0
Automatic inheritance rights for a cohabiting partner — none, regardless of the duration of the relationship or the absence of other heirs.
60%
Inheritance and gift tax rate between cohabiting partners — the rate applied to strangers, after only €1,594 allowance (CGI Art. 777, III).
€0
Legal entitlement to financial compensation on separation — cohabitation ends with no prestation compensatoire, no support obligation, no sharing mechanism.

What Cohabitation Is Under French Law

Cohabitation (concubinage) is defined in Article 515-8 of the Civil Code as a union of fact, characterised by a shared life of stable and continuous character, between two persons — of different or the same sex — living as a couple. No formality is required to enter into it. No formality is required to leave it.

The shared life and life-as-a-couple do not necessarily require the two persons to share the same domicile full-time (CA Douai 12-12-2002 n° 01-03255). Proof of cohabitation is established by any means: utility bills at the same address, a joint bank account, a lease in both names, a cohabitation certificate issued by the municipality. However, courts have ruled that electricity bills alone — or the mere presence of both names on a lease signed years before the death in question — are insufficient to establish cohabitation on their own (Cass. 1ère civ. 3-10-2018 n° 17-13.113 F-PB).

The law of cohabitation has three defining characteristics: it is primarily judge-made law (statute provides almost nothing for cohabitants in patrimonial matters); it is fragmentary (rights and obligations arise almost exclusively in situations of crisis — separation or death); and it is complex (courts of appeal diverge on many questions). In the famous formula of the jurist Jean Carbonnier: cohabitation appears in French law only at the moment it dies.

Daily Life: No Obligations, No Solidarity

No Duty to Contribute to Household Expenses

The most fundamental distinction between cohabitation and the two formalised statuses is that cohabiting partners owe each other nothing by law. There is no obligation to contribute to household expenses — a duty that the Civil Code imposes on married spouses (Art. 214) and PACS partners (Art. 515-4). Each cohabitant bears, personally and definitively, the household expenses they have incurred. This means there are no accounts to settle at the end: the partner who paid more simply paid more, and cannot claim reimbursement for the excess without proving a specific obligation to the contrary (Cass. 1ère civ. 28-11-2006 n° 04-15.480). Nothing prevents partners from concluding a cohabitation convention to govern how they share daily expenses — such an agreement, if proved, creates enforceable obligations.

No Joint and Several Liability for Household Debts

A cohabitant is not jointly and severally liable for household debts contracted by the other. This contrasts directly with married spouses and PACS partners, both of whom are bound by the solidarity mechanism of Article 220 of the Civil Code. Each cohabitant answers only for debts they have personally contracted (Cass. 1ère civ. 23-3-2011 n° 09-71.261; Cass. 1ère civ. 7-11-2012 n° 11-25.430). The theory of apparent authority is applied with great strictness — a "legitimate error severely assessed" — which virtually eliminates it as a practical risk for professional creditors who failed to check civil status. Where cohabitants jointly operate a business together, however, the joint exploitation confers on each the status of trader and justifies joint and several liability for business debts (Cass. com. 28-6-1983).

The Double Edge of No Solidarity

The absence of household debt solidarity cuts both ways. A cohabitant's partner's creditors cannot reach them — an advantage over PACS and marriage. But neither can the cohabitant compel their partner to contribute to shared costs, pay their share of a joint lease, or meet any household obligation. Without a written agreement, each partner is entirely independent — financially exposed only for their own debts, but equally unsupported by the other's resources.

Income Tax: Separate Filing

Cohabiting partners are taxed separately on income. Each files their own return. Where neither parent can claim to bear a child's maintenance principally or exclusively, the child is deemed equally the charge of both, and each parent receives half the corresponding quotient familial uplift (CE 20-12-2017 n° 397650). For the Impôt sur la Fortune Immobilière (IFI), concubins notoires — an openly acknowledged, stable couple — are in principle subject to joint assessment. This means the real estate wealth tax base is aggregated across both partners, exactly as for married couples and PACS partners, even though the cohabitants enjoy none of the corresponding inheritance or gift tax benefits of those statuses.

Asset Ownership: You Own What You Can Prove

Cohabitation creates no community, no indivision, and no presumption of shared ownership over assets acquired during the relationship. Each partner owns what they personally acquired, created, or received. The dominant rule is strict: each recovers what they can prove is theirs.

