Real-estate VAT, CGI art. 279-0 bis A

Intermediate rental housing (LLI):
the new BOFiP of 8 July 2026

On 8 July 2026 the tax authorities published the consolidated version of their doctrine on intermediate rental housing (BOI-TVA-IMM-30), following the public consultation opened on the version of 2 April 2025. The text confirms the reduced VAT rate of 10% under article 279-0 bis A of the French Tax Code and provides long-awaited clarifications: serviced residences operated under a commercial lease, dismemberment of ownership, the favourable calculation of the social-mix condition introduced by the Finance Act for 2026, the chargeable event in an off-plan sale (VEFA), and the situations in which a resale or a vacancy does not call the reduced rate into question. This page reviews what actually changes for operators and institutional investors.

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— In brief
Applicable provision
CGI art. 279-0 bis A, 10% reduced rate
Doctrine in force
BOI-TVA-IMM-30, version of 8 July 2026
Purchaser
Legal entity (institutional investors, companies, usufructuary in the event of dismemberment)
Social mix
2026 Finance Act calculation: LLS / (LLS + LLI) above 25%
Associated benefit
Tax credit in respect of the property tax on LLI dwellings
— 01

What the consolidated doctrine of 8 July 2026 changes

Intermediate rental housing allows an investor that is a legal entity to acquire new dwellings (or dwellings resulting from the conversion of offices) at the reduced VAT rate of 10%, subject to conditions: letting, unfurnished or furnished, as the tenant's main residence, rent ceilings and tenant income ceilings, location in a high-demand or assimilated area, and a social-mix condition. The regime is accompanied by a tax credit in respect of the property tax borne on these dwellings.

The version of BOI-TVA-IMM-30 published on 8 July 2026 stabilises the doctrine following the public consultation opened on the version of 2 April 2025. It incorporates the social-mix calculation introduced by the Finance Act for 2026, which is markedly more favourable to operators, and settles several practical questions that had remained open: the treatment of serviced residences operated under a commercial lease, the treatment of dismemberment of ownership, the notion of a property complex, transactions involving buildings completed less than five years ago, the chargeable event in an off-plan sale (VEFA), and the situations of resale or vacancy that do not call the rate into question.

For operators, the issue is not only the rate: it is long-term security. The additional VAT remains payable in the event of a breach of the letting commitment, on a scale that decreases over time. Documenting each condition, from the structuring stage onwards, therefore remains decisive.

The firm favours a limited number of engagements in order to guarantee the direct involvement of the partners in each matter, and systematically assesses the relevance of its involvement before any commitment.

— 02

The 9 clarifications to note

What the version of 8 July 2026 settles in practice.

A doctrine finally stabilised for LLI operators

The nine points below are those that actually change the practice of transaction structurers, property companies and residence managers. Several adopt favourable positions requested during the public consultation.

The clarifications

1. Serviced residences: a commercial lease is not an obstacle

Letting the building to an operator under a commercial lease (student or senior residences) does not deprive the transaction of the reduced rate, provided the dwellings are ultimately occupied as main residences under the conditions of the regime.

2. Dismemberment: 10% rate on the creation of the bare ownership

The doctrine confirms that the reduced rate applies on the creation of the bare ownership and specifies the consequences of the termination of the usufruct: no clawback if the bare owner continues the letting under the conditions of the regime.

3. Landlord-tenant relations do not affect the regime

The terms of the tenancy relationship (flat-sharing, renewals, management practices) have no bearing on the benefit of the reduced rate, as long as the structural conditions of the regime remain satisfied.

4. Social mix: the favourable 2026 Finance Act calculation is confirmed

The social-mix condition is now assessed under the formula LLS / (LLS + LLI) above 25%: only social and intermediate dwellings are counted in the denominator, which makes the threshold significantly easier to meet in mixed programmes that include open-market housing.

5. Property complex: a common planning document

The notion of a property complex, the framework within which the social mix is assessed, requires a common planning document, including where the programme brings together several operators.

6. Buildings completed less than five years ago

Acquisitions of buildings completed less than five years ago may benefit from the 10% rate under the ordinary rules governing supplies of new buildings.

7. VEFA: the chargeable event clarified

The doctrine adopts the position expressed in a ministerial answer on the chargeable event in an off-plan sale (VEFA), securing the rate applicable to instalment calls.

8. Transfer and vacancy: no automatic clawback

A resale to an operator that undertakes to continue the letting under the conditions of the regime does not trigger additional VAT; likewise, a vacancy accompanied by an active search for a tenant does not amount to a breach of the commitment.

