Housing in France: Renting, Buying, and Choosing Where to Live (2026 Guide)
Housing Is Where Most Moves Go Wrong
Securing housing is one of the most emotionally charged parts of moving to France. It’s also one of the most misunderstood.
For visa purposes, you simply need proof of accommodation. For real life, you need alignment. This page explains how to think about housing in France — practically, strategically, and realistically.
Proof of Accommodation for Your Visa
For a long-stay visa, you must show where you will be living upon arrival.
This can be:
A signed lease
A property purchase
A long-term rental agreement
A multi-month furnished reservation
The consulate does not require permanent housing. It requires proof that you are arriving with a plan. You can change housing after arrival.
Renting in France
Renting is often the most flexible entry point. However, the rental market operates differently than in the United States.
Expect:
Detailed documentation requests
Proof of income
French banking preference
Security deposits
Slower response times
Many landlords prefer tenants with stable French employment. This can make initial rentals challenging for new arrivals. Patience and preparation matter.
Buying Property in France
Some Americans choose to purchase property before or shortly after arrival.
Buying in France involves:
A notaire
Mandatory waiting periods
Deposit structures
Diagnostic reports
Formal closing procedures
The process is transparent but procedural. It moves at its own pace. Buying can simplify your visa proof but adds complexity elsewhere.
Using Short-Term Housing Strategically
Many people begin with:
Three-month furnished rentals
Extended Airbnb stays
Seasonal leases
This approach allows you to:
Explore regions
Understand daily life
Avoid rushing into long-term commitments
France varies dramatically by region. Spending time before settling permanently reduces regret.
Common Insurance Mistakes
Many people begin with:
Three-month furnished rentals
Extended Airbnb stays
Seasonal leases
This approach allows you to:
Explore regions
Understand daily life
Avoid rushing into long-term commitments
France varies dramatically by region. Spending time before settling permanently reduces regret.
Choosing Where to Live
France is not one place.
Paris is not Provence.
The Loire is not the Riviera.
Bordeaux is not Brittany.
Climate, pace, cost, community, and bureaucracy all vary.
The right region is less about fantasy and more about alignment with your temperament and budget. Visit in different seasons if possible. January tells you more than July.
Housing and Financial Reality
Your housing decision affects:
Visa documentation
Financial proof
Utility setup
Insurance
Residency renewal
It is foundational. But it should not be rushed.
What Most People Underestimate
Housing is not just about beauty.
It’s about:
Distance to services
Transportation
Local administration
Community integration
Daily logistics
The Instagram version of France and the lived version are not the same. Both can be good. But they are not identical.
If You Want the Full Housing Strategy
This page explains the options. But choosing regions, navigating rental documentation, timing property purchases, avoiding renovation traps, and aligning housing with your broader move strategy require deeper planning.
In Get Frenched, I walk through how we chose where to land, what we considered, what we got wrong, and what I would do differently.
If you’re going to build a life here, start with clarity.
Start with the book.
[Start with Get Frenched]