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Relance Logement 2026: Legal Guide for Developers, Eligibility, Contracts and Project Risk

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

France’s Projet de loi de finances (PLF) 2026 introduced the Relance Logement package, commonly called the dispositif Jeanbrun, as the government’s headline response to a severe decline in new housing starts and a shrinking private rental supply. For real estate developers, investors and in-house counsel evaluating new projects in 2026, the Relance Logement France framework is not simply a tax event: it is a contractability and compliance event that touches construction contracts, planning permissions, RE2020 energy-performance rules and long-term risk allocation.

This guide provides the practical legal playbook that tax summaries omit, walking practitioners through eligibility conditions, model contract clauses, due diligence checklists and the risk scenarios most likely to trigger clawbacks, so that every stakeholder in the development chain can structure projects to capture incentives and defend them against audit.

Executive Summary: What Relance Logement Means for Developers

Before diving into the detail, three key takeaways frame every decision that follows:

  • Eligibility is conditional and ongoing. The tax benefit is not secured at purchase alone. It depends on meeting rent ceilings (plafonds de loyer), minimum lease durations and RE2020 technical performance standards throughout the commitment period. A failure at any point, including one caused by a contractor’s defective work, can trigger a full or partial clawback of the fiscal advantage.
  • Construction contracts must be updated now. Standard French construction contracts (contrat de construction de maison individuelle, VEFA, contrat d’entreprise) do not allocate tax-incentive risk. Developers and investors need new clauses covering eligibility warranties, RE2020 acceptance tests, rent-ceiling covenants and indemnity mechanisms to protect against clawback exposure.
  • Due diligence and documentation are the first line of defence. Tax authorities will verify compliance through document audits. A structured, time-stamped evidence file, from planning permission through to annual rent declarations, is essential from day one.

The sections below translate each of these principles into specific legal actions, model clauses and procedural checklists designed for the French construction and development market.

What Is Relance Logement (Jeanbrun)? Legislative Background and Key Measures

The Plan Relance Logement was announced on 23 January 2026 as part of the government’s broader strategy to create a “supply shock”, targeting two million additional dwellings by 2030. The plan spans social housing, public-sector investment and, critically for the private market, a new fiscal status for private landlords (statut du bailleur privé) designed to replace the expired Pinel device and drive private capital into rental construction.

Where It Appears in the Finance Bill 2026

The fiscal mechanics of Relance Logement are enacted through specific articles of the PLF 2026 as adopted by Parliament. The scheme creates a dedicated depreciation/amortisation regime for qualifying residential rental investments, inserted into the Code général des impôts. Practitioners should consult the consolidated text on Legifrance for the exact article references as codified, since the numbering shifted during parliamentary debate.

Summary of Fiscal Mechanics

The core mechanism allows qualifying landlords to deduct from their rental income (revenus fonciers) a depreciation allowance on the acquisition cost of the property, up to a ceiling reported at €12,000 per year. When combined with deductible charges, this amortisation can effectively neutralise rental income taxation for the early years of ownership. To access the benefit, the investor must commit to renting the property as a primary residence at a rent below statutory ceilings for a minimum period of nine years. The rent ceilings vary by geographic zone and are updated annually by ministerial decree.

Parameter Key Detail Source
Scheme launch date Announced 23 January 2026; applicable to qualifying acquisitions from PLF 2026 entry into force ecologie.gouv.fr
Minimum rental commitment Nine years as unfurnished primary residence info.gouv.fr
Annual amortisation cap Up to €12,000/year (reported industry figure; verify against codified text) gestia-solidaire.com; service-public.gouv.fr
Rent ceilings Set by zone; updated annually by decree service-public.gouv.fr
Administrative filing Annual rental income declaration with supporting documentation service-public.gouv.fr

Which Projects and Entities Qualify? Eligibility Relance Logement by Project Type

Not every development qualifies for the tax incentives introduced by the finance bill 2026 for France’s construction sector. Eligibility turns on the type of project, the entity holding the investment, the territorial zone and, crucially, whether the property will be let under conditions that satisfy the scheme’s social and economic objectives. Developers must verify these conditions before land acquisition, because retroactive structuring is extremely difficult once contracts are signed.

The scheme targets acquisitions of new-build residential properties or properties undergoing substantial rehabilitation that converts them to residential rental use. Individual investors acting as private landlords (bailleurs privés) are the primary beneficiaries, but investments held through certain transparent vehicles, such as sociétés civiles immobilières (SCIs) subject to income tax, are also envisaged, provided the ultimate beneficial owner meets the personal-commitment requirements. Corporate developers themselves do not claim the benefit directly; rather, they structure VEFA (vente en l’état futur d’achèvement) sales to investor-purchasers who will claim it.

