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A SURGE in the popularity of second homes is set to follow the Chancellor’s tax concessions unveiled this week. Anyone selling such a property after nine years will benefit from the new low rate of capital gains tax on the profits – only 18 per cent. According to Liam Bailey, Knight Frank’s head of residential research, “this could have the effect of raising investment volumes – and hence underpin prices in investment and second-home locations”.
Paris, which is already receiving a boost from the high-speed train link from St Pancras starting next month, is set to be one of those locations. House prices in the French capital rose by 9.9 per cent last year. They are now slowing but the city is regaining its lost prestige, according to Gilles Oury, a Paris notary. “Paris has always attracted foreigners, but they stopped buying here in the 1980s and early 1990s,” he says. “Now they’re back.”
Liz Wood and her husband, Lewis, are in the British vanguard. When they were looking for a second home recently, they wanted somewhere attractive, affordable and safe. Paris fitted the bill: it was cheaper than London and more romantic than Eastern Europe. “The system in France is straightforward,” says Mrs Wood, 53, who is from Edinburgh. “I saw six flats in one day and really liked the last one. We made an offer, it was accepted and that was that.”
The family now owns a €600,000 (£400,000) appartement in the central 6th arrondissement near the chic Bon Marché department store and the no less luxurious Lutetia Hotel. “We’ve just finished renovating it and we’re really pleased,” says Mrs Wood. She is by no means alone. According to the Paris Chamber of Notaries, the proportion of flats in the French capital bought by foreigners rose from 5.2 per cent in 1996 to 8.2 per cent in 2006. The British represented 5 per cent of foreign purchasers ten years ago. Today they represent 10.8 per cent, having bought 279 Parisian properties over the past 12 months. Many are in well-known districts such as the Marais, but some are in less touristy parts of the city, such as the 14th arrondissements to the south, and the 11th to the east. In these areas, Britons tend to buy flats as an investment to rent out, often to students.
Marie-Pierre Saint-Martin, the director of London Paris Dream Home, a firm that provides a flat-hunting service for people looking to buy in the French capital, says her clients fall into two categories. “There are those who want a pied-à-terre and those who want an investment,” she says. “It’s about half and half.” The Woods, whose flat Mme Saint-Martin found, fall into the first category.
Declan O’Brien, on the other hand, has never stayed in the two studio flats he bought in 2004. “I’ve doubled my money and I’ve never been without a tenant,” says Mr O’Brien, 50, an NHS manager. He says a capital gains tax of 16 per cent for nonresidents from another EU country was an added bonus. “I could have invested in somewhere like Croatia, but Warren Buffett says never invest in a product you don’t understand.”
The standard lease for an unfurnished flat is three years, but includes clauses that can dissuade investors. Tenants can only be expelled before the end of the lease if the owner wants to move into the property – they cannot be expelled between November and March. Many of the Britons investing here opt instead for student rentals – furnished flats with a one-year lease.
John-Pierre Clark, the director of an internet property finder, Focus France, says that student flats costing €90,000 can bring in monthly rent of €600 a month. “The equivalent in London would be somewhere like Whitechapel,” he says. “But you would pay £200,000 and get rent of £800 a month.”
The other main attraction for British investors is the short-term rental market – for executives working in the city or tourists. Jean-Philippe Roux, of Knight Frank in Paris, says such flats can generate a revenue of €2,300 a week. “You’re essentially competing with hotels, so you must buy in the right area and the specifications must be high.” The cost of a flat destined for the short-term rental market is between €8,000 and €12,000 per sq m, and €20,000 per sq m in the Gold Triangle around the Champs Elysées, he says. The average price in Paris as a whole is €6,000 per sq m.
“We’ve noticed a sociological modification in certain areas, notably in the 6th arrondissement, where one flat in six belongs to nonresidents,” says Jean-Yves Mano, the head of housing at Paris City Council. “There’s been an impact on schools and businesses. Some foreign purchasers are welcome, the council says. But not so many that they drive away “les Parisiens”.
FACTFILE
59,734 flats were sold in the Paris region last year.
The average price of a flat in Paris has risen from €2,500 per sq m in 1996 to almost €5,900 per sq m in 2006.
The average flat bought by a foreigner in Paris measures 49 sq m.
The 4th arrondissement has the highest proportion of foreigner purchasers, while the 12th in the east has the lowest.
Contacts: parisdreamhome.com focusfrance.net , flat-hunter.com philiphawkes.com , parisaddress.com francehomefinance.com
Click here to search for properties for sale in Paris and the surrounding area on propertyfinder.com
Click here to search for properties for sale in Paris on properazzi.com
For everything you need to know about the property market in France, go to: timesonline.co.uk/frenchproperty

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Before buying in France British buyers should come to terms with French law on tax and inheritance. Stay one day over the permitted period in France and you will be liable for full tax and national insurance ( a big shock). Death dutites are very high by UK standards and if you are deemed to be domiciled in France at your death your estate will have to be distributed according to French law (Roman law in effect). However like Linda, the thought of a second home depresses me; one is quite enought for me.
Dectora , London, UK/ex Ireland
Why is everyone so greedy these days... money, money, money.
Do people not realise how lucky they are compared to some others in the world. Who needs two homes?
Linda, Victoria, B.C. Canada
Norm! get a life
The Addick, Morland House; Orfdnance Wharf, UK
Is there no moral dimension to owning two homes?
Eric Hall, Stirling,
Paris, which is already receiving a boost from the high-speed train link from St Pancras starting next month..... Hahahaaaa! You cannot be serious. Britannia still rules the world, and big London rules tiny Paris. We will show them Froggies!
Hein Maassen, Leidschendam, The Netherlands
The idea of extra tax breaks for the urban well heeled, in this case, having a directly adverse effect on the far less affluent rural population, will be greeted with horror and disgust in numerous communities, where already much of the local population has been forced out, due to overinflated house prices caused chefly by "city folk" looking for a part-time rural idyll. The subsequent loss of local services due to underuse by households which remain empty or underoccupied for much of the year has only exaccerpated the decline these once flourising communities.
It is a tragedy that in a nation where there is a housing shortage and millions struggle to gain a foot on the property ladder, that a Labour administration should pander to the greed and aquisitiveness, regarless of the effects on others, of an already too comfortable section of society.
There is already a growing resentment. Personally, I'd welcome the day when second home ownership is seen as anti-social as drink-driving.
Norman Saunders, Barnstaple, Devon
hear, hear Linda. the ownership thing is a bit crazy. I in fact run an estate agency in Bulgaria for brtis but the best clients move over and settle. some buy and never visit again, or spend all their time and money renovating a place they dont have time to use. I wrote a book on buying property to be published this month - my advice is you dont have to own a home in a place to enjoy it ! its a psychological thing too. people like the idea of a bolt hol even if they dont use it...
andy , sussex/rousse, england/bulgaria