What Is the Bail Emphytéotique?
The bail emphytéotique is defined by Article L 451-1 of the Code rural as a contract with a duration of between 18 and 99 years by which the landlord confers on the tenant — the emphytéote — a special real property right over an immovable asset: the emphytéose. This is not a personal right of enjoyment of the kind conferred by an ordinary lease. It is a real right, enforceable against the world, that gives the emphytéote substantially broader prerogatives than any ordinary tenant enjoys.
Under this real right, the emphytéote may erect buildings on the land, let them to third parties, sell or assign the emphyteutic right itself, and mortgage it — all without the landlord's consent, and subject only to the obligation not to diminish the value of the underlying property. In exchange, the emphytéote must carry out all the construction and improvement works stipulated in the lease and must bear all charges throughout the term. Buildings erected by the tenant pass to the landlord at the end of the contract — typically without compensation. This combination justifies the defining economic feature of the emphyteutic lease: the redevance, which is substantially lower than the rent of a statutory commercial lease.
Exclusion from the Commercial Lease Statute
Article L 145-3 of the Code de commerce expressly provides that the provisions of Articles L 145-1 and following do not apply to emphyteutic leases. The full apparatus of statutory commercial lease protection — the nine-year minimum term, the right of renewal, the eviction indemnity, the rent indexation rules — is simply absent. An emphytéote who operates a fonds de commerce on the leased land has no statutory right to remain at the end of the emphyteusis and no right to compensation if the landlord declines to renew. The landlord recovers the property, together with all improvements, at the end of the agreed term.
The exclusion from the commercial lease statute also has a specific consequence for rent review. The Cour de cassation has firmly ruled that the landlord of an emphyteutic lease cannot apply for a revision of the redevance to bring it to market rental value (Cass. 3e Civ. 19-2-2014 n° 12-19.270 ; Cass. 3e Civ. 8-9-2016 n° 15-21.381). The reason is structural: the economic logic of the emphyteutic lease is that the counterpart of the tenant's enjoyment is not the payment of a market rent but the absence of renewal rights and the accession of works and improvements at the end of the term. Imposing a market rent would destroy the economic balance of the arrangement entirely.
The Conditions for a Valid Emphyteutic Lease: Rigorous Assessment
The courts assess the existence of an emphyteutic lease rigorously, and all of its defining characteristics must be simultaneously present. Labelling a contract a bail emphytéotique does not make it one; conversely, the absence of the label does not preclude it from being one if all substantive conditions are met. The judge must examine the contract as a whole, taking into account: the long duration, the free right to make improvements and modify the state of the property, the free right of assignment and sub-letting, and the right to mortgage the emphyteutic interest.
The mere fact that the building on the leased land is used for commercial or industrial purposes is not sufficient to exclude the emphyteutic characterisation (Cass. 3e Civ. 3-12-1980 n° 79-14.132). A long duration alone does not establish an emphyteutic lease if the other defining elements are absent.
What a Court Looks At: Illustrative Cases
A 25-year lease with a modest rent, rights of assignment and sub-letting, and the possibility of hypothecating the tenant's interest was held not to be emphyteutic because the low rent was only relative (not justified by a corresponding obligation to improve), the right to build was limited to one room, assignment was attenuated by a joint liability clause, and the freedom to change commercial activity was not general (Cass. 3e Civ. 3-10-1991 n° 1392). A 30-year lease over land for a naturists' centre, with a low annual fee, full repair obligations, free assignment and sub-letting, and no indemnity at the end, was held not to be emphyteutic solely because it contained a clause restricting the use to a naturist centre — a restriction incompatible with the broad freedom of use essential to emphyteusis (Cass. 3e Civ. 13-5-1998 n° 70).
Clauses That Destroy the Emphyteutic Character
Certain clauses are irreconcilable with the nature of the emphyteutic lease and automatically disqualify the contract. Because the emphyteutic lease cannot contemplate any resolution before the eighteenth year, the following clauses are all disqualifying: any provision for triennale termination at the tenant's option; any faculty of early termination for the landlord; a clause résolutoire (automatic termination clause); joint liability of the tenant with any assignee; and any requirement for landlord consent to a change in the type of commercial activity.
The Free Assignment Rule: The Most Important Condition
The most critical disqualifying clause is any restriction on the emphytéote's right to assign freely. The Cour de cassation has held consistently that the right of free assignment is an essential characteristic of the emphyteutic lease, and that any clause subjecting assignment to the landlord's prior approval destroys the emphyteutic character — whether the restriction applies generally or only when the assignment is accompanied by a change in commercial activity (Cass. 3e Civ. 10-4-1991 n° 725 ; Cass. 3e Civ. 29-4-2009 n° 08-10.944).
The case law on the bail à construction has introduced a nuance worth noting. For that instrument, the Cour de cassation has ruled that clauses restricting the right to assign are null and void rather than disqualifying — the clause falls away but the contract retains its character (Cass. 3e Civ. 24-9-2014 n° 13-22.357 ; Cass. 3e Civ. 14-9-2017 n° 16-23.590). Whether this approach could be transposed to the emphyteutic lease — so that a restrictive assignment clause would be struck out rather than causing disqualification — remains an open question the courts have not yet definitively resolved.
Any of the following clauses, if included in an emphyteutic lease, risks destroying its emphyteutic character and exposing the landlord to statutory commercial lease protection once a fonds de commerce is operated on the premises: triennale termination option; any right of early termination for the landlord; a clause résolutoire; joint liability of the tenant with any assignee; any requirement for landlord consent to a change of commercial activity; and any general restriction on assignment or sub-letting. The contract must preserve the broadest possible freedom of use and transfer for the emphytéote.