9. Assignment of a VEFA contract: the updated ruling removes the 20% rate risk

The advance tax ruling BOI-RES-TVA-000064, updated on 8 July 2026, secures the transfer of a VEFA contract in progress: the reduced rate of 10% is maintained for the assignee that satisfies the conditions of the regime, the assignor retains the deduction of the VAT paid to the developer, and subsequent instalment calls remain invoiced at 10%. An earlier version of the ruling had created a risk of the assignment being recharacterised as an unfinished building, with a 20% rate at stake: this point is now resolved.

— 03

Our approach

The firm acts alongside operators, property companies, institutional landlords and family offices on the VAT structuring of their intermediate rental housing transactions: eligibility audit (area, social mix, ceilings), securing the rate in VEFA and dismemberment arrangements, drafting of the commitments, management of changes to the programme (transfer, vacancy, change of operator) and defence in the event of a challenge. The interaction with the property-tax credit and the other real-estate VAT regimes is addressed within the same analysis.

  • Intermediate rental housing
  • 10% VAT
  • CGI art. 279-0 bis A
  • VEFA
  • Dismemberment of ownership
  • Serviced residences
— FAQ

LLI and VAT: your questions

What is intermediate rental housing (LLI)?

The LLI is a regime under article 279-0 bis A of the French Tax Code which applies the reduced VAT rate of 10% to supplies of new dwellings (or dwellings resulting from the conversion of business premises) acquired by legal entities to be let as main residences, at rents and to tenants subject to ceilings, in areas where the housing supply is under pressure. It targets the segment between social housing and the open market, and is accompanied by a tax credit in respect of the property tax.

What does the version of BOI-TVA-IMM-30 of 8 July 2026 bring?

It consolidates the doctrine following the public consultation opened on the version of 2 April 2025. The main contributions: confirmation of the regime for serviced residences operated under a commercial lease, treatment of dismemberment of ownership (reduced rate on the creation of the bare ownership, consequences of the termination of the usufruct), incorporation of the social-mix calculation of the Finance Act for 2026, clarification of the notion of a property complex, the regime for buildings completed less than five years ago, the chargeable event in an off-plan sale (VEFA), and the absence of clawback in the event of a transfer to a committed purchaser or of a vacancy with an active search for a tenant.

How is the social-mix condition now assessed?

Under the formula introduced by the Finance Act for 2026: the number of social rental dwellings divided by the sum of the social and intermediate dwellings of the complex concerned must exceed 25%. Open-market dwellings in the programme are no longer counted in the denominator, which makes the threshold significantly more accessible in mixed programmes. The condition is set aside in certain situations, in particular for serviced residences.

Does the resale of the building call the 10% rate into question?

Not necessarily. No additional VAT is due where the transfer is made to a purchaser that undertakes to continue the letting under the conditions of the regime. Otherwise, additional VAT remains payable on a decreasing scale based on the letting period already elapsed, the commitment lapsing after twenty years.

Does a period of rental vacancy cause the loss of the regime?

No, provided the vacancy remains temporary and the landlord can demonstrate an active search for a tenant on the terms of the regime (capped rents, tenants within income ceilings). Documenting this search (mandates, advertisements, steps taken) is decisive in the event of a tax audit.

Can the LLI be combined with a dismemberment of ownership?

Yes. The doctrine of 8 July 2026 confirms that the reduced rate applies to the creation of the bare ownership and that the usufructuary, a legal entity, may be the beneficiary of the regime. On termination of the usufruct, the regime is not called into question if the bare owner continues the letting under the required conditions. The precise structuring (duration, treatment of the commitments) must be calibrated from the outset.

Can a VEFA contract concluded at the 10% rate be assigned without losing the benefit of the regime?

Yes, under the conditions specified by the advance tax ruling BOI-RES-TVA-000064, updated on 8 July 2026. The transfer of the VEFA contract to an assignee that meets the conditions of the regime (eligible legal entity, intermediate-letting commitment) preserves the reduced rate of 10%: the assignor retains the deduction of the VAT paid on the earlier instalment calls, and the developer invoices the subsequent instalment calls at the reduced rate. An earlier version of the ruling had raised a debate on the characterisation of the assignment (unfinished building, with a 20% rate risk): the update of 8 July 2026 removes this difficulty. The drafting of the assignment deed and the verification of the assignee's eligibility remain decisive.

How does this relate to ordinary real-estate VAT?

The LLI is a preferential regime within real-estate VAT: the transaction remains subject to the general rules governing supplies of new buildings (taxable-person status, chargeable event, right to deduct), with the 10% rate replacing the standard rate. The analysis of an LLI transaction therefore always ties in with the ordinary rules of real-estate VAT, in particular in a VEFA and in the event of a resale within five years of completion.

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François Ouairy, avocat associé

Written by

Me François Ouairy, avocat associé en charge du bureau de Paris, expert en fiscalité immobilière, fiducie et fiscalité financière.