How the Donation avec Réserve d'Usufruit Works
The mechanism is deceptively simple. Under French property law, full ownership (pleine propriété) combines three rights: the right to use the asset, the right to its income and fruits, and the right to dispose of it. A donation avec réserve d'usufruit uses the separation deliberately: the donor gives away the bare ownership (nue-propriété) — the right to ultimately dispose of the asset — while retaining the usufruit: the right to use it and collect its income for life.
The legal effect is immediate. From the date of the notarial deed, the children own the nue-propriété — a real property right, not just a promise. When the donor dies, the usufruit extinguishes. The nue-propriété and usufruit consolidate automatically in the children's hands: they become full owners without any further legal act, probate procedure, or further tax payment. Article 1133 CGI is explicit: the extinction of the usufruit generates no additional registration duty or succession tax (CGI Art. 1133).
What Each Party Retains and What They Give Up
- Lives in the property rent-free, exactly as before
- Collects all rents and income from the property
- Manages the property: concludes and renews leases (up to 9 years without the children's agreement), handles routine management
- Pays all maintenance costs, routine upkeep, and the taxe foncière
- Cannot sell the full property without the children's agreement
- Cannot give away, destroy, or fundamentally alter the asset
- Can sell the usufruit itself to a third party, but it remains limited to the donor's own lifetime — not the buyer's
- Own the nue-propriété immediately — a real property right registrable in the land register
- Can sell, mortgage, or give away the nue-propriété independently
- Receive no income from the property during the usufruit
- Responsible for major structural repairs (grosses réparations) but cannot be compelled to carry them out unless the deed stipulates otherwise
- Cannot use the property or collect rent during the usufruit
- Become full owners automatically on the donor's death — no further tax due
- If there are multiple children, may hold the nue-propriété in indivision — the deed can include inaliénability clauses to prevent any child selling without consent
The Fiscal Calculation: How the Barème Reduces the Taxable Base
Gift tax is not calculated on the full property value — only on the value of the nue-propriété, which is determined by the mandatory barème of Article 669 CGI. The barème assigns the usufruit a percentage of full value based on the donor's age, with the nue-propriété receiving the remainder. The older the donor at the time of the gift, the higher the nue-propriété's fiscal value — and the higher the gift tax base. The incentive therefore runs strongly in favour of acting early.
| Donor's age bracket | Fiscal value of usufruit retained | Fiscal value of nue-propriété given |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 20 years | 90% | 10% |
| 21–30 years | 80% | 20% |
| 31–40 years | 70% | 30% |
| 41–50 years | 60% | 40% |
| 51–60 years | 50% | 50% |
| 61–70 years | 40% | 60% |
| 71–80 years | 30% | 70% |
| 81–90 years | 20% | 80% |
| 91 years and over | 10% | 90% |
A widower aged 64 donates the nue-propriété of his Paris apartment (worth €500,000) to his only child, retaining the usufruit for life.
Fiscal value of nue-propriété: 60% × €500,000 = €300,000
Less: direct-line abatement per parent per child: − €100,000
Net taxable base: €200,000
Gift tax (direct line — rates apply progressively): approximately €33,000
Compare this to the alternative: if the father dies without making the donation, the child inherits €500,000 less the €100,000 abatement = €400,000 taxable at inheritance rates. The tax saving from acting at 64 — even accounting for the cost of the notarial deed — is substantial. And the father continues to live in the apartment for the rest of his life.
A couple aged 67 and 63 (both in the 61–70 bracket) donate the nue-propriété of their holiday home to their three children. The property is worth €900,000.
The donation is split between two parents (€270,000 each)
Per child per parent abatement: €100,000 → total abatements: 2 × 3 × €100,000 = €600,000
Net taxable base: €540,000 − €600,000 = €0 — no gift tax due
A couple donating to three children can pass on €900,000 worth of nue-propriété with no gift tax at all after abatements. The €100,000 per child per parent abatement is renewable every 15 years — so the same structure used again in 15 years would have the full abatement available once more.
The Fundamental Rule: The Usufruit Cannot Outlast the Donor's Lifetime
The réserve d'usufruit is a viager usufruit — it is tied to the donor's life. This is a rule of law: any clause attempting to make the usufruit last beyond the donor's death is null. The practical consequence: if the donor sells their usufruit to a third party, the duration of that transferred usufruit is still measured by the donor's remaining life, not the transferee's (Cass. 1ère civ. 5-1-2023 n° 21-13.966 FS-B).
