Everything you need to rent in France

Guides, checklists, articles, and done-for-you support, for expats navigating the French rental system. Whether you're just starting your research or ready to move, this is where to begin.

How to build a dossier landlords actually accept
Understanding leases, deposits, and tenant rights
Why the French system is hard, and how to beat it
Done-for-you rental support from search to signed lease

Renting in France as a foreigner is harder than it looks

The listings are there. The properties exist. But availability doesn't mean accessibility. The French rental system quietly filters out foreign applicants before anyone even reads their dossier, through GLI insurance requirements, agency gatekeeping, and document formats that don't match French expectations.

This page brings together everything Ibanista knows about renting in France, the articles, guides, services, and honest answers, so you can approach the process with clarity rather than frustration.

01

The GLI filter

Most agencies require GLI insurance, which excludes foreign income by design. Even high, stable income from abroad often fails the criteria, and you're filtered before anyone sees your application.

02

The dossier problem

French landlords expect a very specific set of documents in a very specific format. Foreign payslips, pension income, and savings are presented in ways that don't map to what landlords expect to see.

03

The language barrier

Every listing, every lease clause, every negotiation, in French. And the legal implications of what you're signing are rarely explained in a language you can fully understand.

Done-For-You Rental Support

We handle the search, the dossier, and the lease, so you don't have to

Ibanista specialises in helping expats secure long-term rentals in France. We don't just advise. We work alongside you, manage the process, and get you from search to signed lease with clarity and confidence.

Find a rental that genuinely fits your lifestyle and budget
Build a strong, well-presented dossier that makes sense to French landlords
Contact agencies and private landlords in French on your behalf
Guide you through lease signing, your rights, and what you're agreeing to
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OUR YOUTUBE VIDEOS ON RENTING IN FRANCE

Renting in France: your most common questions, answered

These are real questions pulled directly from our Live Q&As with people actively trying to rent in France.

Do I need French income to rent in France?

No, but it does make things easier. If you don’t have French income, landlords need to clearly understand how your rent will be paid consistently. This usually means presenting pensions, remote income, or investment income properly, often alongside a third-party guarantor.

For most newcomers, furnished rentals are easier. They usually come with one-year leases, feel lower-risk to landlords, and are more flexible if you plan to buy later.

Unfurnished rentals (often three-year leases) are possible, but landlords tend to be more selective.

For long-term rentals, landlords are not legally allowed to accept large upfront rent payments.
Offering this can actually raise red flags rather than help.

Listings typically appear 4-6 weeks before move-in. Starting too early can lead to frustration; starting too late limits your options. Timing matters.

No. Most people successfully use Wise or another EU IBAN initially, then open a French bank account once they have a lease and utility bills in their name.

No, as long as your income is stable and clearly documented. In many cases, pension income is viewed as more reliable than freelance or variable earnings.

Often, yes.
Large agencies frequently rely on insurance products that exclude non-French income. Smaller agencies and direct landlords tend to be more flexible, if your dossier is presented correctly.

Ready to move forward?

Renting in France is hard.
We make it manageable.

You have income, savings, and the right intentions. But the French rental system wasn't designed for people like you. We bridge that gap, building a dossier that works, contacting landlords in French, and guiding you from search to signed lease with clarity.

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