|
For buying a regular freehold
residential property in France. An agreement to buy is negotiated
between the buyer and seller and an initial contract is drawn up by
the Real Estate Agent or a Notary and signed by the buyer and seller
which legally binds both parties.You would now pay a deposit of
about 10% of the purchase price which remains held in a special
account by the Notary or selling agent until completion of the sale
when the property will no longer be open to offers from other
parties. This contract is known as a bilateral agreement, compromis
de vente in French, and the most popular type of contract. You would
lose the deposit if you do not proceed with the purchase.
The
final contract is signed at the Notary’s office and the deeds pass
to the buyer and the land registered. You must then pay the balance
of the purchase price to the Notary who will then pay
the
vendor. You will also need to provide the Notary a copy of your
birth certificate translated into French and, if applicable, a copy
of a Marriage Certificate, also translated.
Solicitor
/ Lawyer
A solicitor/lawyer is recommended to protect
your interests and conveyance the property title. They will be in
addition to the Notary who is mandatory for property
transactions.
Fees
You would expect to
pay a total of over 12% of the selling price; less for properties
under five years which have VAT (20.6%) built into the price.The
Notary fee would be around 3%, transfer tax 7.5% (less than 1% for
new properties) and registration fees around another 6%.
The
vendor should pay the Real Estate Agents
fees.
Property Tax
Real Estate taxes are
levied on property plus residential tax for living as a owner
occupier or as a tenant (renting or not). Both are calculated on the
average property rental values.
*In France new
property purchases attract Vat of 19.6%, but this
can be avoided through the leaseback scheme.
Leaseback restricts thenumber of weeks per year that the buyer can
use their property, so that it can be rented out as holiday
accommodation. Popular in skiresorts and coastal areas with
developers quoting an average of 5-6% gross annual rental
income. In some cases the buying price you are quoted is
with the tax already recovered by the contractor.Leaseback
Property
For more
information on French Property and to arrange your viewing visit:
French Property Viewing
Arrangements
French
Property Search:
French Property
Search
Alps Property Bordeaux Property Brittany Property
Corsica Property
Cote d Azur Property Dordogne Property Languedoc Property
Loire Property Normandy Property Paris Property Provence Property Pyrenees Property
Andorra Property
|