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House prices, wind farms: Five updates for property owners in France

The price of non-new build houses in France in the first quarter of 2022 is relatively stable compared to the end of 2021, with slight increases.

1. Properties outside Ile-de-France push up market prices

The price of non-new build houses in France in the first quarter of 2022 is relatively stable compared to the end of 2021, with slight increases. 

Overall, properties in France were 7.3% more expensive in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period in 2021. 

This is a rise of 0.1% compared to the final quarter of 2021, when prices were up 7.2% year-on-year. Read more about that in our article here: Coastal boom, inflation: Six French property trends from notaire data. 

The general rise in prices compared to last year is mainly down to people buying houses outside Ile-de-France, inspired by Covid and consecutive lockdowns. 

Overall, house prices were up by 9,2% in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period last year, while prices for flats were only up 4.7% year-on-year. 

In Ile-de-France, prices for houses and flats combined increased just 2.5% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2022, while outside they increased in price by 9.3%. 

This data, reported by France’s national statistics bureau Insee, shows that in general property prices were stable in the first quarter of 2022 compared to the end of 2021. 

The number of completed transactions in March over the past 12 months was 1,175,000, slightly down on December’s figure of 1,177,000. 

It should be noted that these prices do not yet take into account the effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has pushed inflation in May to 5.2% and caused building material costs to soar. 

2. 14-year eviction battle between landlord and tenant

An article in French newspaper Sud Ouest outlines the difficulties of a landlord to expel a tenant who he claims he let stay in a property he was renovating as a temporary measure and with low rent as he was the son of a friend. The saga has been going on for 14 years. 

It began in 2008 when Raymond Rolland, who is now in his 80s, bought a property in Chancelade (Dordogne) with some friends which they planned to do up and turn into three flats for them to live in. 

An acquaintance then asked if their son, who had recently divorced and needed a place to stay, could live in one of the flats. Mr Rolland said they agreed to let him live there temporarily for €250 per month. 

Mr Rolland claims that the tenant chose not to leave.

He later managed to get the property classed as ‘insalubre’, a legal classification meaning the property presents a risk to a person’s health or wellbeing. 

Mr Rolland said that he and the other landlords had planned to do up the property once the tenant left but had found no way to get him to leave. 

Because of the property being classed insalubre, a court ordered the landlords in 2015 to renovate the property and suspended rent payments - they are still suspended. 

“I feel I am in the right, but as the tenant knows all the intricacies, he always gets away with it,” Mr Rolland said. 

3. Wind farms cause no negative impact on property value, study finds
Wind farms cause no noticeable impact on a property’s value when they are located more than five kilometres away, and only have a very minimal impact if they are closer, a new study published yesterday (June 1) shows.

France’s agency for ecological transition, Ademe, carried out the study to dispel reports that the proximity to wind farms can cause a property’s value to drop significantly.

The agency used statistical data of the sales of detached houses between 2015 and 2020 throughout metropolitan France - equal to 1.5 million sales - and cross-referenced that with data on the location and installation of wind farms.

They combined this quantitative study with an analysis that compared the values of two similar rural properties, one located near wind farms and the other not.

It found that there was zero tangible impact on the price of a property if it is located more than five kilometres from a wind farm.

Closer than that, the study found that a property’s value can decrease by 1.5% per square metre, a drop consistent with properties located close to other industrial sites or infrastructure such as telephone antennas, thermal power plants, landfills, high voltage power lines, etc.

These findings are in contrast to a 2019 report by the Fédération environnement durable, which brings together 1,300 associations and groups opposed to wind power projects in France.

Their study, based on interviews with estate agents, real estate experts, notaries, found that properties located near to wind farms lost 20% of their value, sometimes more.

Bénédicte Genthon, deputy director of sustainable production and energy at Ademe, said of the agency’s recent study:

“It demonstrates that, statistically, property located near wind farms remains a liquid asset. There is no consistent pattern of properties becoming unsellable when a wind farm is built.”

There are around 8,000 on-shore wind turbines in France (including overseas territories) located in 1,380 parks. Read More...

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