Ineligible Activities and Common Pitfalls

Several activities fall outside the perimeter and constitute the most frequent sources of error:

  • Short-term and furnished lettings. Properties let as furnished accommodation (meublé) or through short-term platforms do not qualify. The lease must be an unfurnished primary-residence lease under the 1989 law.
  • Subletting. Unless expressly authorised under implementing decrees, subletting breaks the chain of eligibility.
  • Letting to connected persons. Renting to a member of the investor’s fiscal household voids the benefit.
  • Failure to meet documentation deadlines. Late filing of the commitment or missing supporting documents at the time of the tax return is a procedural ground for refusal.
Project Type Typical Qualifying Condition Key Documentation Required
New residential development (collective) Meets new-build criteria under PLF 2026; rents at or below statutory ceilings; nine-year commitment Notarised deed, planning permission (permis de construire), rent schedule, RE2020 attestation
Rehabilitation converting to rental Meets substantial-rehabilitation thresholds; property converted to primary-residence rental use Change-of-use permit; contractor completion certificates; energy-performance diagnostics
Individual investor VEFA purchase Acquisition off-plan from developer; subject to private-landlord status rules VEFA contract; delivery report (procès-verbal de livraison); rental contract under 1989 law

Interaction with Planning Permissions and RE2020

The Relance Logement incentives do not operate in isolation from France’s urban-planning and building-regulation frameworks. Industry observers expect the intersection of tax eligibility rules with planning permission incentives and RE2020 energy-performance standards to generate the most complex compliance challenges for developers in 2026 and beyond.

Planning Permission Timelines and Trigger Points for Eligibility

Eligibility under the scheme is generally linked to the date of the planning permission (permis de construire) or, for VEFA purchases, the date of the notarised acquisition deed. Developers must ensure that planning permission is obtained and remains valid within the window prescribed by the Finance Bill. Expired or modified permissions can disrupt eligibility. Where a project requires a permis modificatif, counsel should verify that the modification does not take the project outside the qualifying criteria, for example, by changing the unit mix or reducing the proportion of units meeting rent-ceiling parameters.

RE2020 / Building Rules: Compliance Obligations and Contract Risk

All new residential buildings for which a planning application is filed from 1 January 2022 onward must comply with France’s RE2020 regulations, which impose stringent thresholds for energy consumption, carbon emissions and summer comfort. Because the Relance Logement scheme applies to new-build projects, RE2020 compliance is effectively a prerequisite: a building that fails to meet RE2020 standards will not receive the completion attestation (attestation de fin de travaux) required for delivery, and without delivery, the investor cannot claim the fiscal benefit. The RE2020 interaction therefore creates a direct contractual risk, if a contractor delivers a building that fails thermal or carbon tests, the investor’s tax benefit is jeopardised.

Practical Steps to Coordinate Energy Compliance with Tax Certification

Developers should require RE2020 compliance testing at the pre-delivery stage rather than waiting for the post-delivery attestation, and should include contractual milestones that tie progress payments to confirmed intermediate energy-performance results.

Date / Milestone Event Developer Action
January 2026 Plan Relance Logement announced; PLF 2026 provisions enter into force Review pipeline projects for eligibility; brief legal and tax counsel
Planning permission grant Permis de construire delivered by prefecture Confirm permission falls within qualifying window; archive documentation
Construction phase RE2020 intermediate testing milestones Insert contractual RE2020 compliance checkpoints; monitor energy-performance KPIs
Pre-delivery Final RE2020 attestation issued Verify attestation before scheduling VEFA delivery; hold back funds if non-conforming
Delivery / acquisition Notarised deed signed; procès-verbal de livraison File commitment with tax authorities; begin rent-ceiling compliance monitoring
Annual (years 1–9) Tax return with rental income declaration Submit supporting documentation; conduct internal compliance review

Construction Contract Clauses France: Protecting Incentive Benefits Through Drafting

Standard French construction contracts do not address the allocation of tax-incentive risk. This is the central legal gap that the Relance Logement scheme creates for every development involving investor-purchasers who intend to claim the benefit. Whether the transaction is structured as a VEFA, a contrat de promotion immobilière or a classic contrat d’entreprise, the contract must be supplemented with bespoke clauses that allocate eligibility risk, define cooperation obligations and create enforcement mechanisms in the event of clawback.

Model Clause Set

The following six model clauses are designed as starting points. Each must be adapted to the specific project structure, jurisdiction and counterparties involved.