Proving Ownership of Real Estate

For real estate, courts look first to the title deed. The ownership split stated in the purchase deed governs, regardless of who actually financed what. If one partner contributed 80% of the purchase price but the deed says 50/50, the legal ownership is 50/50 — and the over-contributing partner's only remedy is a claim for reimbursement of a loan, not a correction of the ownership split (Cass. 1ère civ. 10-1-2018 n° 16-25.190 F-PB; Cass. 1ère civ. 13-2-2019 n° 17-26.712 F-D). Where no breakdown is stated in the deed, ownership is presumed equal. This presumption can be rebutted — courts have ordered unequal splits where one partner proved they repaid the entire mortgage from their own professional income — but the burden of proof is heavy (Cass. 1ère civ. 6-2-2001 n° 99-11.252).

The Title Deed Trap

The single most practical risk for cohabiting couples buying property together is a mismatch between the ownership split in the deed and the actual financial contributions. Over-contributing to the purchase without documenting it as a loan creates two problems: you cannot correct the ownership split, and the tax authority may requalify your excess contribution as an indirect gift — taxable at 60% after only €1,594 allowance (Cass. com. 7-7-2009 n° 08-18.365). State the actual proportions in the deed, or document any excess contribution as a notarised loan at the time of purchase.

Proving Ownership of Moveable Assets

For moveable assets — furniture, vehicles, bank accounts, investments — the possessor is presumed to be the owner under Article 2276 of the Civil Code. Where possession is shared or equivocal, ownership is proved by any means: purchase orders, bank statements, credit agreements, receipts. Some courts have held that where cohabitants pooled all their resources, moveable assets acquired during the relationship should be divided equally regardless of individual receipts — but this approach is contested and far from universal.

Housing: Precarious by Default

During Cohabitation

The protections that French law gives to the family home under Article 215(3) of the Civil Code — requiring one spouse to obtain the other's consent before selling or mortgaging the shared residence — do not apply to cohabiting couples. A cohabitant who owns the shared home can sell it, encumber it, or terminate a tenancy without the other partner's agreement at any time.

Where the shared home is rented by one partner only, there is no automatic joint tenancy. If the tenant gives notice, the non-tenant must leave. If the tenant dies or abandons the home, the lease transfers to the surviving or remaining cohabitant — provided they have been living together as a notoriously recognised couple for at least one year at the relevant date (Loi 89-462 du 6-7-1989, Art. 14).

When One Partner Owns the Home

Where the shared home belongs to one partner alone, the other's position is singularly precarious. On separation, the non-owner can be required to leave at any time. On the owner's death, they have no right to remain whatsoever — the home passes to the heirs. The owner-partner can protect the other by making a bequest of the full ownership or the usufruct of the home. But where there are children, any such bequest is subject to the réserve héréditaire and may be reduced if it exceeds the quotité disponible. It will also be subject to inheritance tax at the 60% rate. Life insurance in favour of the surviving partner — sufficient to cover the tax charge and buy out any reserved-share heirs — is a practical complement to any testamentary arrangement.

When Both Partners Own the Home Together

Where the home has been purchased jointly in indivision, either partner can at any time demand a partition — the court is obliged to order it. The only available delay is a judicial stay of up to two years if immediate partition would damage the property's value (C. civ. Art. 820). On separation without agreement, neither partner has any preferential right to be allocated the home — attribution préférentielle is not available to cohabitants on dissolution of a voluntary indivision unless the co-ownership agreement expressly provides for it (Cass. 1ère civ. 26-9-2012 n° 11-12.838).

The partition of the jointly owned principal residence gives rise to no capital gains tax, provided the property was acquired by the cohabitants during their relationship (BOI-RFPI-PVI-10-40-100 n° 40). However, if one partner buys out the other's share by paying a soulte, that payment is subject to the sale duty (5.80% in most departments) plus a 2.50% partition duty — the reduced 1.10% rate available to divorcing spouses and dissolving PACS partners does not apply to cohabitants.

Inheritance and Gifts: The Stranger Treatment

No Intestate Succession Rights

A cohabiting partner who dies without a will leaves the surviving partner with nothing. There is no legal inheritance right of any kind — not even where the deceased had no other heirs, in which case the estate passes to the State. The law treats cohabiting partners as strangers to each other's estates (C. civ. n° 734). To inherit, the survivor must be named in a will. But even a will does not give the surviving cohabitant the same position as a married spouse or a PACS partner. First, the bequest is subject to the réserve héréditaire. Second, cohabitants cannot make a donation au dernier vivant. Third, any amount the surviving cohabitant does inherit is taxed at 60% after a mere €1,594 allowance.

