Key Points: Agricultural Land and Rural Leases in France
The fermage statute (C. rur. Art. L 411-1) is a public-order regime applying to any onerous making-available of agricultural property for farming. Any clause restricting the tenant’s statutory rights is void. The landlord does not become an agricultural operator by letting agricultural land.
Rent is not freely negotiated: it must fall between prefectural statutory minima and maxima. Farming land rent is updated annually by the indice national des fermages (60% gross agricultural income + 40% general price level). Payment of pas-de-porte (key money) is a criminal offence.
Standard minimum lease: 9 years, tacitly renewable. Long-term lease: 18 years minimum, unlocking 75%/50% succession/gift and IFI abatements. Cessible lease (authentic form required): 18 years minimum, tenant may transfer the lease outside the family.
The right of reprise allows the landlord (or spouse, adult descendant) to recover possession for personal exploitation, subject to strict conditions: 9-year personal exploitation commitment; professional capacity; financial means; personal occupation; structural control compliance; not at retirement age.
Departure indemnities are public order (no advance waiver): four categories ranging from full reimbursement for publicly imposed works to cost-minus-6%-per-year for constructions, and cost-minus-amortisation for plantations and agronomic improvements.
Long-term lease land (and non-tradeable GFA shares) benefits simultaneously from: (1) 75%/50% abatement on succession and gift duties (CGI Art. 793); (2) 75%/50% IFI abatement; and (3) revenus fonciers income tax treatment with standard deductibles. Few other asset classes combine all three.

The Agricultural Land Market

The agricultural land market is driven by a dense web of physical factors (soil quality, climate, relief, accessibility), legal factors (tenant statutory rights — renewal and pre-emption — planning servitudes, private servitudes), and economic factors (production quotas, urbanisation anticipation). Near towns, farmland prices reflect expected future building land status rather than pure agricultural value. The market is highly localised, composed of micro-markets, with extreme price variation by region and type of culture. The Ministry of Agriculture publishes an indicative scale of average agricultural land values by department, region, and type of culture annually.

Agricultural land is a long-term capitalisation investment, generally producing limited rental income but offering inflation-resistant value preservation. Liquidity is restricted. The landlord’s ability to recover possession is heavily constrained by the statutory lease regime. Investors without agricultural knowledge or familiarity with local markets should approach this as a specialist asset class.

Scope and Excluded Conventions

The Broad Definition of Fermage

The fermage statute applies to any onerous making-available of agricultural immovable property for the purpose of farming an agricultural activity (C. rur. Art. L 411-1). This definition is deliberately broad and is a matter of public order: any clause in a covered lease that restricts the tenant’s statutory rights is deemed unwritten. A landlord who lets agricultural land does not thereby acquire the status of agricultural operator.

Métayage is the variant in which the landlord receives a share of the farming produce rather than a fixed money rent. Under métayage, both landlord and tenant hold agricultural operator status. The tiercement rule limits the landlord’s share to a maximum of one third of the produce overall. Exploitation charges are borne in the same proportion. The métayer has a unilateral right of triennial termination even if the lease does not provide for it.

Conventions Excluded from the Statute

C. rur. Art. L 411-2 excludes the following from the fermage regime:

  • Emphyteutic leases (C. rur. Art. L 451-1 et seq.);
  • Complant leases, hunting and fishing leases, family garden lets;
  • Multi-year pastoral or agricultural operation conventions (C. rur. Art. L 481-1 et seq.);
  • Administrative concessions and temporary concessions on land reserves;
  • Making available of agricultural property to a company by a person who actually participates in its exploitation within that company.

The statute is also entirely or partially disapplied for: conventions for maintenance of land near a residential building constituting its dependency; certain precarious occupation conventions; SAFER conventions (except for price); small parcels below the prefectural threshold; annual lettings; and lettings in the context of judicial liquidation.

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Hidden Risk: Automatic Bail Verbal on Cessation of Participation

Where a person makes agricultural land available to a company in which they personally participate in the exploitation, the convention is excluded from the fermage statute. However, if the person ceases their personal participation and the land remains available to the company on an onerous basis, a statutory verbal fermage lease arises automatically by operation of law (Cass. 3e civ. 10-9-2020 n° 19-20.856). To prevent the automatic creation of a nine-year renewable statutory lease with a former associate as tenant, the landowner must reclaim the property simultaneously with their departure from the company.

