Words: Ashley Rigg

Published: 12th May 2011


*French property sales drop sharply as new 20% tax looms

*French property sales drop sharply as new 20% tax looms
Sales of new build properties in France fell steeply in the first three months of 2011.

Volumes dropped 24 per cent in the first quarter of the year compared to same period in 2010, according to new data from the federation of French property developers (FPI).

The worst areas affected were Lyon, the third largest city, the region of Brittany and Provence in South West France. Sales fell 16% in Paris.

The only region to buck the trend was the Cote d'Azur. Sales of new homes on the Mediterranean coast were up 12 per cent compared with the first three months of 2010.

Nick Leach, managing director of Pierre & Vacances puts the change down to a winding down of tax incentives aimed at local buy-to-let investors.

“Our sales are slightly down on last year. Mortgage rates are beginning to creep up which is having some effect but the main reason is probably the tapering off of government tax relief offered in the Loi Scellier legislation in 2009”.

Loi Scellier allows French investors to offset rental income on properties worth over £300,000 against income tax. The amount of tax relief decreases over time.

New tax on property rental income proposed



The news of the drop in sales volumes coincides with the news that a draft law is being debated by the French parliament to levy a 20% tax on the rental income of non-resident second home owners.

The draft, which was approved by President Nicolas Sarkozy's cabinet on Wednesday and is expected to pass parliament in time to become law in 2012, says second home owners who don't rent out their properties should help pay for French public services.

It is part of a package of measures to cut France’s yawning budget deficit after an increase in the threshold for a supertax on the rich.

EU legal challenge



Although the law has been written so as not to apply only to foreigners (it also applies to French citizens who have moved abroad), it is likely to face legal challenges on the grounds it is discriminatory.

The French parliament is due to vote on the tax reform bill in July.


Source: Global edge

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User Comments

I second those comments. This article needs correcting. There are many exemptions if you buy a house in France and like most French laws there are many ways in which they don't apply by using simple measures - <a href="http://www.seymour-james.com">Seymour-James- The French Property Website</a>

Seymour-James, Seymour-James


So as not to scaremonger those with second homes in France, it may be advisable to correct this piece according to the detail on the new second homes tax in this article from The Connexion. It is a tax on those who do not let out their second homes and therefore do not contribute to the local economy, rather than a tax on all second homes. http://www.connexionfrance.com/Holiday-home-government-tax-non-residents-12723-view-article.html?sf1454315=1

Kate Stinchcombe-Gillies, holidaylettings.co.uk



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