Gifts: Irrevocable, and Taxed at 60%

Cohabitants may make gifts to each other freely — gifts between partners are not immoral, even in an adulterous relationship (Cass. 1ère civ. 25-1-2005 n° 96-19.878). But for all civil and fiscal purposes, they are treated as strangers. The gift tax rate is 60% after a €1,594 allowance — compared to €80,724 with rates never reaching 60% between spouses or PACS partners. Gifts between cohabitants are irrevocable once made; a partner cannot invoke ingratitude simply because the other ended the relationship (Cass. 1ère civ. 10-7-2013 n° 12-18.581).

The 60% Tax: Why Life Insurance Is the Only Real Answer

Even with a will in place, a surviving cohabitant faces 60% inheritance tax after €1,594 allowance — a charge that can consume the majority of any significant inheritance. Life insurance (assurance-vie) is the single most effective tool available: proceeds designated in favour of the surviving partner pass outside the estate entirely and are transmitted with substantially more favourable tax treatment, regardless of marital status. Every cohabiting couple with significant assets should treat assurance-vie as a priority planning step, not an optional extra.

When Cohabitation Ends: Separation

No Formality, No Compensation

Either partner can end cohabitation at any time, for any reason, with no legal formality whatsoever. There is no equivalent to divorce, no judicial process, no notice period, and — critically — no right to financial compensation for economic imbalance created during the relationship. The partner who sacrificed career prospects to raise children, who relocated for the other, who managed the household while the other built a business, receives nothing by operation of law when the relationship ends.

Damages may be awarded where the breakup was caused by proven fault: extreme brutality, incitement to give up employment, particularly cruel or humiliating circumstances (Cass. 1ère civ. 7-4-1998 n° 96-10.581). But the mere termination of a long relationship — even after 18 or 40 years — gives rise to no claim in itself. The courts have been equally clear that making voluntary payments to an ex-partner for several months after separation does not create an ongoing enforceable obligation, absent a clear written engagement (Cass. 1ère civ. 23-5-2006 n° 04-19.099).

In Case of Accidental Death by a Third Party

Where a cohabitant dies as the result of a third party's fault, the surviving partner may claim damages in tort for the loss suffered, on the same basis as any other victim of the accident (CE 3-3-1978, Muësser; Cass. crim. 29-6-2010 n° 09-82.462). The claim requires proof of a sufficiently stable and durable relationship. Even cohabitation without full-time shared residence has been recognised as a sufficient basis for such a claim (Cass. crim. 2-3-1982 n° 80-95.197).

Recovering Money After Separation: The Legal Toolkit

When cohabitation ends after years of financial intermingling, the partner who gave more faces a fundamental difficulty: the law treats those contributions as final. Recovering them requires surmounting significant legal obstacles.

1
Loan — the cleanest route, but requires evidence over €1,500
If money was transferred with the intention of lending rather than giving, the transferring partner can sue for repayment. For amounts above €1,500, proof requires a written document — a notarised deed or private agreement — signed at the time of the transfer (C. civ. Art. 1359). Electronic documents are admissible provided the sender is clearly identified and integrity of the document is guaranteed (C. civ. Art. 1366). Without such evidence, the courts presume the transfer was a gift.
2
Unjustified enrichment (enrichissement injustifié) — possible but unpredictable
A partner who financed improvements to the other's property — building work, renovation, extensions — may claim reimbursement under unjustified enrichment, equal to the lesser of the enrichment and the impoverishment (C. civ. Art. 1303). Courts compare the property's value increase against the expenditure incurred. The claim fails if courts find the claimant was compensated by free accommodation or other personal benefits during the relationship (Cass. 1ère civ. 12-11-1998 n° 96-21.198; Cass. 1ère civ. 31-3-2021 n° 20-14.312 F-D). Success is fact-specific and far from guaranteed.
3
De facto company (société créée de fait) — rarely succeeds in practice
Where both partners contributed to a joint project, one can argue a de facto company existed, entitling them to a share of the assets. Three cumulative conditions must be proved: mutual contributions (even in labour), an intent to collaborate as equals, and an intent to share profits and losses (Cass. com. 23-6-2004 n° 01-14.275). Mere financial participation in a shared property purchase is insufficient (Cass. 1ère civ. 20-1-2010 n° 08-13.200). In practice, such claims rarely succeed for real estate disputes.
4
Claims under co-ownership law — available for jointly held assets
Where the disputed property is held in indivision, each co-owner may claim reimbursement for expenses of improvement or conservation under Article 815-13 of the Civil Code. A partner who personally carried out works on a jointly owned property may also claim remuneration for their labour under Article 815-12 — calculated on the cost of the work performed, not on the value it added to the property (Cass. 1ère civ. 13-3-2007 n° 05-13.320).