It is entirely possible — and common — to include a clause de réversibilité providing that on the donor's death, the usufruit does not extinguish immediately but passes to the surviving spouse as a second (successive) usufruit. The children own the nue-propriété; the surviving parent holds the usufruit after the first parent's death; the children become full owners only when the second parent also dies. The Cour de cassation confirmed in 2007 that the réversibilité clause is legally characterised as a donation of present assets to the second usufruitier, effective immediately from the date of the constitutive deed, with enjoyment merely deferred (Cass. ch. mixte 8-6-2007 n° 05-10.727). Where the second usufruitier is the surviving spouse, this opening of the usufruit generates no succession tax — spouses are fully exempt from French inheritance tax.
Who Pays for What: Costs and Repairs
The allocation of costs between usufruitier and nu-propriétaire is legally defined but partly adjustable by convention in the deed of donation.
The usufruitier (donor) pays: all routine maintenance and upkeep; the taxe foncière and other property taxes treated as charges of the revenues (C. civ. Art. 608); insurance premiums; and, if letting the property, all costs a landlord bears toward tenants — including repairs that, between the two rights holders, would normally fall to the nu-propriétaire, since the landlord's obligation to tenants overrides the internal allocation.
The nu-propriétaire (children) are legally responsible for major structural repairs (grosses réparations) (C. civ. Art. 606) — but crucially, they cannot be compelled to carry them out. The usufruitier has no legal mechanism to force the nu-propriétaire to fund major works. This default rule is not of public order — it can be modified in the donation deed. A properly drafted deed can require the nu-propriétaire to fund essential major works and specify the consequences of non-compliance.
The donation deed is not a formality to be signed and forgotten. A well-drafted deed will address: who pays for major structural works; whether the nue-propriété is subject to an inaliénability clause; whether the réversibilité clause is included for the surviving spouse; and, if the asset involves financial instruments or a company, the rules on voting, dividends, and reserves. Spending time and fees on the deed's content is far less expensive than resolving the disputes that poorly drafted deeds generate.
Quasi-Usufruit: When the Donation Covers Cash, Financial Assets, or Consumables
A standard donation avec réserve d'usufruit works perfectly for real estate and company shares. Where the asset is a sum of money, a bond portfolio, or another asset that cannot be "used" without being consumed, French law applies the quasi-usufruit (C. civ. Art. 587).
In a quasi-usufruit, the holder can use and dispose of the consumable asset freely — but becomes a debtor to the nu-propriétaire for the equivalent value at the end of the usufruit. The nu-propriétaire holds a debt claim against the quasi-usufruitier's estate. When the donor dies, this debt is deductible from their estate for inheritance tax purposes, which can substantially reduce the taxable succession.
The Conseil d'État has validated quasi-usufruit arrangements where the deed of donation expressly provides for it from the outset — but has challenged arrangements where the quasi-usufruit was constructed after the sale and allowed the donor to effectively reappropriate the full sale proceeds without any genuine indebtedness to the children (CE 14-10-2015 n° 374440; CE 10-2-2017 n° 387960).
The Donation-Avant-Cession Strategy: Eliminating Capital Gains Before Selling
A frequently used combination is the donation avant cession: instead of selling an asset and paying capital gains tax on the full gain, the donor first gives the nue-propriété to the children — establishing a new, higher acquisition cost for the children equal to the gift's value — and then the asset is sold shortly after. Because the sale price equals the value at the time of the donation, the children's capital gain is nil or minimal.
Where only the nue-propriété is donated, the strategy is more complex: the capital gain is purged only on the donated nue-propriété, not on the usufruit retained by the donor. To be effective and safe from abuse-of-law challenge, the donation must genuinely precede the sale — it must be made before the sale conditions are definitively met, and the donor must actually and irrevocably divest themselves of the donated assets.
The French tax authority actively challenges donation-avant-cession and quasi-usufruit arrangements on the basis of abuse of law where it can show that the transaction was motivated exclusively by tax avoidance and had no genuine legal or economic substance. For a donation avant cession to be safe, the donation must be real — the donor must genuinely and irrevocably relinquish the donated assets — and there must be a legitimate family purpose. For quasi-usufruit, the arrangement must be provided for in the original deed and must give rise to a genuine, documented debt of restitution. Legal advice tailored to the specific transaction is essential before relying on either mechanism.
The Expat and Non-Resident Dimension
The donation avec réserve d'usufruit is not limited to French residents. Any person owning French real estate — regardless of where they live — can use this mechanism, because French property law applies to French immoveable assets regardless of the nationality or residence of the owner. A British citizen living in London, an American retired to Spain, an Australian with a Provence farmhouse — all can donate the nue-propriété of their French property while retaining the usufruit.