Rent Setting, the Fermage Index, and the Prohibition on Key Money

Encadré Rent: Between Statutory Minima and Maxima

The fermage regime does not allow free rent negotiation. The rent must fall between a statutory minimum and maximum fixed in each department by prefectural order, following consultation with the departmental joint advisory commission on rural leases. These bands are re-evaluated at least every six years and updated annually by the national fermage index. The price of each fermage takes into account: lease duration; condition and importance of buildings; soil quality; any tenant obligation to implement environmentally respectful farming practices; and parcel structure.

If a lease is concluded at a price more than one tenth above or below the applicable rental value for that category, either party may bring a rent revision action before the tribunal paritaire des baux ruraux during the third year of the lease (and the third year of each renewal), but only once per term.

The Two Components of the Fermage

The total fermage has two components. The residential buildings rent is expressed in money, between prefectural minima and maxima per square metre, categorised by condition, comfort, and location; updated annually by the indice de référence des loyers (INSEE). The farming land and operational buildings rent is expressed in money, between prefectural minima and maxima, updated annually by the indice national des fermages — composed of 60% gross agricultural income per hectare (RBEA, national average over the preceding five years) and 40% evolution of the general price level of the preceding year (C. rur. Art. R 411-9-3).

The fermage may not include any supplementary payment or service of any nature, except where the landlord has made investments exceeding their legal obligations, where a public authority has imposed investments, or where the landlord has definitively borne the outgoing tenant’s departure indemnity. In a cessible lease, the rent may be up to 50% above the standard scales.

Prohibition on Key Money: Pas-de-porte

It is a criminal offence for any landlord, outgoing tenant, or intermediary to obtain or attempt to obtain from an incoming tenant, on the occasion of a change of operator, any unjustified sum or value, or to impose repurchase of movable goods at above-market-value prices. Sums improperly received beyond 10% of market value for movables are subject to recovery. This prohibition does not apply to cessible leases (C. rur. Art. L 411-74; C. rur. Art. L 418-5).

Lease Duration: Standard, Long-Term, and Cessible

9 ans
Standard Minimum
C. rur. Art. L 411-5. Tacit 9-year renewal absent congé. Triennial and sexennial reprise clauses possible by contract.
18 ans
Long-Term Lease
C. rur. Art. L 416-1. No triennial reprise during initial period. Renews for 9-year periods. Unlocks 75%/50% succession, gift, and IFI abatements.
18+ ans
Cessible Lease
C. rur. Art. L 418-1. Authentic form required. Tenant may transfer outside family. Rent up to 50% higher. Eviction indemnity if renewal refused without justification.

Standard 9-Year Lease and Triennial Clauses

The standard rural lease runs for a minimum of nine years and renews tacitly for further nine-year periods at the same price and conditions unless a valid congé is given. The parties may agree a triennial reprise clause allowing the landlord to recover the land at the end of the third or sixth year of a renewed lease for personal exploitation by the landlord, spouse, civil partner, or adult descendants. A sexennial reprise clause (at year six of a renewal) may also be agreed, but benefits only the spouse, civil partner, or adult/emancipated descendants — not the landlord personally. A tenant within five years of agricultural retirement age may oppose a reprise, in which case the lease is extended by law for the period needed to reach that age.

Long-Term Lease: Bail à Long Terme (18 Years)

The long-term lease (C. rur. Art. L 416-1) is concluded for a minimum of eighteen years with no possibility of triennial reprise during the initial period. It renews by nine-year periods. A sub-category, the bail à long préavis (minimum 25 years, renewable indefinitely by tacit reconduction), allows each party to give notice annually with four years’ advance notice after the first lease term. The long-term lease regime unlocks the major tax advantages described in the taxation section below.

Cessible Lease: C. rur. Art. L 418-1

The cessible lease must be concluded in authentic form before a notaire. Its minimum duration is eighteen years, renewing for at least nine years absent a congé given eighteen months in advance. The key distinctive feature is that the tenant may transfer the lease outside the family framework — unlike an ordinary bail rural. In exchange, the rent may be up to 50% above the standard scales, and no prohibition on key money applies. The tenant has a right to an indemnité d’éviction where the landlord refuses renewal without justified grounds.