Professional Collaboration Without Pay

Where one cohabitant worked in the other's business without remuneration, two avenues for recovery exist: the de facto company theory and unjustified enrichment. Since 1 January 2022, however, a cohabitant working in their partner's artisanal, commercial, or liberal business is required to choose one of three formal statuses: collaborating spouse, salaried spouse, or associate spouse (C. com. Art. L 121-8, as amended by Law 2021-1754 of 23-12-2021). This obligation should progressively reduce disputes over unpaid professional collaboration.

Protecting Yourself: What Cohabiting Couples Can and Should Do

The law of cohabitation leaves vast gaps. Those gaps must be filled by deliberate private planning.

RiskWithout planningPlanning tool
Surviving partner loses home on deathNo right to remain if partner owns the home; or inherited share passes to heirs if joint ownersWill bequeathing usufruct or ownership; SCI with clause d'agrément; cross-dismemberment of SCI shares; clause de rachat in indivision agreement
60% inheritance tax on bequest60% tax after €1,594 allowance on everything received under a willAssurance-vie with partner as named beneficiary — proceeds pass outside the estate at significantly reduced tax cost
Dispute over ownership of shared propertyOwnership determined by title deed; courts apply 50/50 presumption if deed is silentState actual ownership split in the purchase deed; document excess contributions as a notarised loan at time of purchase
No financial protection on separationNo compensation, no sharing mechanism, no support obligationWritten cohabitation convention specifying financial contributions and reimbursement rights; notarised acknowledgment of loans made between partners
Partner can sell jointly owned home without consentEither co-owner can demand partition at any time; no preferential right of allocationInclude a preferential allocation clause in the co-ownership agreement; or purchase through a SCI where majority, not unanimity, governs
Unpaid work in partner's businessRecovery requires proving de facto company or unjustified enrichment — uncertain outcomeFormal status election since 2022 (collaborating/salaried/associate status); or written remuneration agreement at the outset
Key Points: What Every Cohabiting Couple in France Must Know
Cohabitation creates no legal obligations between partners — no duty to contribute to household expenses, no joint liability for debts, no maintenance obligation.
Each partner owns what they personally acquired; assets whose ownership cannot be proved are presumed jointly held half and half.
The ownership split in the real estate purchase deed governs — courts do not correct it based on actual financial contributions; document the real split in the deed, or record excess contributions as a loan.
The family home protections of Art. 215(3) do not apply — a cohabitant who owns the shared home can sell it at any time without the other's agreement.
A cohabitant has no inheritance rights whatsoever without a will; even with a will, inheritance is taxed at 60% after €1,594 — the rate applicable to strangers.
Assurance-vie with the partner named as beneficiary is the most effective way to transmit assets at death — proceeds pass outside the estate and are taxed at substantially lower rates regardless of couple status.
Separation creates no entitlement to compensation, sharing, or financial support — the only claims available require proving a loan, unjustified enrichment, or a de facto company, each with significant evidential obstacles.
Contributions to household expenses — including mortgage repayments — are treated as final; the partner who paid more cannot reclaim the excess without a prior written agreement.
Since 1 January 2022, a cohabitant working in their partner's business must formally elect a status (collaborating, salaried, or associate); unpaid informal collaboration should now be formalised at the outset.
Concubins notoires are subject to joint IFI assessment — the real estate wealth tax base is aggregated for both partners despite having no inheritance tax advantages of married or PACS couples.
Cohabiting in France and Want to Protect Your Position?

The gap between what cohabitation provides and what couples need is wide — and entirely bridgeable with the right planning. Our guides and resources cover the full range of tools available to cohabiting couples in France.

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This article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. French family and patrimonial law applicable to cohabiting couples is predominantly judge-made, fact-specific, and subject to divergence between courts. Always seek advice from a qualified French notary or lawyer before making any decision about your situation.