  • Clause 1, Eligibility Warranty. “The Developer warrants that the Property, as designed and to be constructed, meets all conditions required for the Purchaser to claim the tax benefit under the Relance Logement provisions of the PLF 2026, including but not limited to RE2020 compliance, zoning classification and unit-type eligibility.” Drafting note: This warranty should be qualified by a knowledge standard and should survive delivery. Consider whether the warranty is absolute or best-efforts, depending on the developer’s control over all eligibility variables.
  • Clause 2, Cooperation and Documentation Covenant. “The Developer shall provide the Purchaser, within [30] days of delivery and annually thereafter upon request, with all certificates, attestations and technical documents required to evidence eligibility for the Relance Logement benefit, including the RE2020 attestation de fin de travaux and the energy-performance diagnostic.” Drafting note: Include a penalty clause (clause pénale) for late delivery of documentation, since delays can result in missed tax-filing deadlines.
  • Clause 3, Rent Ceiling Covenant and Monitoring. “The Purchaser undertakes to let the Property at a rent not exceeding the applicable plafond de loyer as published annually, and to provide the Developer with a copy of the executed lease within [15] days of signature for the purposes of verifying programme compliance.” Drafting note: In multi-unit developments, the developer may need aggregate rent-ceiling compliance data for programme-level reporting.
  • Clause 4, RE2020 Compliance and Acceptance Tests. “Delivery shall be conditional upon the Developer providing an attestation confirming that the Property meets all RE2020 performance thresholds. If the attestation cannot be delivered at the scheduled date, the Purchaser may defer acceptance without penalty, and the Developer shall bear all costs of remediation.” Drafting note: Link this clause to the retention/holdback mechanism below.
  • Clause 5, Force Majeure and Regulatory Change. “In the event that a legislative or regulatory change occurring after the date hereof renders the Property ineligible for the Relance Logement benefit despite compliance with all conditions existing at the date of signature, neither Party shall be liable for the resulting loss of benefit. The Parties shall meet in good faith to discuss amendments to preserve, to the extent possible, the economic equilibrium of the transaction.” Drafting note: This clause protects against retroactive rule changes but should not excuse failures that are within a party’s control.
  • Clause 6, Indemnity and Escrow for Tax Recovery. “In the event that the Purchaser suffers a tax recovery (redressement fiscal) arising from a breach of the Developer’s obligations under Clauses 1, 2 or 4, the Developer shall indemnify the Purchaser in full, including penalties and interest. To secure this obligation, a sum equal to [X]% of the purchase price shall be held in escrow by the notary for a period of [3] years following delivery.” Drafting note: The escrow percentage and duration should reflect the expected tax exposure. Coordinate with the garantie décennale (ten-year structural warranty) insurer to confirm that tax-recovery losses arising from construction defects are not excluded from coverage.

Sample Allocation of Liability

Risk Category Primary Bearer Secondary / Contributing Party
RE2020 performance failure Developer / main contractor Subcontractors (under back-to-back clauses)
Rent-ceiling breach Investor-owner Property manager (if delegated)
Late delivery of documentation Developer Notary (for notarised certifications)
Retroactive legislative change Shared (force majeure clause) Neither party exclusively
Tax clawback due to construction defect Developer (via indemnity/escrow) Décennale insurer (subject to policy terms)
Subletting or misuse by tenant Investor-owner Property manager (contractual obligation to monitor)

Due Diligence, Documentation and Procedural Checklist to Claim Benefits

A structured developer checklist for France’s Relance Logement scheme should begin before the land acquisition and continue through every phase of the project. The following step-by-step framework organises the minimum documentation requirements by project phase:

  • Pre-acquisition. Verify zoning classification against eligible zones; obtain preliminary RE2020 feasibility study; confirm that the project type (new build or qualifying rehabilitation) falls within the PLF 2026 perimeter; engage tax counsel and notary.
  • Planning and permitting. File for permis de construire and archive the dated receipt; confirm that the permission falls within the qualifying window; obtain and file the RE2020 design-stage attestation (attestation de prise en compte de la RE2020).
  • Construction. Insert RE2020 checkpoints in the construction contract; conduct intermediate energy-performance testing; maintain a time-stamped document file for every contractor certificate, test report and site inspection record.
  • Pre-delivery. Obtain the final RE2020 attestation; prepare the procès-verbal de livraison; verify that rent-ceiling schedules are correct for the applicable zone.
  • Delivery and letting. Execute the notarised deed; sign the lease under the 1989 law at or below the rent ceiling; file the commitment with the tax authorities within the deadline stipulated by Service-public guidance.
  • Annual compliance (years 1–9). Submit annual rental income declaration with all supporting documents; conduct annual internal review of rent compliance; archive all tenant correspondence, lease renewals and any modifications.

