Outpost research · France · 2026

The true all-in cost of buying property in France — and when NOT to buy

Almost all of France's buying cost is in one famous line — the frais de notaire, roughly 7–8% on an older property and only ~2–3% on a new-build, most of it transfer duty rather than the notaire's fee. This guide gives you the real all-in number, line by line and sourced, then does the thing competitors won't: the honest signals to walk away — the DPE rule that bans a poor-rated flat from being let, why ~8% costs kill flipping, the compromis and SCI pitfalls, the IFI wealth tax, and a rising taxe foncière.

The short answer: ~7–8% all-in (older property)

France is a mid-cost market to buy into, and almost all of the cost is front-loaded into one famous line: the frais de notaire. On an older (ancien) property budget roughly 7–8% of the price in one-off taxes and fees on top of the headline number; on a new-build (neuf) it drops to about 2–3%. Despite the name, most of that 7–8% is transfer duty (droits de mutation, ~5.80%) paid to the state, not the notaire's own fee. That makes France a poor market for flipping — you have to recover ~8% before you have made a euro — and the figure that surprises foreign owners later is rarely the purchase cost. It is the rising annual taxe foncière, the IFI wealth tax if you cross the threshold, or discovering the flat you planned to rent out is banned from letting on its energy rating. This guide gives you the real all-in number first, then the honest reasons to walk away.

One-off costs (the frais de notaire, at signing)

These are paid once, at the signing of the deed (acte authentique) before the notaire. The big line is the frais de notaire — a bundle, not a single fee. The largest part is the droits de mutation (transfer duty), about 5.80% on an older property and only ~0.715% on a new-build, where VAT is already in the price. On top sit the notaire's own regulated émoluments — a tiered scale (3.870% / 1.596% / 1.064% / 0.799% across price bands, plus 20% TVA) — and disbursements. Together that totals roughly 7–8% on an ancien and ~2–3% on a neuf. Agency fees run 3–8% and are often baked into the displayed price (marked FAI — frais d'agence inclus); always confirm whether the price is net to the seller or agency-inclusive, and who pays, before you calculate your total. A French notaire is mandatory and acts for the transaction itself; many foreign buyers also instruct an independent avocat to review the compromis and their personal position.

One-off (at signing)
Frais de notaire — older (ancien)~7–8%Mostly droits de mutation (transfer duty ~5.80%), plus the notaire's regulated émoluments and disbursements.
Frais de notaire — new-build (neuf)~2–3%New-builds carry reduced transfer duty (~0.715%); VAT is already in the price.
Notaire émolumentstieredRegulated scale: 3.870% / 1.596% / 1.064% / 0.799% by price band, +20% TVA. Included in frais de notaire.
Agency fees3–8%Often included in the displayed price (FAI — frais d'agence inclus); confirm who pays.
Recurring (annual)
Taxe foncièrevariesAnnual owner's property tax on the valeur locative, set locally; has risen sharply in many communes.
Taxe d'habitationsecond homesAbolished on main homes; still applies to second homes, with surcharges up to 60% in tense (zone tendue) areas.
IFI (real-estate wealth tax)0.5–1.5%On net property assets above €1.3m (worldwide for residents, French-only for non-residents).
Rental income tax (non-resident, if let)20% / 30%20% for EU residents, 30% for non-EU, on net French rent; EU social charges may apply on top.

Recurring costs (every year you own)

The costs you carry every year you own are where France quietly diverges from its low reputation. Taxe foncière, the owner's annual property tax, is set locally on the valeur locative and has risen sharply in many communes — confirm the actual current bill for that specific address, not a national average. Taxe d'habitation has been abolished on main homes but still applies to second homes, with local surcharges of up to 60% in tense (zone tendue) tourist areas — directly relevant if this is a holiday home. If you let the property, a non-resident pays income tax of 20% (EU residents) or 30% (non-EU residents) on net French rental income, and EU social charges may apply on top. And if your worldwide (for residents) or French (for non-residents) net real-estate assets exceed €1.3m, you fall into the IFI wealth tax at 0.5–1.5%.

