From the French Alps ski resorts of Courchevel, Megève and Chamonix-Mont-Blanc to the Côte d'Azur's Cap-Ferrat and St-Tropez, France offers Europe's deepest luxury market. Fine Luxury Property advises international buyers on chalets, Riviera villas and Parisian apartments, with specific focus on the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes ski country and the French Riviera, supported by bilingual legal and tax coordination.
Slope-side and village chalets across Courchevel 1850, Méribel, Val d'Isère, Megève and Chamonix, typically four-to-eight bedrooms with ski rooms, private spas and traditional vieux-bois facades, priced from €3 million to €70 million.
French Riviera villas on Cap-Ferrat, Cap d'Antibes, Mougins and in the St-Tropez hinterland, with pools, garden staff accommodation and in many cases Mediterranean sea views.
Haussmannian apartments in Paris' 6th, 7th, 8th and 16th arrondissements, with parquet, moulures, marble fireplaces and high ceilings, alongside modern ski-resort apartments in Courchevel and Megève.
Duplex penthouses on the Croisette in Cannes, in the Port Hercule area of Monaco (immediately adjacent), and in Paris' 7th arrondissement near the Tour Eiffel, with private terraces and panoramic views.
Fine Luxury Property operates as a boutique international brokerage covering France's luxury hot spots, with specific deal-flow across the French Alps (Courchevel, Megève, Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, Val d'Isère, Méribel), the Côte d'Azur (Cap-Ferrat, Cap d'Antibes, St-Tropez) and central Paris. Our bilingual French, English and Portuguese advisors coordinate notaire appointments, IFI wealth-tax planning and SCI holding-company structuring, working alongside specialist French tax lawyers for every international transaction.
The Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes ski country hosts Courchevel 1850, Méribel, Val d'Isère, Megève and Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, covering the 3 Vallées, Paradiski, Espace Killy and Chamonix lift domains, the most concentrated world-class ski real estate market on earth with structurally limited chalet supply.
Cap-Ferrat, Cap d'Antibes, Mougins and St-Tropez form the Côte d'Azur's trophy-villa belt, immediately adjacent to Monaco and supported by Nice-Côte d'Azur international airport, with limited frontline stock trading between €15,000 and €45,000 per square metre.
Prime Paris (6e, 7e, 8e, 16e) remains one of the deepest global luxury markets, with Haussmannian stock legally protected, supply constrained and prices consistently between €15,000 and €35,000 per square metre in the grand arrondissements of the Left Bank and Champs-Élysées corridor.
French property transactions are overseen by a public-office notaire who verifies title, calculates transfer duties and files registration, delivering one of Europe's most structurally secure conveyancing systems, albeit with meaningful 7-8% transfer-cost ratios on existing property.
Once the offer is accepted, the parties sign a compromis de vente (preliminary contract) before a notaire, typically with a 5-10% deposit held in the notaire's escrow. The buyer benefits from a ten-day statutory cooling-off period (SRU law) after signing, during which they can withdraw without penalty.
International buyers typically choose between direct ownership and holding through an SCI (Société Civile Immobilière). SCI structures can optimise succession and joint ownership but trigger different IFI wealth-tax treatment and income-tax classifications. We coordinate with specialist French tax counsel before the compromis is signed.
Where mortgage financing is used, the compromis includes a suspensive clause allowing withdrawal if the mortgage is declined, governed by the Scrivener Law. French banks typically finance up to 70% LTV for non-resident buyers, with fixed-rate 20- to 25-year terms.
Between compromis and final deed, the notaire runs title searches, verifies pre-emption rights (commune, SAFER for rural land), orders surveys required by French law (asbestos, lead, termites, natural risks, energy performance) and prepares the final acte de vente.
Around two to three months after compromis, the acte de vente (final deed) is signed before the notaire, the purchase price transfers from the notaire's escrow to the seller, and keys transfer the same day. Registration follows automatically through the notaire's filing.
From the first French tax year of ownership, the buyer becomes liable for French local taxes (taxe foncière, taxe d'habitation on second homes where applicable). Properties over €1.3 million gross value also trigger IFI wealth-tax reporting. We coordinate registration and filings with specialist French tax counsel.
Courchevel 1850, Cap-Ferrat and prime Paris share a common feature: supply is legally and physically fixed. New chalet parcels in Courchevel 1850 have essentially ceased since the 2010s, Cap-Ferrat is a finite peninsula, and Haussmannian Paris is heritage-protected, creating long-term scarcity pricing dynamics.