Congé: Notice Requirements and the Right of Reprise

Congé Formalism

The congé regime is strictly regulated. Any breach of formalism renders the congé null. The tenant’s congé must be given at least eighteen months in advance by registered letter with acknowledgement of receipt, or by bailiff’s act (C. rur. Art. L 411-55). The landlord’s congé must be given by bailiff’s act (C. rur. Art. L 411-47), in principle eighteen months before the end of the lease (two years for a mid-lease triennial/sexennial reprise; one year for a change-of-destination termination where the land becomes urban under the PLU). The congé must contain, under pain of nullity: the reason(s) invoked; the reproduction of the text of C. rur. Art. L 411-54, al. 1 (the four-month period for the tenant to contest before the tribunal paritaire); and for a reprise congé: the full name, age, address, and occupation of the person in whose favour the reprise is exercised, and the habitation they will occupy.

The Right of Reprise

The principal right of reprise permits the landlord to recover the land for personal exploitation by: the landlord; their spouse or PACS partner; or an adult or emancipated minor descendant. The beneficiary must: commit to nine years of personal, permanent exploitation; demonstrate professional capacity or experience; have sufficient financial resources; occupy the buildings on the recovered property or a nearby habitation; be in compliance with structural controls (contrôle des structures); and not have reached agricultural retirement age.

Where a partial reprise would seriously compromise the economic balance of the tenant’s operation, the tenant may demand a total reprise. An irregular reprise entitles the tenant to seek maintenance in occupation (if not yet executed), reinstatement, or damages.

Termination and Death of Tenant

The landlord may seek termination on fault-based grounds: two rent defaults persisting beyond three months after formal notice (one for a cessible lease); or conduct compromising proper operation (C. rur. Art. L 411-31 and L 411-53). The tenant may seek termination for: severe work incapacity exceeding two years; death of an indispensable family member; acquisition of another farm requiring personal exploitation; or application for retirement.

The tenant’s death does not terminate the lease: it continues for the benefit of the spouse, PACS partner, ascendants, and descendants who participate or have participated in the exploitation in the five preceding years (C. rur. Art. L 411-34). A spouse who participated in the agricultural works for more than five years before the tenant’s death qualifies — even if married only shortly before the death (Cass. 3e civ. 16-11-2022 n° 21-18.527). The landlord may terminate within six months of learning of the death if the successors do not meet statutory conditions.

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Scope: Where the Right of Reprise Does Not Apply

The right of reprise does not apply during the initial term of a long-term lease (bail à long terme of 18 years). The triennial and sexennial reprise clauses operate only in the renewal period. A tenant within five years of agricultural retirement age may always oppose a reprise and require the lease to be extended by law until they reach retirement age, regardless of the applicable clause.

Departure Indemnities for Improvements

A tenant who, through work or investment, has made improvements to the leased land is entitled to a departure indemnity, whatever the cause of the lease’s end. The claim must be made within twelve months of lease end. The regime is public order: advance waiver is prohibited; post-improvement waiver must be express and unequivocal. For improvements to qualify, they must have been made lawfully — certain categories require prior authorisation by the landlord or failing that by the tribunal paritaire; others require only advance notice.

Works imposed by public authority
Full Cost Reimbursement
Indemnity equal to the full cost of the works, with no amortisation deduction of any kind.
Constructions and works incorporated in the soil
Cost Minus 6% Per Year from Execution
Indemnity equal to the cost of the works, reduced by 6% for each year elapsed since their execution.
Plantations
Pre-Production Costs, Amortised from Entry into Production
Expenditure incurred before entry into production of the plantation, minus amortisation calculated from the date of entry into production.
Agronomic and land improvements
Cost of Lasting Works, Amortisation Maximum 18 Years
Cost of works whose effect is likely to continue after the tenant’s departure, minus amortisation whose maximum duration is 18 years.

Tax Regime: Income, Succession, IFI and Capital Gains

Income from Rural Lettings: Revenus Fonciers

Income from agricultural land let under a bail à ferme where the landlord does not hold agricultural operator status is taxable as revenus fonciers (property income). Specific deductible charges for rural property include: maintenance and repair; insurance; land taxes including by default one fifth of the taxe foncière sur les propriétés non bâties (borne by the tenant under C. rur. Art. L 415-3, al. 3, absent contrary agreement); management charges; and loan interest. Rural tenants must additionally bear half of the cotisations pour frais des chambres d’agriculture (C. rur. Art. L 514-1). Income from métayage and forestry falls instead within agricultural profits (bénéfices agricoles).

