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Real estateTaxation

What should I know about rental fees in 2025/2026 ?

Here is an up-to-date overview (2025–2026) of the tax rules applying to classified furnished tourist rentals in France — what an owner of a holiday villa in the Luberon (or anywhere in France) needs to know today, including the changes introduced by recent legislation.


Reminder: How furnished rentals are taxed

Income from a furnished rental (short-term or seasonal) is taxed under the category of Industrial and Commercial Profits (BIC).

There are two main tax regimes:

  • the simplified Micro-BIC regime, and

  • the Real (Réel) regime, which can be optional or mandatory depending on the level of income.


Recent changes (2024–2025 laws) — applicable in 2025/2026

The reforms passed at the end of 2024 (including the Le Meur law) and the 2025 Finance Act have modified the tax rules for furnished tourist rentals — both classified and non-classified.


Reduction of the “lump-sum” allowance

For a classified furnished tourist property (villa, guesthouse, etc.):

  • the deduction applied under the Micro-BIC regime has been reduced from 71% to 50%.

For a non-classified furnished rental (short-term rental without an official label):

  • the Micro-BIC regime remains possible but with a very low revenue cap of €15,000 per year

  • and only a 30% allowance.


Adjusted revenue thresholds for Micro-BIC

For a classified furnished rental or a B&B:

  • the annual revenue ceiling to qualify for the simplified regime is now €77,700.

Beyond this threshold, the Real regime becomes mandatory.


The Real regime: often more advantageous — but more demanding

Under the Real regime, owners can deduct actual expenses (maintenance, depreciation, repairs, management fees, etc.), which can significantly reduce taxable income — especially when costs are high (pool maintenance, equipment, services, etc.).

However, this regime requires accurate bookkeeping, keeping all receipts, and a generally heavier administrative workload.


Depreciation and capital gains

Since the reform, depreciation applied as part of a furnished rental activity may be reintegrated into the capital gains calculation upon resale, which can reduce the tax benefit at the time of selling the property.

For a classified rental, this can have an even greater impact when the property is sold after several years of ownership — careful planning is essential.


What this means for owners of villas with swimming pools (in the Luberon or elsewhere)

  • Obtaining an official classification (meublé de tourisme) remains beneficial — it improves the tax allowance (50% vs. 30% for non-classified rentals) and provides access to the higher Micro-BIC revenue ceiling (€77,700). However, the advantage is less significant than in previous years.

  • If your villa generates substantial rental income (especially high-end villas with strong occupancy), the Real regime may become more advantageous than Micro-BIC — particularly when you have significant expenses (pool maintenance, equipment, services, taxes, depreciation).

  • It is essential to maintain rigorous accounting: keep invoices, receipts, depreciation records, etc., to safely deduct expenses under the Real regime.

  • When selling the property, the impact of depreciation on capital gains must be anticipated — it can affect long-term net profitability.

  • Finally, the recent reforms (Le Meur law, increased scrutiny of tourist rentals) show how important it is to remain compliant — classification when possible, proper declarations, and adherence to tax and administrative obligations — in order to secure the rental activity over the long term.

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