France's Impôt sur la Fortune Immobilière taxes real-estate wealth above €1.3 million at 0.5% to 1.5% annually, an important carry cost that international buyers must underwrite explicitly. We model IFI burden into total cost of ownership at offer stage for every transaction.
US-dollar, sterling and Swiss-franc holders have periodically enjoyed 10-20% FX discounts to euro-denominated French assets over the last three years, layering a currency-entry benefit on top of the underlying property fundamentals.
Geneva airport services Courchevel, Megève, Val d'Isère and Chamonix within 60-90 minutes by car or helicopter. Nice-Côte d'Azur serves the entire Riviera within an hour. Paris has two major airports. This air infrastructure supports ultra-high-frequency second-home use.
Courchevel 1850 prime chalets trade at €35,000-€80,000 per square metre, with trophy chalets on Le Jardin Alpin regularly exceeding €50 million. Megève and Val d'Isère sit at €18,000-€40,000 per square metre, and Chamonix-Mont-Blanc at €12,000-€25,000. A four-to-six bedroom slope-side chalet typically runs €5-€30 million depending on resort, exposure and ski-in/ski-out status. French Riviera villas on Cap-Ferrat and Cap d'Antibes run €20,000-€45,000 per square metre, with trophy villas at €30-€100 million.
Courchevel 1850 is the apex ski-resort luxury market globally, with the most restrictive zoning and the highest per-square-metre prices. Megève offers a historic village feel, longer transit history with Paris families and easier summer use. Val d'Isère pairs altitude-snow reliability with Espace Killy lift access. Chamonix-Mont-Blanc delivers the deepest year-round alpine lifestyle, including summer mountaineering. Méribel in the 3 Vallées remains the value option inside the largest interconnected ski domain on earth.
France levies IFI (Impôt sur la Fortune Immobilière) on real-estate wealth above €1.3 million of net value. Rates are progressive from 0.5% up to 1.5% annually. Non-residents are liable only on French-situs real estate, while French tax residents report worldwide real estate. Certain debts, including mortgage balances, are deductible against the IFI base subject to rules tightened from 2018 onwards. We model IFI burden into total-cost-of-ownership analysis for every transaction.
Total closing costs for existing property run 7-8% of the purchase price. The bulk is transfer duty (droits de mutation) at roughly 5.8%, split between department, commune and state. The notaire's fee is approximately 1%, plus mortgage registration costs where applicable. For new-build property, VAT (TVA) of 20% applies instead of transfer duty, but is typically embedded in the purchase price. Legal and surveyor fees add a further 0.5-1%.
Yes. France imposes no nationality restrictions on residential or rural property ownership. Foreign buyers frequently use an SCI (Société Civile Immobilière) holding structure for succession and joint-ownership planning. Rural land is subject to SAFER pre-emption rights, and certain coastal and viticultural parcels carry additional commune-level pre-emption. We coordinate with French notaires and specialist tax counsel for every international transaction, including IFI wealth-tax registration after completion.
All French property transactions pass through a notaire, a public-office lawyer who represents the state, not the buyer or seller. The notaire verifies title, runs pre-emption checks, orders statutory surveys (asbestos, lead, termites, natural-risk, energy performance) and calculates transfer duties. The compromis de vente is signed first with a 5-10% escrow deposit, followed by a ten-day cooling-off period for the buyer, and typically completed through the acte de vente two to three months later.
Peak-season rentals in Courchevel and Val d'Isère concentrate in the three weeks between Christmas and New Year, plus the February half-term and Easter, with weekly rates on trophy chalets ranging from €60,000 to €350,000. Gross annual yields on Courchevel chalets typically land at 2.5-4%, and Megève and Chamonix at 3-4.5% thanks to longer summer use. French Riviera summer villas run 2.5-4% gross over July and August, and Paris long-let prime apartments deliver 2.5-3.5%.
Geneva airport is the primary international gateway for the French Alps. Megève is roughly 75 minutes by car, Chamonix-Mont-Blanc is 75 minutes, Courchevel 1850 is around 2 hours 15 minutes, Val d'Isère is 2 hours 45 minutes, and Méribel is 2 hours 15 minutes. Helicopter transfers from Geneva cut these times dramatically, with direct lifts available to Courchevel Altiport and Megève Altiport during the winter season.
Serving international clients in France. Expertise in historic preservation, new developments, and investment properties across all neighborhoods.