Consequences of Disqualification
When the conditions of emphyteusis are not satisfied, the court restores the contract's true qualification: that of an ordinary lease. The clauses that were incompatible with the emphyteutic character are not treated as unwritten — they remain in force as clauses of the ordinary lease. If the holder of the disqualified contract is the owner of a fonds de commerce operated on the leased premises and satisfies the conditions of Article L 145-1 of the Code de commerce, they become the holder of a statutory commercial lease and acquire the right of renewal.
This consequence — the automatic acquisition of commercial lease protection on disqualification — is precisely what makes the emphyteutic lease attractive to landlords seeking to avoid statutory lock-in, and precisely what makes drafting errors so costly.
Any action to requalify an emphyteutic lease as a commercial lease is subject to the two-year limitation period of Article L 145-60 of the Code de commerce (Cass. 3e Civ. 29-10-2008 n° 07-16.185 ; Cass. 3e Civ. 25-1-2023 n° 21-24.394). This period runs from the date of conclusion of the contract — including on renewal (Cass. 3e Civ. 14-9-2017 n° 16-23.590 ; Cass. 3e Civ. 17-9-2020 n° 19-18.435). A tenant who wishes to challenge an arrangement labelled emphyteutic must do so within two years of its conclusion. Waiting until the end of the term to raise the issue will almost always be fatal.
Leases Granted by the Emphytéote
The emphytéote may grant commercial leases over the buildings they have erected on the land or over parts of the unleased terrain. Despite sometimes being described as sub-leases, these are in law direct leases between the emphytéote as lessor and the occupant as tenant. If the conditions of Article L 145-1 of the Code de commerce are otherwise met, these leases are subject to the commercial lease statute in full (C. com. art. L 145-3).
There is, however, an important limitation: where the emphyteusis itself expires, the commercial lease tenant who holds under the emphytéote loses the benefit of the right to remain, the right of renewal, and the right to an eviction indemnity. The expiry of the emphyteusis terminates the legal basis on which the sub-lease was granted, and the commercial lease tenant cannot assert rights against the ultimate landlord that go beyond what the emphytéote could themselves have asserted.
The Bail à Construction: A Related but Distinct Instrument
The bail à construction, defined by Article L 251-1 of the Code de la construction et de l'habitation, is a lease under which the tenant undertakes as a primary obligation to erect buildings on the landlord's land and maintain them in good condition throughout the term. Its regime is broadly similar to that of the emphyteutic lease, but two significant differences distinguish them.
First, unlike the emphyteutic lease, the bail à construction may validly include clauses restricting the tenant's activities. A clause limiting use of the built structures to specified commercial or industrial purposes is valid and does not cause disqualification (Cass. 3e Civ. 7-4-2004 n° 465). Second, unlike the emphytéote who merely has a faculty to build, the tenant under a bail à construction has a genuine obligation to build as the primary object of the contract. Where a contract confers only a faculty to erect commercial or industrial constructions without imposing an obligation to do so, it is an emphyteutic lease rather than a bail à construction (Cass. 3e Civ. 11-6-1986 n° 84-17.222). A regularly constituted bail à construction is not subject to the commercial lease statute. The tenant's right to assign is a matter of public order and cannot be restricted by contract (CCH Art. L 251-8).
The emphyteutic lease confers a real right and preserves total freedom of use — any use restriction is disqualifying. The bail à construction imposes a primary obligation to build and may validly restrict use. A contract that gives the tenant a mere option to build without obliging it to do so is emphyteutic, not a bail à construction. Both instruments are outside the commercial lease statute; both allow the tenant to grant commercial sub-leases over the built structures.
Whether you are a developer considering an emphyteutic lease or a bail à construction, an investor acquiring assets held under emphyteusis, or a tenant assessing the scope of rights conferred by a long-term contract, precision in drafting and qualification is essential.
Speak with a French LawyerThis article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The legal analysis reflects the provisions of the Code rural, the Code de commerce, the Code de la construction et de l'habitation and the case law cited. Always seek qualified legal advice for your specific situation before making any decision with legal consequences.
Key Legal References
Definition of the bail emphytéotique: a contract with a duration of between 18 and 99 years by which the landlord confers on the tenant (emphytéote) a real property right (emphytéose) over an immovable asset. The emphytéote may erect buildings, let, assign and mortgage without the landlord’s consent.
Exclusion from the commercial lease statute: Articles L 145-1 and following of the Code de commerce do not apply to emphyteutic leases. No right of renewal, no eviction indemnity, no nine-year minimum term.
Bail à construction: definition. Tenant undertakes as a primary obligation to erect buildings on the landlord’s land and maintain them in good condition throughout the term.
Bail à construction: tenant’s right to assign is a matter of public order and cannot be restricted by contract.
The landlord of an emphyteutic lease cannot apply for a revision of the redevance to bring it to market rental value. The economic logic excludes a market rent: the counterpart is the absence of renewal rights and the accession of improvements.
All defining characteristics of the emphyteutic lease must be simultaneously present; the use of premises for commercial or industrial purposes does not exclude emphyteutic characterisation.
Free right of assignment is an essential characteristic of the emphyteutic lease; any clause requiring landlord consent to assignment destroys the emphyteutic character, whether the restriction is general or applies only on change of activity.
Use restriction clause (restricting use to a naturist centre) destroys the emphyteutic character, being incompatible with the broad freedom of use essential to emphyteusis.
Two-year prescription for requalification actions (Art. L 145-60 C. com.), running from the date of conclusion of the contract including on renewal. Courts of appeal have applied this rule to requalification of emphyteutic leases.
Bail à construction: use restriction clause valid; does not cause disqualification.
Bail à construction vs emphyteutic lease: a contract conferring only a faculty to erect constructions without imposing an obligation to do so is emphyteutic, not a bail à construction.
