Why Guarantors Are Such a Problem for Expats
When a French landlord asks for a garant, they typically mean a person physically present in France, with stable French income — an employment contract, three months of payslips, and a tax return — who is willing to be jointly and severally liable for the full rent if the tenant defaults. For most expats arriving in France, this is impossible: their family and friends are abroad, their employer is foreign, and they have no French network to draw on.
French law is largely silent on whether a guarantor must be resident in France, and landlords are legally permitted to refuse a foreign guarantor on commercial grounds. The result is a structural barrier that affects virtually every foreigner attempting to access the private rental market. Fortunately, the alternatives are better than most expats realise.
A landlord who already holds a GLI insurance policy (garantie loyers impayés) cannot simultaneously require a personal guarantor from the tenant, except where the tenant is a student or apprentice. This legal restriction under Article 22-1 of the 1989 law prevents landlords from stacking multiple security layers. If your landlord has GLI insurance, they cannot legally demand a personal guarantor as well. You can ask directly whether the landlord holds a GLI policy.
Find Your Best Option
Answer three questions below to see which guarantor alternatives best fit your situation. Results update automatically as you change your answers.
Visale: The Free Government-Backed Guarantee
Visale is the most powerful tool available to expat tenants in France. It is a free guarantee scheme operated by Action Logement — a government-mandated social housing body — under which Action Logement itself acts as guarantor to the landlord. If the tenant fails to pay rent, Action Logement pays the landlord directly and then recovers the debt from the tenant. It costs nothing to the tenant and nothing to the landlord.
Who Is Eligible for Visale?
Eligibility has been broadened significantly since Visale was launched in 2016. As of 2025, Visale is available to:
- All people aged 18 to 30, regardless of employment status, for any private-sector furnished or unfurnished rental
- Employees of any age who have started a new job within the last 6 months (CDI, CDD, interim, or any employment contract), including foreign nationals employed in France
- Employees on CDI during their trial period (période d'essai)
- Students and apprentices of any age, including foreign students enrolled in a French institution
- People in precarious employment (CDD, interim, seasonal work) under certain conditions
Visale does not cover: self-employed people, retired people, or people with no employment connection to France. It also requires the monthly rent (charges included) not to exceed €1,500 in Île-de-France or €1,300 elsewhere.
The entire Visale process is online at visale.fr. The tenant applies first, receives a visa (guarantee certificate) within minutes if eligible, and provides this certificate to the landlord before lease signature. The landlord then registers the lease on the Visale platform. There is no paper process. The guarantee is valid for 36 months for private-sector rentals and covers unpaid rent, charges, and exit damage up to the equivalent of 2 months' rent. If you are eligible for Visale, apply before you start apartment hunting — having the certificate ready dramatically improves your position with landlords.
All Guarantor Alternatives: An Overview
- Covers up to €1,500/month (IDF) or €1,300 elsewhere
- Valid 36 months for private rentals
- Apply online at visale.fr in minutes
- Does not count as a "personal guarantor" under Art. 22-1
- No income or age restriction for tenant
- Covers self-employed, retired, and high earners
- Decision in 24–48 hours
- Landlord must accept the service (most do)
- Must be on company letterhead, signed by HR or legal
- Must specify the property and maximum liability
- Works best with large, well-known employers
- Check if employer is enrolled in Action Logement (mandatory above 50 employees in France)
- Typically requires deposit of 6–12 months' rent
- Funds are frozen for the duration of the guarantee
- Annual bank fees (0.5–1% of guaranteed amount)
- Cannot be combined with a personal guarantor (Art. 22-1)
- Must provide proof of income and identity
- Must sign a formal acte de cautionnement
- Landlord is not obliged to accept a foreign guarantor
- Most effective when guarantor has strong, documented income
- Paid by the landlord (cost: 2–4% of annual rent)
- Requires tenant to meet solvency criteria (usually 3× rent in income)
- Eliminates the need for a personal guarantor by law
- Cannot be combined with a personal guarantor
Building a Winning Rental Dossier Without a Guarantor
For expats who cannot provide any of the above guarantees — particularly self-employed professionals, retirees, or those with non-standard income — the strength of the rental dossier itself becomes the primary persuasion tool. A landlord who has no guarantor coverage can still be persuaded to accept a tenant whose financial position is transparently documented and unambiguously strong.
