HomePropertiesRentalsGuidesRegionsServicesForumsVersion francaiseNews
View the IFP newsletters online here.
Log-in | Register

Log-In to Account
Username

Password


Not registered?
Finance & Taxation
Inheritance Laws & Taxation in France
 - 1. Overview
 - 2. Inheritance Rights
 - 3. Inheritance Tax
 - 4. Inheritance Planning
IFP Guides
Buying Property in France
 - House Buying Process
 - Buying Off-Plan
 - Buying at Auction
Building & Renovation
 - Building a New Home
 - Planning System
 - Financial Assistance
Finance & Taxation
 - Banking in France
 - French Mortgages
 - Personal Taxation
 - Inheritance Laws & Taxation
Public Services
 - Health Care Services
 - School Education
 - Higher Education
Work & Business
 - Starting a Business
 - Letting Property
Property Rights
 - Land Registration
 - Property Boundaries
 - Boundary Walls
 - Noise Nuisance
Household and Motor Insurance
 - Organising Household Insurance Cover
Contact

Contact Us
Send this to a friend
Community and News
 - IFP Forums
 - IFP Newsletter
 - Newsletter Sign-up
Services
 - Bookstore
 - Metric Unit Conversion
  

Search from our database of over 10,000 properties and find your dream home today!
PriceRegionBedrooms 



2.4. French Civil Partnership

  1. 2.4.1. No Rights of Inheritance
  2. 2.4.2. Children
  3. 2.4.3. No Children
  4. 2.4.4. Inheritance Planning


2.4.1. No Rights of Inheritance

If you are a resident non-married couple it is possible to enter into a French civil partnership, which grants relief from French inheritance taxes.

Nevertheless, a French civil partnership does not grant automatic rights of inheritance to a surviving partner.

Similarly, a surviving partner in a French civil partnership is not granted any basic right to remain permanently in the family home.

A surviving partner who is part owner of the property, shares ownership of the property en indivision with the other inheritors who, under the rules of en division, are ultimately entitled to insist on the sale of the home if they so wish.

In order to mitigate the worst affects of this situation, a recent change in the law has granted a right of occupation of the family home to the surviving partner for a period of one year.

The deceased can also transfer at least some of their estate to their partner by will or gift but, if there are children, the deceased is only able to give away to their partner that part of their estate that is freely disposable.

We can review the circumstances of a surviving partner in a civil partnership where are there are children, and where there are no children, of the deceased.


2.4.2. Children

Children of the deceased are specifically protected from being disenfranchised from the inheritance.


Accordingly, children of the deceased have absolute priority over all other potential inheritors and, in the absence of a will or gift, the estate of the deceased is divided entirely between them.

The grandchildren of the deceased would only inherit if the children of the deceased were themselves deceased.

No distinction is made between children born inside or outside the relationship, or adopted children. If children of the deceased from a previous relationship are excluded from the inheritance, deliberately or by default, they have the right to bring an action to benefit from the estate.

That part of the estate that is earmarked for children of the deceased is called la réserve; that part of the estate that is freely disposable is called the quotité disponible.

The amount of la réserve and the amount freely disposable will depend on the number of decendants.

The following table illustrates the entitlement of descendants under la réserve, and the amounts freely disposable.


Table: La Réserve
InheritorsReserve Freely Disposable
One Child1/2 of estate 1/2 of estate
Two Children2/3 of estate 1/3 estate
Three Children3/4 of estate1/4 estate

So, if you leave a partner and two children, then the children automatically inherit 2/3 of your estate, and you are free to dispose as you wish (including to the children or your surviving partner) the remaining 1/3 of your estate.


2.4.3. No Children

In the estate is intestate the following rules apply:

  • If the parents of the deceased are alive, they inherit 1/2 the estate. If there is only one of the parents alive they inherit 1/4 of the estate.
  • Where there are also brothers and sisters, or their descendants, they will inherit the remaining 1/2 if there are two parents, or 3/4 if only one parent.
  • If there are no parents, then the sisters and brothers of the deceased (or their descendants) inherit the totality of the estate.
  • And so on, down to aunts', uncles' and cousins.

In the absence of children, the deceased is able by a will or gift to freely dispose of their entire estate.


2.4.4. Inheritance Planning

If you want to have some control over your estate on your death, then you need to undertake some inheritance planning.

  • Buy your French home en tontine with your partner so it is automatically transferred to the surviving partner on first death.
  • Alternatively, buy your French home through a property company.
  • Enter into a family inheritance pact with protected heirs in which they defer some or all of their inheritance rights in favour of the surviving partner.

You should also consider further provision through a will or gift.

Read more about these options in the section on Inheritance Planning.


Next: Free Union



The IFP Guides are published for general information only.
Please visit our Disclaimer for full details.

  


LinksAdvertisingHelpAbout IFPContact UsDisclaimerTermsPrivacyReference

Copyright © 1995 - 2008 Internet French Property