Succession and Gift Duties: The Long-Term Lease Abatement (CGI Art. 793)

Agricultural land subject to a long-term lease (bail à long terme of at least 18 years, cessible lease, or ordinary lease with at least three years remaining) benefits from a significant reduction in succession and gift transfer duties under CGI Art. 793:

  • 75% abatement on the taxable base up to a statutory threshold (updated periodically by decree);
  • 50% abatement on the portion exceeding that threshold.

Heirs or donees must commit to continuing the long-term lease for at least five years from the date of the transfer. The same abatements apply to shares in a groupement foncier agricole (GFA) meeting the applicable conditions.

IFI: Agricultural Land and GFA Shares

Agricultural land is in principle included in the IFI base of the landowner. The same 75%/50% abatement structure applies to:

  • Land subject to a long-term lease (bail à long terme or cessible lease) — 75% abatement below threshold, 50% above;
  • Shares in a GFA that are not freely tradeable — same 75%/50% abatements;
  • Land personally exploited by the owner as part of a qualifying agricultural activity may be entirely exempt from IFI as professional property.
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The Combined Tax Advantage of Long-Term Agricultural Letting

For high-net-worth families with a multi-generation horizon, agricultural land under a long-term lease (or held through a GFA) combines three distinct tax advantages simultaneously: (1) a 75%/50% abatement on succession and gift duties (CGI Art. 793), making intergenerational transmission dramatically cheaper than for ordinary property; (2) a 75%/50% abatement on the IFI wealth tax base, reducing annual wealth tax cost substantially; and (3) index-linked rental income taxable as revenus fonciers with standard deductible expenses. Few other asset classes in the French tax system combine all three benefits at once.

Capital Gains on Sale of Agricultural Land

Gains on the sale of agricultural land by a private individual are taxed under the private capital gains regime for immovable property (CGI Art. 150 U et seq.) at 36.2% overall (19% income tax plus 17.2% social charges), subject to holding-period abatements from year six. The sale of long-term lease land to the tenant farmer may benefit from a specific exemption or reduced rate under the conditions applicable at the time of sale.

Summary: Practical Checklist for Agricultural Land Investors
Long-term lease from day one: if the tax advantages (75%/50% succession/gift and IFI abatements) are part of the investment rationale, the lease must be at least 18 years from the outset. An existing ordinary 9-year lease does not automatically qualify unless it has at least three years remaining and a new long-term instrument is executed.
Cessation of company participation: if you make land available to a farming company in which you participate personally, reclaim the land simultaneously with your departure from the company. Any delay creates an automatic statutory 9-year verbal bail rural with the company as tenant (Cass. 3e civ. 10-9-2020 n° 19-20.856).
Right of reprise planning: include a triennial or sexennial reprise clause at the time of concluding the lease if family exploitation is anticipated. The clause must be in the original lease; it cannot be inserted retroactively. But remember: no triennial reprise is possible during the initial term of a long-term lease.
Congé formalism is absolute: the landlord’s congé must be by bailiff’s act, contain all mandatory elements (reason, Art. L 411-54 al. 1 text, and for reprise: beneficiary identity and future habitation). Any defect renders the congé null — and the lease renews by nine years.
Departure indemnities cannot be waived in advance: they are public order. Landlords should factor in the four indemnity categories when granting authorisation for works, plantations, or improvements during the lease. Once the works are made lawfully, the entitlement to indemnity on departure is irrevocable.
GFA as a holding vehicle: for estate planning, a groupement foncier agricole with non-tradeable shares benefits from the same 75%/50% succession/gift and IFI abatements as directly-held long-term lease land, and can facilitate progressive intergenerational transfer of agricultural land without triggering the lease’s pre-emption mechanism.
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Legal Notice. This article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. The fermage index and IFI/succession abatement thresholds for long-term leases and GFA shares are updated periodically by decree and should be verified at the time of any assessment. Always consult a qualified French notaire and lawyer before concluding or modifying a rural lease or structuring an agricultural land investment.