The Right to Remain in Occupation
Article L. 145-28 of the Code de commerce states the principle plainly: no tenant who can claim an eviction indemnity may be compelled to vacate before receiving it. Until the full indemnity (including accessory indemnities, which the Court of Cassation treats as indivisible from the main indemnity) is paid, the tenant remains in occupation on the same terms and conditions as the expired lease — except that the amount due for occupation is the occupation indemnity, not the contractual rent.
This right is opposable to a purchaser of the building (Cass. 3e civ., 17 December 2003; Cass. 3e civ., 13 July 2010). Where the tenant sells their fonds de commerce during the holdover period, the right to remain and the eviction indemnity claim pass to the assignee by operation of law, absent any contrary agreement (Cass. 3e civ., 6 April 2005). The only statutory exception before payment is repossession in a secteur sauvegardé under Art. L. 145-18, where a provisional indemnity fixed by the court president may allow early departure.
When the Right to Remain Is Lost
A forfeiture clause that covers only non-payment of “rent” cannot be triggered for non-payment of the occupation indemnity: the Court of Cassation has confirmed these are distinct obligations (Cass. 3e civ., 24 February 1999). Landlords drafting commercial leases should ensure the forfeiture clause expressly covers “occupation indemnity and any indemnity due during holdover following refusal of renewal.” An existing clause without this wording may leave the landlord without an automatic forfeiture mechanism during a contested eviction.
The Occupation Indemnity: Calculation and Quantum
The occupation indemnity is assessed at the market rental value of the premises (valeur locative) under Art. L. 145-33 C. com., but without the rent cap provisions that apply to renewals (Cass. 3e civ., 14 November 1978; Cass. 3e civ., 17 June 2021). It cannot be fixed by reference to the lease indexation clause (Cass. 3e civ., 8 June 2023), cannot simply equal the contractual rent (Cass. 3e civ., 29 November 2000), and where the original lease contained a turnover-based rent clause, is still assessed at market value (Cass. 3e civ., 3 October 2007). Tenant improvements are excluded: the indemnity is assessed on the premises as if without the tenant’s works (Cass. 3e civ., 13 October 1993). A contractual clause fixing the occupation indemnity at a specific amount is treated as a penalty clause, giving the court discretion to reduce a manifestly excessive amount (Cass. 3e civ., 8 April 2010).
The Precarity Discount
The occupation indemnity is routinely reduced by a precarity discount (coefficient de précarité), typically 10%, sometimes 20%, reflecting the tenant’s inherent instability. The discount is not automatic: it must be justified by the circumstances. Where the tenant’s turnover has increased during the holdover period or where the tenant has continued investing, courts have refused the discount (CA Paris, 16 January 2008). Conversely, where the lease contains a valid clause requiring the tenant to remain in occupation until the eviction indemnity is paid (Cass. 3e civ., 15 June 2023), that forced retention may justify an increased precarity adjustment.
TVA
The Conseil d’État has ruled that the occupation indemnity paid by a tenant without legal title is not subject to TVA, since there is no service rendered in exchange (CE, 30 May 2018, n° 402447). Where the expired lease provided for TVA on top of the rent, the Court of Cassation has held that the same TVA treatment follows during holdover since holdover operates on the terms of the expired lease (Cass. 3e civ., 13 December 2018). The Conseil d’État’s position as the competent tax court should prevail, but the position remains technically unsettled.
Prescription of the Occupation Indemnity Claim
The landlord must also claim the occupation indemnity within two years under Art. L. 145-60. The start date depends on the circumstances: ordinarily from the effective date of the refusal notice; if the tenant’s entitlement to an eviction indemnity was contested, from the date the court finally confirmed that entitlement in principle. Prescription of the occupation indemnity claim does not extinguish the debt entirely: if the claim is prescribed but the tenant continued in occupation, the last contractual rent paid is treated as the reference amount for the holdover period.
Both the eviction indemnity claim and the occupation indemnity claim are subject to the two-year prescription of Art. L. 145-60. For the eviction indemnity, the period runs from the effective date of the refusal notice. For the occupation indemnity, the period ordinarily runs from the same date — meaning that if the landlord delays initiating proceedings, they may find that early months of the occupation indemnity period are already prescribed before they claim them. Where entitlement was contested and only confirmed by the court at a late stage, the prescription for the occupation indemnity begins from that confirmation date.
Whether you are a tenant assessing how long you can remain and what you will owe, or a landlord seeking to bring the holdover period to an end and recover the correct occupation indemnity, we advise on the conditions, the calculation, and the procedural steps required.
Book a ConsultationLegal Notice. This article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Laws and regulations may have changed since publication. Always seek qualified French legal advice on holdover and occupation indemnity matters in a French commercial lease.
Key Legal References
Right to remain pending payment of eviction indemnity: tenant cannot be compelled to vacate before the full indemnity (including accessories) is paid; holdover on same terms as expired lease except for occupation indemnity replacing rent
Tenant must vacate within three months of payment of the eviction indemnity
Right of repentance: withdrawal of refusal and offer of renewal; extinguishes eviction indemnity right and right to remain
Two-year prescription for eviction indemnity and occupation indemnity claims; failure to bring claim within two years is fatal to both rights
Market rental value: the five criteria for assessing the market rental value of leased premises; basis for the occupation indemnity calculation
Right to remain is opposable to a purchaser of the building who acquires after the refusal of renewal
Right to remain and eviction indemnity claim pass to the assignee of the fonds de commerce during the holdover period, absent contrary agreement
After two-year prescription expires: tenant loses right to eviction indemnity and right to remain; owes general law damages indemnity for unlawful occupation period thereafter
Forfeiture clause limited to non-payment of ‘rent’ cannot be triggered for non-payment of the occupation indemnity during holdover; the two are distinct obligations
Occupation indemnity is not subject to the rent cap provisions applicable to renewals; assessed at full market value
Occupation indemnity cannot be fixed by reference to the lease indexation clause
Tenant improvements excluded from the assessment of the occupation indemnity; indemnity assessed on premises as if without the tenant’s works
Contractual clause fixing occupation indemnity at a specific amount is treated as a penalty clause; court has discretion to reduce a manifestly excessive amount
Lease clause requiring the tenant to remain in occupation until the eviction indemnity is paid is valid
Occupation indemnity paid by a tenant without legal title is not subject to TVA, since there is no service rendered in exchange
Where expired lease provided for TVA on top of the rent, same TVA treatment follows during holdover since holdover operates on the terms of the expired lease