Practical Risk Scenarios and Mitigation

Scenario 1: Project Delayed, Impact on Eligibility and Who Pays?

If construction delays push the delivery date beyond the qualifying window, the investor may lose the right to claim the tax benefit entirely. The model indemnity clause (Clause 6 above) should expressly address this scenario. The likely practical effect will be that the developer bears the economic cost of the lost incentive, unless the delay qualifies as force majeure. Developers should build delay-risk buffers into project timelines and notify investors immediately of any slippage that may affect eligibility.

Scenario 2: RE2020 Test Fails After Completion, Remedies and Insurance

A post-completion RE2020 failure is particularly serious because the investor cannot obtain the attestation required for delivery and tax filing. The developer must remediate at its own cost. Where the failure results from a subcontractor’s defective work, back-to-back indemnity clauses in the subcontract should transfer the cost down the chain. Industry observers expect that garantie décennale insurers will scrutinise whether tax-recovery losses constitute an insurable “damage” under the policy, developers should raise this question with their insurer at project inception.

Scenario 3: Buyer/Successor Takes Title and Tax Recovery Occurs

If the investor sells the property before the end of the nine-year commitment period, the tax benefit is typically clawed back. Protective drafting should include a covenant prohibiting early sale without the purchaser’s assumption of the fiscal commitment, and a seller warranty in the resale contract under which the original investor indemnifies the successor for any residual tax exposure. An escrow mechanism funded at completion and held by the notary provides the most reliable security.

Reporting, Audit and Likely Tax Authority Checkpoints

French tax authorities (Direction générale des finances publiques) conduct audits on a risk-targeted basis. Relance Logement declarations are expected to attract early scrutiny given the scheme’s novelty and the fiscal cost to the state. Auditors will typically request the notarised acquisition deed, the planning permission, the RE2020 attestation, the executed lease, annual rent receipts and evidence of the tenant’s occupancy as a primary residence.

Early indications suggest that the recommended retention period for all supporting documents is at least ten years from the last year of the amortisation claim, aligning with the standard tax-audit prescription period for income-tax matters. Developers should implement internal controls including annual compliance reviews, centralised digital document repositories and automated reminders for filing deadlines.

Obligation Individual Investor SCI / SPV
Annual rental income declaration Filed with personal income tax return Filed through entity return; benefit flows to associates
Initial commitment filing Filed with first return claiming the benefit Each associate files individual commitment
Document retention period Minimum 10 years from last amortisation claim Minimum 10 years; entity records also retained
Rent-ceiling evidence Lease copy and annual rent receipts Same, plus entity-level aggregation for multi-unit portfolios

What to Do Now: 6 Practical Next Steps for Developers and In-House Counsel

For developers and in-house counsel navigating the Relance Logement France framework, the following immediate actions should be prioritised:

  1. Amend construction and VEFA contracts. Insert eligibility warranties, RE2020 compliance conditions and indemnity/escrow clauses before signing any new contracts on qualifying projects.
  2. Commission an RE2020 compliance plan. Engage an energy consultant to confirm that design-stage specifications meet RE2020 thresholds and build intermediate testing milestones into the construction programme.
  3. Draft escrow and indemnity mechanisms. Coordinate with the project notary to establish an escrow account funded at delivery to cover potential clawback exposure.
  4. Align planning permissions. Verify that all pending and recently granted planning permissions fall within the qualifying window and meet zoning and unit-type requirements.
  5. Coordinate tax counsel and notary. Ensure that the acquisition deed includes all declarations and commitments required by the PLF 2026 provisions; confirm filing deadlines.
  6. Notify insurers. Alert garantie décennale and professional-liability insurers to the tax-recovery exposure arising from construction defects that may invalidate the incentive.

Appendix: Model Clause Text and Downloadable Checklist

The following model clauses are provided as drafting templates. They must be reviewed and adapted by qualified French counsel before incorporation into any binding contract.

Model Clause A, Eligibility Warranty (Full Text)

“Le Promoteur garantit que le Bien, tel que conçu et devant être construit, satisfait à l’ensemble des conditions requises pour que l’Acquéreur puisse bénéficier de l’avantage fiscal prévu par les dispositions Relance Logement du PLF 2026, y compris, sans limitation, la conformité RE2020, la classification de zonage et l’éligibilité du type de logement. Cette garantie survit à la livraison pour une durée de [3] ans.”

