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Tenant rights in France

13

Comments

  • BrassicWoman
    BrassicWoman Posts: 3,202 Forumite
    First Anniversary Name Dropper First Post Mortgage-free Glee!
    I expect this is another psychological experiment. Whether on us or the landlord, I am still unsure.
    2021 GC £1365.71/ £2400
  • sparky130a
    sparky130a Posts: 660 Forumite
    I expect this is another psychological experiment. Whether on us or the landlord, I am still unsure.

    I suspect it's a load of BS. But they pretty much amount to the same thing anyway!

    The student Phil one years ago was great fun...
  • FBaby
    FBaby Posts: 18,367 Forumite
    First Anniversary First Post Combo Breaker
    And in terms of the LL having the right to ask me to leave at any time, you imagined wrong.
    Really? So it was written in the reglement de colocation that any of the tenants can have 'friends' staying over for an unlimited time without any right for that person to be asked to leave during the tenancy?

    Somehow I doubt it, and without it, your friend (and you) have no rights.
  • Cakeguts
    Cakeguts Posts: 7,627 Forumite
    First Anniversary Name Dropper First Post
    Tenants rights in France. You aren't a tenant so you don't have any. Next?
  • puppypants
    puppypants Posts: 1,033 Forumite
    Who's this Ad Hom bloke? Is he related to Ken Hom? Is he a lodger too? x
  • sparky130a
    sparky130a Posts: 660 Forumite
    puppypants wrote: »
    Who's this Ad Hom bloke? Is he related to Ken Hom? Is he a lodger too? x

    Just Ken and his wife...
  • zebulon
    zebulon Posts: 677 Forumite
    edited 17 March 2017 at 3:30PM
    FBaby wrote: »
    Really? So it was written in the reglement de colocation that any of the tenants can have 'friends' staying over for an unlimited time without any right for that person to be asked to leave during the tenancy?

    Somehow I doubt it, and without it, your friend (and you) have no rights.

    It probably as nothing about it. I saw a forum with a French LL feeling very sorry for themselves for not having mentioned any specific limits. And the general consensus on the forum was that there was nothing they could do but get the lodger to leave.

    https://translate.google.co.uk/

    Le locataire est chez lui dans le logement qu'il occupe. Dès lors, certaines clauses qui limitent sa jouissance sont abusives. C'est le cas des clauses qui :
    [...]
    interdisent au locataire d'h!berger des personnes ne vivant pas habituellement avec lui

    https://www.service-public.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/F1686
  • FBaby
    FBaby Posts: 18,367 Forumite
    First Anniversary First Post Combo Breaker
    A 'locataire' is a tenant, not a lodger. Just like in England, the law protects them differently.
  • zebulon
    zebulon Posts: 677 Forumite
    edited 17 March 2017 at 8:35PM
    FBaby wrote: »
    A 'locataire' is a tenant, not a lodger. Just like in England, the law protects them differently.


    A lodger in France is still a 'locataire'.
    Just like a tenant, a lodger has to sign a 'bail' (diff is its for the room only, and with right of use for other parts as specified in an annexed 'convention')


    https://www.service-public.fr
    where are the details specific to lodgers ?

    Happy to be corrected with relevant sources
  • sparky130a
    sparky130a Posts: 660 Forumite
    zebulon wrote: »
    A lodger in France is still a 'locataire'.
    Just like a tenant, a lodger has to sign a 'bail'.

    They are a house guest though. And a p155 taking one at that.
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