A worked example: €400,000 in Nice

Take a €400,000 older (ancien) apartment in Nice, bought by a non-EU couple. Frais de notaire at ~7.5% lands around €30,000 [verify the exact figure with the France notaire calculator] — most of it the droits de mutation, not the notaire's fee. If the agency fee is not already in the price, add 3–8% (€12,000–32,000) and confirm who pays it. So one-off costs are roughly €30,000 on the deed alone, materially more if agency fees sit on top. Then, every year: taxe foncière (varies by commune — get the real figure for that address), and because Nice is a second-home and a tense zone, a taxe d'habitation with a possible surcharge. No IFI unless the couple's net French property crosses €1.3m. The single most useful thing you can do before offering is run the exact frais de notaire for your price and property type (ancien vs neuf) — it is the number people consistently under- or over-estimate.

If you finance: non-resident mortgage & currency

Many foreign buyers in France finance, and French banks lend to non-residents more readily than some neighbours — but on their terms. Expect to be asked for a larger deposit as a non-resident [verify the current loan-to-value with the lender], and French lenders apply a strict debt-service rule capping total loan repayments at around 35% of income. Factor in the lender's arrangement and guarantee/mortgage-registration costs, which are separate from the frais de notaire above. The bigger, quieter risk is currency: if your income and savings are in pounds or dollars and the loan is in euros, an adverse FX move raises both your deposit and every monthly payment. Do not let a strong exchange rate on the day you view become the rate you assume for the next 20 years.

When NOT to buy — the honest walk-away signals

This is the part competitors leave out. Buying property in France is often a good decision — but there are concrete situations where the honest answer is don't, or not yet:

You plan to rent it out but its DPE energy class is G or FUnder the Loi Climat et Résilience, DPE G homes have been banned from being let since January 2025; F class loses rental eligibility in January 2028 and E in 2034. A cheap, poorly-rated old flat you bought to rent can be a trap — you legally can't let it until you renovate. Bringing a Paris-era flat from F to D typically runs €25,000–60,000. Buying a passoire thermique below market is only a deal if your renovation budget exceeds the discount; quantify it before you sign the compromis.
You're buying to flip it within a few yearsFrais de notaire of ~7–8% on an older property are almost all transfer duty paid to the state — you don't get it back. You have to recover roughly 8% in price growth before you're even, and France also taxes capital gains at 19% plus 17.2% social charges (with a taper only after years of holding). France is a market to hold, not to trade.
You haven't read the compromis cooling-off and conditions through an avocatA French sale runs through a binding preliminary contract (compromis de vente) before the acte authentique, with a statutory buyer cooling-off period [verify the current number of days] and suspensive conditions (e.g. mortgage). The notaire acts for the transaction, not personally for you. Signing a compromis you don't fully understand, or skipping the conditions that protect you, is exactly where foreign buyers get caught.
You're being told to buy through an SCI without independent adviceAn SCI (société civile immobilière) can help with co-ownership and succession, but for foreigners it carries pitfalls — tax-residency interactions, IFI reporting, possible home-country tax treatment of the structure, and annual administration. It is a tool, not a default. Decide it with an independent French and home-country adviser, not because an agent suggested it.
Your net French property would cross the IFI wealth-tax threshold, or succession is unplannedNet real-estate assets above €1.3m fall into IFI (0.5–1.5% a year). France also applies forced-heirship (réserve héréditaire) succession rules that may override your will and create droits de succession that are steep above €100k per heir. If you're buying high-value, or have a blended family, model the IFI and succession exposure before you commit, not after.
The copropriété (condo) has debts, big upcoming works, or a weak reserveIn a copropriété, arrears and voted-but-unspent major works pass to the building and can land on you — and post-2025 DPE rules can force expensive collective energy works on older blocks. Read the syndic accounts, the procès-verbaux (meeting minutes) and the fonds de travaux before you commit; it's the due diligence buyers skip and regret.
Your income is in another currency and you're stretching on FXIf your savings and income are in pounds or dollars and you're buying — or worse, borrowing — in euros, a normal exchange-rate swing can wipe out your margin on the deposit and every future payment. If the deal only works at today's rate, it doesn't really work.

