Dénégation
Denial: tenant does not meet the legal conditions for the statute or renewal right — not a fault, just a condition failure
No indemnity
Successful denial: no eviction indemnity owed; tenant becomes occupant without title and owes occupation indemnity
2 critical dates
Registration assessed at date of notice/renewal request AND at lease expiry — a gap at either date is a valid denial ground
2-year limit
Tenant must challenge the denial within 2 years (Art. L. 145-60) — after which court must validate without assessing the merits

Denial vs Refusal: An Important Distinction

Dénégation — Denial
The tenant does not meet the legal conditions for the statute or the renewal right. Not a fault — the tenant simply does not qualify. No prior formal notice required.
  • Based on: Art. L. 145-1 (statute conditions), Art. L. 145-8 (renewal conditions), or Art. L. 145-13 (nationality condition)
  • Most common ground: registration lapse at RCS/RNE at one or both critical dates
  • Also covers: ceased exploitation, business transferred, ownership condition not met
  • No prior formal notice to tenant required before serving denial
  • Denial notice must still comply with all Art. L. 145-9 statutory formalities (Cass. 3e civ., 1 Oct. 2003)
Refus pour motif grave — Fault-Based Refusal
The tenant qualifies for the statute but loses the renewal right because of their own breach. Different regime, different procedure.
  • Based on: Art. L. 145-17 (serious and legitimate grounds for refusal)
  • Typical grounds: repeated failure to pay rent, exploitation breach, serious degradation of premises
  • Prior formal notice (mise en demeure) required in most cases before the notice can rely on the fault
  • Outcome: no eviction indemnity if refusal is upheld — but procedural requirements are stricter
  • Denial and fault-based refusal can be pleaded cumulatively in the same notice

Grounds for Denial

Denial of the Right to the Statute (Art. L. 145-1)

The landlord may deny the tenant the benefit of the commercial lease statute where the conditions of Article L. 145-1 are not met. In practice, the overwhelming majority of statute denials arise from registration lapses. The tenant must be registered at the RCS (or RNE for leases signed from 1 January 2023) at the address of the leased premises and for the activity actually carried out there, as at both the date of service of the notice or renewal request and at the date of expiry of the lease. The Court of Cassation has confirmed that registration must correspond to the activity actually operated in the premises, not merely to any commercial registration (Cass. 3e civ., 18 January 2011; Cass. 3e civ., 22 September 2016). A tenant registered at a different address, or for a different activity, does not benefit from the statute.

⚠️
Warning — Registration Must Match the Activity Actually Operated

A tenant who is registered at the RCS but under a different activity from the one actually operating at the premises faces a denial risk. A pharmacy diversified into general health products, a restaurant operating as a food retail outlet — any business whose RCS classification does not reflect current operations. Verify and update RCS/RNE registration well before the notice date and the lease expiry date. A registration gap is very hard to cure retroactively once a denial notice has been served.

Denial of the Right to Renewal (Art. L. 145-8)

Even where the tenant benefits from the statute, the landlord may deny the right to renewal specifically if the conditions of Article L. 145-8 are not satisfied — most commonly where the tenant has ceased operating the business, or where ownership of the fonds de commerce has passed to another. Other conditions under Article L. 145-13 (relating to foreign nationals and reciprocity requirements for non-EU tenants) may also provide a basis for denial.

When the Conditions Are Assessed

Registration conditions are assessed at two specific dates: when the notice or renewal request is served, and at the date the lease expires. Other conditions (such as ownership of the fonds de commerce) must be met throughout the duration of any proceedings. A denial based on statute conditions can be raised at any stage of the proceedings, including for the first time on appeal.

Procedure: Statutory Form Mandatory Even for Denials

Until 2003, courts held that where the tenant did not qualify for the statute, the landlord was not bound by the Article L. 145-9 formalities when serving a denial notice. The Court of Cassation reversed this in its ruling of 1 October 2003: even where the tenant is being denied the right to the statute, the notice must comply with all formal requirements (bailiff service, six months notice, proper motivation, reproduction of the statutory text) (Cass. 3e civ., 1 October 2003; confirmed Cass. 3e civ., 11 December 2007). No prior formal notice to the tenant is required before the denial.

