The Social Levy Divide: EU/EEA vs Everyone Else
The most significant divide in French social levy treatment for non-resident meublé landlords is between EU/EEA residents and everyone else. This divide was created by the 2015 de Ruyter ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union and its French implementation, which reduced the social levy rate from 17.2% to 7.5% for EU/EEA residents. The difference — 9.7 percentage points — can represent thousands of euros per year on a mid-value rental property.
The De Ruyter Ruling and Its French Implementation
The de Ruyter ruling (CJEU, C-623/13, 26 February 2015) held that France could not subject EU residents who were affiliated to a social security system in another member state to French social levies on income from capital (including real estate income), because double social security contribution on the same income is prohibited by EU Regulation 883/2004. France implemented this ruling by applying only the solidarity levy of 7.5% to EU/EEA residents who provide proof of affiliation to another member state's social security system.
The mechanism is straightforward: an EU/EEA resident presents documentation confirming their social security affiliation in their country of residence (typically an S1 form, a certificate of insurance, or equivalent national document), attached to their French income tax declaration. The tax authority then applies 7.5% social levies rather than 17.2%, producing a saving of 9.7% of the taxable meublé income and capital gains.
UK Residents Post-Brexit: The Full 17.2% Rate
Before 1 January 2021, UK residents were treated as EU residents for de Ruyter purposes and paid only 7.5% social levies on their French rental income and capital gains. Since Brexit took effect, UK residents have lost this status and are now subject to the full 17.2% prélèvements sociaux. A property generating €20,000 of net meublé income now attracts an additional €1,940 of social levies per year compared to pre-Brexit. On a capital gain of €150,000, the additional social levy cost is €14,550. There is no treaty relief available — the France-UK double-tax treaty does not cover social levies.
There are limited but real planning options for UK residents affected by the 17.2% rate. First, if the landlord can legitimately change their tax residence to an EU/EEA country, the reduced rate applies going forward — particularly relevant for those planning a move to Europe. Second, LMP status subjects income to SSI contributions rather than prélèvements sociaux — though SSI rates are typically higher in aggregate. Third, holding the property via a French corporate structure (SARL/SAS subject to IS) eliminates prélèvements sociaux on rental income entirely — though other tax consequences apply. Each option requires careful modelling.
Non-Treaty Countries: Extra Complexity
Residents of countries with no double-tax treaty with France are in the most exposed position. They pay the full 17.2% social levies on French meublé income, receive no treaty credit for these levies at home, and may face double social security contribution if their home country also levies social charges on worldwide income. For residents of countries in this situation, professional advice on the interaction between French and home-country social charges is essential before acquiring French rental property.
How to Claim the 7.5% Rate as an EU/EEA Resident
The reduced rate is not automatic — it must be claimed each year by attaching the appropriate documentation to the French income tax declaration. If the reduced rate is refused by the SIPNR, the taxpayer can appeal within the standard tax dispute deadlines (generally before 31 December of the second year following assessment). Given the amounts involved, professional assistance in filing the claim is advisable.
| Country of residence | Document required | Issuing authority |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | Certificate of insurance (Versicherungsbescheinigung) | German health insurer (Krankenkasse) |
| Belgium | Certificate ONSS / INSS affiliation | Belgian ONSS/INSS |
| Italy | INPS certificate of affiliation | Italian INPS |
| Spain | Certificado de afiliación / vida laboral | Spanish TGSS |
| Netherlands | Verzekeringsverklaring | Dutch health insurer / SVB |
| Switzerland | Certificate from cantonal health insurer | Swiss health insurer |
| EEA (Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein) | Certificate of insurance under national scheme | National social security authority |
The same EU/EEA vs non-EU/EEA distinction applies on exit. When a non-resident landlord sells their French meublé property, social levies are assessed on the taxable capital gain. EU/EEA residents with proof of social security affiliation pay 7.5%; others pay 17.2%. On a €200,000 taxable gain after taper relief, the difference amounts to €19,400 in social levies. Confirming the applicable rate before finalising a sale is essential.
The 17.2% vs 7.5% analysis applies to LMNP landlords and their prélèvements sociaux on rental income. For LMP non-residents — those meeting the professional threshold — LMP income qualifies as professional activity income, not patrimoine income. For LMP landlords resident in the EEA or Switzerland who exercise a substantial part of their meublé activity in their country of residence, their French-source LMP income falls under the social security system of their country of residence, not French SSI (EU Regulation 883/2004, Art. 13). For LMP landlords resident outside the EEA and Switzerland, French SSI cotisations apply unless a bilateral social security convention between France and their country of residence provides otherwise.
Our English-speaking French lawyers advise non-resident landlords from the UK, US, Australia, Canada, and non-treaty countries on social levy planning, rate reduction claims, and the full post-Brexit position.
Speak with a French Tax LawyerThis article is for general information only. It does not constitute legal advice. Always seek qualified French legal advice.
Key Legal References
Social levies on investment and rental income: the prélèvements sociaux framework applicable to non-resident landlords.
De Ruyter ruling: France cannot subject EU residents affiliated to another member state's social security system to French social levies on capital income, because EU Regulation 883/2004 prohibits double social security contribution on the same income.
Social levies on capital gains: the same EU/EEA vs non-EU/EEA distinction applies on the sale of French property — EU/EEA residents pay 7.5%; others pay 17.2%.
EU Regulation 883/2004 Art. 13: principle of unity of applicable legislation — for LMP landlords in the EEA exercising their activity partly in their country of residence, social security is allocated to the country of residence.
