categories follow different carry-forward rules, and the consequences of LMP vs LMNP status apply differently to each.

LMNP Loss Rules: Strict Carry-Forward

For LMNP landlords operating under régime réel, the treatment of losses depends on their source. There are two distinct loss pools — non-amortissement deficits and suspended amortissement — each with its own carry-forward rule.

Non-amortissement losses
10-year carry-forward — meublé income only
When charges other than amortissement (mortgage interest, repairs, insurance, taxe foncière, management fees) exceed receipts, the resulting deficit carries forward against LMNP meublé income for up to 10 years.
  • Carry-forward: 10 years (CGI Art. 156 I 1°)
  • Offset against: LMNP meublé income only
  • Cannot offset salary, pension, or other income
  • Each year's deficit tracked separately with its own 10-year window
Suspended amortissement
Indefinite carry-forward — no time limit
Under CGI Art. 39 C, amortissement that would create or increase a deficit is suspended — not lost. Suspended amortissement carries forward indefinitely against future LMNP meublé income.
  • Carry-forward: indefinite (no time limit)
  • Offset against: future LMNP meublé income only
  • Accumulates year over year — a growing tax asset
  • Released automatically when receipts exceed other charges
Combined position in practice
Zero income tax for many years
In most years, amortissement reduces BIC income to zero and remaining charges generate a small 10-year deficit. The combined effect is that income tax on meublé income is deferred effectively indefinitely for well-structured rental activities.
  • Zero income tax common for first 10–20 years under régime réel
  • Suspended amortissement bank grows steadily
  • Released against income in later years when depreciation runs off
  • Annual tax savings can be reinvested: compounding benefit

LMP Loss Rules: Immediate Global Offset

LMP landlords enjoy a dramatically more favourable loss treatment. Deficits from a meublé professionnel activity — whether from charges or from amortissement — are immediately deductible against the landlord's global income in the same year. There is no restriction on the type of income against which the deficit can be offset (salary, rental income, pension, investment income), and there is no 10-year time limit.

This means an LMP landlord who incurs a significant deficit in the first year of a new acquisition — perhaps due to renovation costs or a full year of mortgage interest with only partial rental income — can offset that deficit against their employment income or other income immediately, generating a tax refund. For high-income landlords entering meublé investment, this is one of the primary attractions of LMP status.

Example — LMP vs LMNP Loss Treatment in Year 1
Setup and renovation costs€15,000
Mortgage interest (full year)€8,000
Rental receipts (partial first year)€6,000
Year 1 BIC deficit−€17,000
As LMP: offset against employment income (€80,000 → €63,000); estimated tax saving~€6,800 year 1
As LMNP: €17,000 trapped — carries forward against future meublé income only€0 year 1 saving
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When LMP Loss Offset Is Decisive

The LMP immediate global offset is most valuable in years when the landlord has high other income (employment, consulting, dividends). A landlord with €100,000 of employment income in a marginal 41% tax bracket who generates a €30,000 LMP deficit saves approximately €12,300 in income tax in year one. For LMNP, that €30,000 waits up to 10 years to offset future meublé income — worth significantly less in present-value terms.

Para-Hôtelier Services and Loss Planning

Para-Hôtelier Services: LMP-Equivalent Treatment

Landlords who provide para-hôtelier services — breakfast, daily cleaning, linen provision — are taxed as professional regardless of their receipts level. Their loss rules mirror those of LMP even if they do not formally qualify as LMP under the two-condition test (CGI Art. 35 I 5° bis). All deficits from any source are immediately offset against global income, without restriction.

Loss Planning Strategies

Understanding the loss rules creates planning opportunities. The most significant is timing: if a landlord anticipates a large one-time expense (major renovation, replacement of appliances and furnishings), the year of that expense will generate a maximum deficit. For LMP landlords, this should be concentrated in a high-income year to maximise the tax relief. For LMNP landlords, the 10-year carry-forward window means timing is less critical, but the inability to offset against other income should be factored into cash flow planning — not just tax planning.

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Non-Resident Landlords: Loss Carry-Forward Across Tax Years

Non-resident LMNP landlords file BIC declarations with the SIPNR (Service des impôts des particuliers non-résidents) in Noisy-le-Grand. Loss carry-forwards are tracked on annual BIC declarations. A non-resident who stops renting their property forfeits any unused 10-year loss carry-forwards at that point — there is no mechanism to crystallise them against other income. This makes it even more important for non-residents to model the full rental period and ensure carry-forward losses are actually utilised before the activity ends.

Operating Losses in French Meublé Rental: The Essentials
  • LMNP non-amortissement losses (CGI Art. 156 I 1°): when charges other than amortissement (mortgage interest, repairs, insurance, taxe foncière, management fees) exceed receipts, the resulting deficit carries forward against future LMNP meublé income for up to 10 years. Cannot offset salary, pension, or any other income. Each year's deficit has its own 10-year window.
  • LMNP suspended amortissement (CGI Art. 39 C): amortissement that would create or increase a BIC deficit is suspended — not lost — and carries forward indefinitely against future LMNP meublé income. No time limit. The suspended amortissement bank accumulates year over year and is released automatically when receipts exceed other charges. In practice, zero income tax is common for the first 10–20 years under régime réel.
  • LMP global income offset (CGI Art. 155 IV 2°): all LMP deficits — from any source including amortissement — are immediately deductible against global income in the same year (salary, pension, investment income). No time limit, no source restriction. This is one of the primary financial attractions of LMP status for high-income landlords with significant first-year acquisition costs.
  • Para-hôtelier services (CGI Art. 35 I 5° bis): landlords providing breakfast, daily cleaning, or linen provision are taxed as professional regardless of receipts level — all deficits immediately offset global income, equivalent to LMP treatment. Para-hôtelier status does not require the two-condition LMP test to be met.
  • Non-resident LMNP loss planning: carry-forward losses are forfeited when the rental activity ends — there is no mechanism to crystallise them against other income. Non-residents must model the full rental period and plan the end of the activity carefully to ensure carry-forward losses are actually utilised. SIPNR in Noisy-le-Grand handles BIC declarations for non-residents.
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This article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create a lawyer-client relationship. Tax rules are subject to annual change — always seek qualified French legal and tax advice.