Whether you are acquiring a rural estate, setting up an agri-tourism business, or managing a French inheritance, protecting your interests requires a clear understanding of local law.
Unfortunately, standard contracts rarely account for the unique regional restrictions foreign nationals face in northern France. However, by partnering with independent lawyers in Normandy, you get to benefit from an experienced advocate who reviews your entire asset exposure in plain English. Thibault helps you navigate the complexities of French administration without hidden fees, turning potential legal hurdles into a straightforward, predictable process.
Foreign Residents and Business Owners
French wealth tax rules, inheritance law, and agricultural land protections create challenges for foreign nationals that differ sharply from the systems most British, American, Gulf, and Northern European residents know — and the effects often appear long after the chance to deal with them has passed:
- Loi Littoral zoning restrictions: Coastal properties that look unrestricted in estate agent listings may be subject to strict legal limits on building, extending, or converting under the Loi Littoral — and those limits apply from the moment you complete.
- SAFER Normandie pre-emption rights: The regional agricultural land authority can step into rural property transactions — including paddock purchases, farm acquisitions, and agri-tourism conversions — and replace the agreed buyer without warning.
- Statut du fermage protections: French agricultural tenancy law gives sitting tenant-farmers strong rights that can prevent your planned use of land even after a valid purchase has gone through.
- Impôt sur la Fortune Immobilière (IFI) thresholds: Once your French real estate holdings pass certain value thresholds, an annual wealth tax may apply — and it works very differently from the tax systems many foreign owners are used to.
- French civil-law succession rules: Inheritance arrangements that work well in your home country — including trusts, some will structures, and spousal provisions — may need to be rebuilt to comply with French forced-heirship rules and EU succession regulations.
- TRACFIN anti-money-laundering checks: French notaries and banks carry out strict source-of-funds checks on dividend trails, offshore holding structures, and trust documentation — and weak preparation can stall a transaction at the worst possible time.
Only a lawyer with direct, up-to-date knowledge of how these rules work in Normandy can spot which risks apply to your position and deal with them before they become active problems.
Title Checks Before You Sign
Coastal and heritage properties across Normandy often come with restrictions that do not appear in standard estate agent listings. Loi Littoral building limits, flood-risk classifications, heritage overlays, and gaps in planning history can each derail your plans for development, rental, or conversion after completion — leaving you with an asset that cannot do what you expected.
Thibault carries out detailed pre-contract title and zoning checks so you understand the full regulatory position before you are legally tied to the purchase. He identifies each issue, explains it clearly, and helps resolve it or factor it into your decision before the compromis de vente is signed.
Rural Land and SAFER Risks
Off-market farm acquisitions, paddock purchases, and rural-to-hospitality conversion projects in Normandy are some of the most exposed transactions foreign buyers can enter into. SAFER Normandie can step into a rural land transaction and take the buyer's place even after terms have been agreed and money has been committed. At the same time, the statut du fermage means existing agricultural tenancies may continue after ownership changes and prevent your intended use of the land altogether.
Thibault puts the structure of rural acquisitions and lease arrangements in place from the start, reducing pre-emption risk and making sure tenancy obligations are identified, managed, or ended before you commit. If you are planning an equestrian estate, a working farm, or a gîte and agri-tourism business, the transaction should reflect what the land can actually be used for under French agricultural law.
For a broader overview of the main issues involved in rural purchases, the guide on buying land in France covers the key legal checks.
Succession and Wealth Structuring
French inheritance law does not apply only to French nationals — it applies to anyone who owns real estate in France, no matter where they live or what their will says at home. Once your French assets reach certain thresholds, IFI wealth tax may apply, SCI transparency rules come into play, and French forced-heirship rules can override succession arrangements that worked perfectly in the UK, the US, the Gulf, or Asia.
Thibault reviews your cross-border asset position and puts ownership and succession arrangements in place — including wills, co-ownership structures, and entity reviews — so they match your family's long-term plans instead of leaving the outcome to default civil-law rules.
For UK residents managing French assets after Brexit, the guide on UK residents and French succession explains the double-taxation issues in detail. The question of whether EU succession law allows your home-country rules to apply to French assets is covered in the article on Brussels IV and choice of law.
Residency, Visas, and Moving
Moving to Normandy as a British national, a non-EU professional, or a remote-working entrepreneur means dealing with the visa and residency process before you arrive, not afterwards. The long-stay visa, the talent passport, and the digital nomad visa each have different income thresholds, document requirements, and renewal conditions depending on your work status, how you are paid, and what you plan to do in France.
Thibault helps you choose the visa category that fits your situation, prepares the paperwork to the standard French authorities expect, and deals with the follow-on residency permit process so your right to live and work in Normandy is established properly from day one.
Those moving to France from the UK will find detailed route information covering post-Brexit entry options, while anyone planning to work remotely over the longer term can review the requirements for a digital nomad visa in France.
Business Set-Up in Normandy
Starting a cross-border SME, setting up a hospitality or agri-tourism business, or formalising a remote-work consultancy in Normandy means complying with French registration rules, employment law, and contract formalities that can create personal liability if they are handled badly. The structure you choose — SAS, SARL, SCI, or another entity — affects your tax position, your liability exposure, and how income can be distributed across jurisdictions.
Thibault handles entity formation, drafts and reviews commercial contracts and NDAs, and advises on data protection compliance so your business is set up securely from its first day of trading.
For business owners planning the long-term transfer of a French company, the article on business successions and the Pacte Dutreil explains the significant tax advantages available when the transfer is structured correctly.
AML Checks and Procedures
French notaries and financial institutions carry out strict anti-money-laundering checks — led by the TRACFIN financial intelligence unit — on dividend trails, offshore SPV structures, trust documentation, and politically exposed person status. If source-of-funds paperwork is incomplete, inconsistent, or presented in the wrong order, a transaction can be stopped or pushed into a compliance escalation just when delay matters most.
Thibault prepares and co-ordinates your source-of-funds documents, helps with official administrative procedures, and deals with banks, notaries, and public bodies so your affairs are presented clearly and compliantly at every stage. This is especially important for buyers whose wealth comes from dividend income, offshore holding companies, or international trust structures, where careful preparation matters far more than last-minute explanations.
Disputes and Co-Ownership Exits
Commercial disputes, contested inheritance positions, and deadlocked co-ownership arrangements can escalate quickly under French civil procedure if they are not dealt with early and in a structured way. A dispute over a jointly owned Normandy estate, for example, can end in a court-ordered forced sale if the parties cannot agree — an outcome that rarely serves anyone's financial interests.
Thibault uses alternative dispute resolution first to keep costs down and timetables manageable, and takes formal legal action — including forced co-ownership termination proceedings — only when needed to protect your position.
For those dealing with inherited French assets as a non-resident, the guide on inheriting French assets as a non-resident explains the declaration duties and deadlines that must be met to avoid automatic penalties.
If your situation in Normandy involves any of the issues described above — if you are already in a transaction, planning a move, or reorganising an existing asset position — get in touch today to discuss your circumstances directly with a legal specialist based in France, Normandy.
