Review of income France

Review of income France

French banks also test whether your income is sufficient to obtain a mortgage. The method of testing varies from bank to bank. Banks generally allow up to 30%-39% of gross income to be spent on loan charges, rent and alimony. Some French banks place more value on residual income than loan percentage as an assessment standard. Some French banks still deduct Health Insurance Act contributions from income before testing.

Most French banks require that income from salary derives from permanent employment. Some French banks are less strict about this or do not actively check it. The Dutch phenomenon of the declaration of intent is not known in France.

It is possible to get a mortgage if the income comes from your own business. See further explanation on this under “entrepreneurs.”

French banks look at retirement income from a certain age. Exactly what age varies from bank to bank. Sometimes they then use a certain weighting percentage (“pondering”) of current income as future retirement income, sometimes they look at the actual pension to be received.

If the pension income has already started then French banks will test with that pension income provided it is a pension guaranteed for the duration of the mortgage applied for.

Most French banks include existing rental income as income. In doing so, it varies from bank to bank what percentage of it is taken as income. One does not look at the net rental income: so the existing mortgage expense of a leased property will be considered in its entirety in the review of the mortgage application.

If the feasibility of a case depends on future rental income, an application will usually not be approved.

If there is no or little regular income, but the income comes from assets, some French banks are willing to look at the size of the assets to assume a certain fixed income from them. This sometimes assumes a fixed rate of return, or – if the income is demonstrably “perpetual” – looks at actual returns achieved.

For households with gross annual incomes higher than €150,000, there are more mortgage options. Contact us about this for more information.

Existing spending patterns of their prospective clients are also tested by French banks. People like to see that there is a certain “savings capacity”; or in other words, that there is money left over to save each month.

In addition, more and more French banks are also testing the size of savings and how much savings remain after the purchase in France.

French banks do not include income from WAO or WIA as income. Income from private disability insurance is generally included as income.