French gift tax on French real estate: France taxes gifts of French immoveable property regardless of where the donor or donee lives. The barème, abatements, and direct-line rates described in this article apply. Gift tax is due in France and must be declared and paid through a French notaire.
Cross-border tax recognition: The donation will also need to be reported to the tax authority of the donor's country of residence, and possibly the donee's. In the UK, HMRC does not recognise usufruit as a concept equivalent to a UK interest in possession trust — the gift may be treated as a disposal at market value for UK capital gains tax purposes even if French law regards it as a gift. In every cross-border case, simultaneous advice from a French notaire and a tax adviser in the donor's country of residence is essential before the deed is signed.
EU succession regulation: For estates with cross-border EU dimensions, EU Regulation 650/2012 allows a person to choose the law of their nationality to govern their succession. A national who chooses a non-French law may find that the démembrement they structured under French law interacts awkwardly with the other country's estate administration. The interaction requires specialist analysis before any planning is put in place.
Since Brexit, British nationals are no longer EU citizens and cannot rely on the EU Succession Regulation to elect English law for their French assets. French succession law — including the réserve héréditaire (the forced heirshare for children) — applies to French immoveable property belonging to British nationals. The donation avec réserve d'usufruit can be used to pass French property to children while the donor is alive, outside the succession framework, giving the donor more flexibility than the French inheritance rules alone would permit. However, the gift will need to be declared in the UK, and a UK capital gains tax analysis is required — in many cases a UK CGT charge arises on the gift of the nue-propriété even where no French tax is due. Always obtain UK advice before completing the donation.
Our guides cover the complete démembrement framework — from the mechanics and tax calculation to the cross-border issues that affect British, American, and other non-French owners of French property.
Book a ConsultationThis article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. The donation avec réserve d'usufruit is a transaction with significant and irrevocable legal consequences. Its tax treatment depends on the specific ages, family structure, asset values, and applicable bilateral tax treaties involved. For non-residents and expats, additional issues arise under the law of the country of residence. Always seek advice from a qualified French notaire or avocat before completing any donation, and from a tax adviser in your country of residence regarding the cross-border consequences.
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Get Legal AdviceKey Legal References
Usufruit definition: right to use and enjoy another's property and collect its fruits; limited to holder's lifetime; cannot outlast the donor's death
Extinction of usufruit by death; usufruit cannot outlast the holder's lifetime; any clause attempting to extend it beyond death is void
Consolidation of full ownership on extinction of usufruit: no additional registration duty or succession tax due when usufruit extinguishes and nu-propriétaire becomes full owner
Mandatory barème fiscal: allocates usufruit/nue-propriété values by usufruitier’s age (9 age brackets from under 20 to 91+); mandatory for all donations, successions, and sales of démembered rights
Direct-line abatement: €100,000 per child per parent; renews every 15 years; applies to the declared value of the right transmitted (nue-propriété value, not full property value)
Maintenance and running repairs (réparations d’entretien): responsibility of the usufruitier; day-to-day upkeep, internal decoration, maintenance of installations
Grosses réparations (major structural repairs): responsibility of the nu-propriétaire; covers load-bearing walls, beams, roofing; nu-propriétaire cannot be compelled to fund them unless deed stipulates otherwise
Charges on revenues (taxe foncière and property taxes treated as charges of revenues): responsibility of the usufruitier
Réversibilité clause: legally characterised as a donation of present assets to the second usufruitier (surviving spouse), effective from date of constitutive deed, with enjoyment merely deferred
Quasi-usufruit on consumable assets: holder may use and dispose of the consumable asset freely; becomes debtor to nu-propriétaire for equivalent value at end of usufruit; debt deductible from estate for inheritance tax
Quasi-usufruit post-sale (abuse of law): quasi-usufruit arrangement constructed after the sale that allowed donor to reappropriate full sale proceeds without genuine indebtedness challenged as abuse of law
Quasi-usufruit provided for in original deed: valid; debt of restitution running from quasi-usufruitier’s estate to nu-propriétaire is genuine and enforceable
Transferred usufruit limited to transferor’s lifetime: where donor sells or transfers the usufruit, its duration is measured by the transferor’s remaining life, not the transferee’s
Réversion of usufruit between spouses: exempt from succession tax; second usufruit opening on first parent’s death generates no tax where the second usufruitier is the surviving spouse