Model Clause B, RE2020 Acceptance Condition (Full Text)

“La livraison est subordonnée à la production par le Promoteur d’une attestation confirmant que le Bien satisfait à l’ensemble des seuils de performance RE2020. En cas d’impossibilité de délivrer ladite attestation à la date prévue, l’Acquéreur peut reporter la réception sans pénalité, et le Promoteur supporte l’ensemble des coûts de remédiation.”

Model Clause C, Indemnity and Escrow (Full Text)

“En cas de redressement fiscal subi par l’Acquéreur résultant d’un manquement du Promoteur à ses obligations au titre des Clauses A et B, le Promoteur indemnise l’Acquéreur de l’intégralité du préjudice, y compris pénalités et intérêts de retard. Afin de garantir cette obligation, une somme égale à [X]% du prix de vente est consignée entre les mains du notaire pour une durée de [3] ans à compter de la livraison.”

Model Clause D, Rent Ceiling Covenant (Full Text)

“L’Acquéreur s’engage à louer le Bien à un loyer n’excédant pas le plafond de loyer applicable tel que publié annuellement, et à transmettre au Promoteur une copie du bail signé dans un délai de [15] jours suivant sa conclusion.”

Model Clause E, Documentation Cooperation Covenant (Full Text)

“Le Promoteur s’engage à fournir à l’Acquéreur, dans un délai de [30] jours suivant la livraison puis annuellement sur demande, l’ensemble des certificats, attestations et documents techniques nécessaires pour justifier de l’éligibilité au dispositif Relance Logement.”

Model Clause F, Force Majeure / Regulatory Change (Full Text)

“En cas de modification législative ou réglementaire intervenant postérieurement à la date des présentes rendant le Bien inéligible au dispositif Relance Logement malgré le respect de l’ensemble des conditions existantes à la date de signature, aucune des Parties ne sera tenue responsable de la perte d’avantage fiscal en résultant. Les Parties se rencontreront de bonne foi afin de convenir des adaptations nécessaires pour préserver, dans la mesure du possible, l’équilibre économique de l’opération.”

The Relance Logement France regime represents one of the most significant shifts in French residential investment incentives in a decade. For developers, investors and construction law practitioners, the priority is clear: integrate eligibility requirements into every stage of the project lifecycle, from planning and contract drafting through to annual compliance and long-term document retention, so that the fiscal benefit is earned, secured and defended.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shaparak Saleh at Three Crowns, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Info.gouv, Découvrir le plan Relance logement
  2. Ministry for the Ecological Transition, Relance Logement announcement
  3. Service-public.fr, Relance Logement practical guidance
  4. Legifrance, Projet de loi de finances 2026
  5. Gestia Solidaire, Dispositif Relance Logement 2026

FAQs

What does the Relance Logement (Jeanbrun) scheme provide and who qualifies?
The Relance Logement scheme, created by the PLF 2026, provides a depreciation-based tax advantage for private landlords who acquire new or substantially rehabilitated residential properties and commit to renting them as unfurnished primary residences at capped rents for a minimum of nine years. Both individual investors and investors through transparent entities such as SCIs may qualify.
Eligible projects include new-build collective residential developments, substantial rehabilitations converting properties to rental use and individual investor off-plan (VEFA) purchases, provided the project meets zoning, rent-ceiling and RE2020 requirements. See the eligibility table above for detailed conditions and documentation.
RE2020 compliance is effectively a prerequisite for the tax benefit because the completion attestation required for delivery depends on meeting RE2020 thresholds. The risk of non-compliance should be allocated to the developer or main contractor through specific contract clauses, with back-to-back provisions flowing down to subcontractors.
At a minimum, developers should add an eligibility warranty, a documentation cooperation covenant, a rent-ceiling monitoring clause, an RE2020 acceptance condition, a force majeure provision for regulatory change and an indemnity/escrow mechanism. See the model clause set in the appendix below.
Key documents include the notarised acquisition deed, planning permission, RE2020 attestation, executed lease, annual rent receipts, tenant occupancy evidence and all contractor certificates. Retain for at least ten years from the last amortisation claim.
In principle, selling the property before the end of the nine-year commitment triggers a clawback. If a sale is unavoidable, the resale contract should include a clause requiring the purchaser to assume the rental commitment for the remaining period, along with a seller warranty covering any residual tax exposure.
Given the standard tax-audit prescription periods, all supporting documentation should be retained for a minimum of ten years from the last year in which the amortisation benefit was claimed. Digital archiving with time-stamped backups is strongly recommended.
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Relance Logement 2026: Legal Guide for Developers, Eligibility, Contracts and Project Risk

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