| Document | What to provide | Why it matters to the landlord |
|---|---|---|
| Identity | Passport + residence permit (if applicable) | Confirms you are legally authorised to reside in France |
| Income proof | Last 3 payslips, or 2 years of tax returns (self-employed), or pension statements | Core solvency check — rent should not exceed 1/3 of net monthly income |
| Employment contract | CDI, CDD, or secondment letter in French or with certified translation | Confirms stability of income; CDI strongly preferred |
| Bank statements | Last 3 months — showing regular income credits and no overdrafts | Confirms income is actually received and spending is controlled |
| Tax return / avis d'imposition | Last 2 French tax returns, or foreign equivalents with translation | Confirms declared income; landlords and agents check this carefully |
| Previous landlord reference | Letter from previous landlord confirming clean payment history | Direct evidence of reliability; extremely effective |
| Employer letter | On letterhead, confirming employment, salary, and start date | Adds authority to the payslips and confirms job security |
| Cover letter | Brief personal introduction in French, explaining your situation | Humanises the dossier; effective in competitive markets |
The French government operates a free platform called DossierFacile (dossierfacile.logement.gouv.fr) that verifies rental dossier documents and issues a certified seal of approval. Landlords and agents trust DossierFacile-verified dossiers significantly more than unverified document packs. Upload your documents, have them verified, and share the secure link with every landlord you approach. For expats with foreign documents, DossierFacile accepts foreign payslips and tax returns with a translation. This is the single most effective practical step for any foreigner without a French guarantor.
Income Too Low? Strategies for Borderline Cases
If your income is borderline — rent is between one-third and one-half of your net monthly income — several approaches can bridge the gap. First, offer a larger upfront payment: while the deposit is legally capped at two months, offering to pay the first three months' rent in advance (not as deposit, but as advance rent) is permitted and signals financial strength. Second, offer a shorter lease or a bail mobilité if your timeline is uncertain. Third, combine a professional guarantor service with a strong dossier to eliminate any residual doubt.
French law strictly limits what a landlord can request as part of a rental application. Prohibited requests include: a copy of your bank card, your bank account login, a health certificate, a photograph, a marriage or relationship certificate, a criminal record check, or any document that discriminates on grounds of national origin, religion, or family status. A landlord who conditions a tenancy on providing any of these items is committing an offence. The permitted document list is set out in Décret n° 2015-1437 and any request outside it can be refused.
Special Section: Student and Apprentice Options
Foreign students enrolled in French higher education institutions have access to several specific guarantor schemes that are not available to other applicants. The most important are: Visale (available to all students regardless of age), the Clé (Caution Locative Étudiante) scheme operated by some CROUS (university housing bodies), and guarantor letters from the student's university or grande école. Many French universities have specific housing support services for international students — always contact these before approaching the private market.
For students whose parents are abroad, a foreign parental guarantor combined with a Visale certificate (if the student is eligible) creates a very strong dossier. The Visale certificate covers the landlord commercially while the parental guarantee demonstrates personal responsibility.
Our English-speaking French lawyers assist expat tenants with lease reviews, dossier advice, guarantor documentation, and all aspects of the French furnished rental process. We work with individuals, international employers, and relocation agencies.
Book a ConsultationThis article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Visale eligibility criteria and rent ceilings are subject to change — always check the current conditions at visale.fr. Laws and regulations may have changed since publication.
Key Legal References
Guarantor restrictions: GLI or bank guarantee prohibits simultaneous personal guarantor (except students)
Permitted rental application documents: exhaustive list; prohibited documents include bank card copies, health certificates, photographs, criminal records
Non-discrimination in access to rental housing: national origin, religion, family status cannot be grounds for refusal
Acte de cautionnement formalities: guarantor must sign formal act; no informal guarantee clause in lease
Visale statutory basis: government-backed free guarantee scheme for employed and student tenants