Denial Notice — Procedural Requirements
1
Service by Bailiff's Act
The denial notice must be served by a bailiff (huissier), not by registered post. This requirement applies to denial notices in the same way as to ordinary refusal-of-renewal notices — it is not waived by the fact that the landlord is denying the statute rather than invoking a fault ground.
2
Six-Month Notice Period
The notice must be served with a minimum of six months to the end of a lease period (in practice, the expiry or contractual extension date). Even for a denial notice, the six-month period must be observed. A notice served too late will be invalid.
3
Motivation — Identification of the Denial Ground
The notice must clearly identify the ground for denial — the specific statutory condition that is not met. Generic references to "failure to qualify" are insufficient. If the ground is a registration defect, the notice must specify this and identify the relevant dates. The denial ground can be supplemented later in the proceedings but a poorly motivated notice is vulnerable to challenge.
4
Reproduction of Statutory Text
Under Art. L. 145-9, the notice must reproduce verbatim the statutory text of Articles L. 145-9 and L. 145-10 (or whichever statutory article is relevant to the form of the notice). Failure to include this text renders the notice void and the denial fails on procedural grounds alone.

Court Proceedings and Outcome

Following a denial notice, either the landlord (seeking validation and eviction) or the tenant (contesting the denial) may bring proceedings before the tribunal judiciaire. The tenant must act within the two-year prescription period under Article L. 145-60 from the date the notice was served. If the tenant does not act within two years, the court has no discretion — it must validate the denial without assessing the merits.

Denial Upheld by the Court
The tenant does not qualify — the denial is validated.
  • No right to renewal and no right to an eviction indemnity
  • Tenant becomes an occupant without title (occupant sans droit ni titre)
  • Owes an occupation indemnity assessed at market value under tort principles — no contractual basis for calculating it
  • Remains in occupation until they vacate voluntarily or are evicted
  • Landlord may seek expedited eviction proceedings once denial is validated
Denial Rejected by the Court
The denial fails — tenant qualifies; landlord owes the eviction indemnity.
  • The notice remains effective for the date for which it was served
  • Landlord becomes liable for the eviction indemnity (Art. L. 145-14)
  • Landlord may exercise the right of repentance (Art. L. 145-58): withdraw the refusal and offer renewal within 15 days of a final judgment fixing the indemnity
  • Exercising repentance avoids the eviction indemnity payment — but landlord must then renew on the statutory terms
  • A denial pleaded cumulatively with a fault-based refusal ground: if the denial fails, the fault ground is assessed separately
Denial of Renewal: Practical Points
  • Denial vs fault-based refusal: dénégation is based on condition failure (Arts. L. 145-1, L. 145-8, L. 145-13) — not a fault. Different basis, different procedure. Both can be pleaded cumulatively in the same notice if relevant. No prior formal notice required for a denial.
  • Most common ground — registration defect: RCS/RNE registration must match the activity actually operated at the premises and be maintained at both critical dates: (1) date of notice/renewal request; (2) date of lease expiry. A mismatched registration (different address or different activity) is a valid denial ground (Cass. 3e civ., 18 Jan. 2011; 22 Sept. 2016).
  • Statutory form mandatory (Cass. 3e civ., 1 Oct. 2003): denial notice must comply with all Art. L. 145-9 requirements: bailiff service, six-month notice period, clear identification of the denial ground, reproduction of the statutory text. A denial notice with defective form fails regardless of whether the denial ground is valid.
  • Two-year prescription (Art. L. 145-60): tenant must challenge within two years of the notice being served. After two years, the court validates the denial without assessing the merits — the time limit is absolute. Landlords should serve denial notices promptly after the renewal event to start the clock running.
  • If denial fails: landlord owes the eviction indemnity but retains the option of exercising the right of repentance (Art. L. 145-58) — withdrawing the refusal and offering renewal within 15 days of a final judgment fixing the indemnity. Exercising repentance avoids the indemnity but requires the landlord to renew on statutory terms.
  • For tenants — prevention: verify RCS/RNE registration at the premises address and for the correct activity well before any renewal event. A registration gap is very hard to cure retroactively once a denial notice has been served. Check both the notice date and the lease expiry date independently.
Facing a Denial of the Right to Renew?

Whether you are a landlord considering a denial notice or a tenant whose renewal has been challenged on statutory grounds, we advise on the conditions, the procedure, and the strategic options — including the right of repentance if the denial is at risk of failing.

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This article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and does not create a lawyer-client relationship. Laws and regulations may have changed since publication. Always seek qualified French legal advice on denial of renewal rights in a French commercial lease.