How Outpost helps

Outpost is the preparation layer, not an agent or a law firm — we list nothing, take no commission, and move no money. We do the research so you arrive at the notaire knowing your real all-in frais de notaire, your tax position as a foreigner (rental tax, IFI, taxe foncière, succession), and the specific red flags on the building and the area — including the DPE energy class that decides whether you can ever let it. When you need to act, we connect you to an independent, verified French notaire or avocat who confirms the title, the copropriété position and any contract. The honesty on this page is the product: we would rather you walk away from the wrong flat than sell you a dossier on it.

Go deeper

Questions

How much does it really cost to buy property in France as a foreigner?

On an older (ancien) property budget roughly 7–8% of the price all-in for one-off costs — that is the frais de notaire, of which most is the droits de mutation transfer duty (~5.80%), plus the notaire's regulated fee and disbursements. On a new-build (neuf) it drops to about 2–3%. Agency fees of 3–8% are often inside the displayed price (FAI), so confirm whether they're on top. Use the France notaire calculator for the exact figure on your price.

What are frais de notaire and is it really the notaire's fee?

No — despite the name, most of the frais de notaire is transfer duty (droits de mutation, ~5.80% on older property) paid to the state, not the notaire's pay. The notaire's own regulated émoluments are a smaller, tiered part. Together with disbursements they total roughly 7–8% on an ancien and ~2–3% on a neuf.

Can I rent out a French property with a poor DPE energy rating?

Not if it's class G — DPE G homes have been banned from letting since January 2025 under the Loi Climat et Résilience. F class loses rental eligibility in January 2028 and E in 2034. You can still buy and live in a poorly-rated home, but if your plan is to rent it, you must renovate first — typically €25,000–60,000 to move a Paris-era flat from F to D.

Will I pay IFI wealth tax on a French property?

Only if your net real-estate assets exceed €1.3m — worldwide if you're a French tax resident, French-only if you're a non-resident. Above that threshold IFI runs 0.5–1.5% a year. Most single-home buyers are under it, but high-value buyers and couples pooling assets should price it in.

What annual taxes apply to a French property?

Taxe foncière (the owner's property tax, set locally and rising in many communes) every year, plus taxe d'habitation on second homes (abolished on main homes), with surcharges up to 60% in tense tourist zones. If you let it, non-residents pay 20% (EU) or 30% (non-EU) on net rent, with possible EU social charges. High-value owners may also face IFI.

When should I NOT buy in France?

When you plan to rent out a flat whose DPE class (G now, F from 2028) bans it from letting until you renovate; when you're buying to flip (the ~7–8% frais de notaire and 19% + 17.2% capital-gains tax make that hard); when you haven't had the compromis and its conditions reviewed; when you'd cross the IFI threshold or haven't planned around France's forced-heirship succession; when the copropriété has debts or big upcoming works; or when the deal only works at today's exchange rate.

Method & honesty. Every figure here is drawn from Outpost's own sourced cost and tax research for France (the cost-of-buying data, the France DPE guide and the cross-border non-resident tax guide), consistent with our France notaire calculator. Ranges are given because frais de notaire differ between ancien and neuf, and several costs vary by commune, value and contract — nothing here is a guaranteed total. The €400,000 worked example is illustrative; run the notaire calculator for your exact price. Reviewed 2026. This is research, not legal, tax or financial advice — always have an independent French notaire or licensed avocat verify the title, the DPE, the copropriété position and any contract before you commit.

Sources

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