Paris Cracks Down: The New Reality for Short Term Rentals in the French Capital

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Wire Editorial Team

Wire Editorial Team SCALE

The era of unchecked holiday letting in Paris is officially over. As one of the largest hospitality markets in Europe, the French capital is currently home to an estimated 75,000 short-term rental listings. However, mounting concerns over a severe housing shortage for residents have prompted city officials to take unprecedented action. A wave of aggressive new regulations is completely transforming how property managers and individual hosts operate within the city.

The Stricter 90 Night Limit and Mandatory City Registration

For years, Parisian hosts operating out of their primary residences were permitted to rent their homes to tourists for up to 120 days annually. Under the newly implemented regulations, this allowance has been significantly reduced. Primary residences can now only be rented out for a maximum of 90 nights per calendar year.

To enforce this new cap, the city has made property registration completely mandatory. Every single host must now apply for an official registration number from the Paris city hall before they can legally welcome a guest. This unique identification code must be clearly displayed on all public advertisements. Authorities are utilising this digital paper trail to track exact booking numbers across all websites, making it impossible to bypass the 90-night threshold by spreading calendar availability across different booking channels.

Unprecedented Financial Penalties

The Parisian government is no longer relying on gentle warnings. Authorities have massively stepped up their physical and digital audits to identify illegal operations. The financial consequences for ignoring these rules are severe and designed to act as a powerful deterrent.

Hosts found operating without the required city registration or exceeding their annual night allowance face immediate legal action. In cases involving illegal commercial operations or unauthorised changes of property use, fines for non-compliance have reached staggering amounts, occasionally exceeding 100,000 euros. The city is sending a clear message that illegal hospitality businesses will be penalised until they are entirely unprofitable.

The End of Platform Immunity

Perhaps the most structural shift in the French market is how the law now treats the booking platforms themselves. For years, massive digital travel agencies argued that they were merely neutral noticeboards and could not be held responsible if a host broke local housing laws.

Following a landmark ruling by the French courts, this defence is no longer valid. The judiciary determined that booking companies play an active role in structuring and promoting accommodations. Consequently, these corporations can now be held directly responsible for hosting illegal listings or unauthorised sublets. This ruling is forcing platforms to proactively verify the legality of their Parisian inventory or face significant legal damages themselves.

The European Central Registration System

These local crackdowns in France are operating in tandem with sweeping international changes. New European Union regulations will soon introduce a centralised registration system to help cities track housing data more effectively.

This upcoming digital infrastructure will force platforms to share exact monthly booking activity directly with municipal governments. Once fully integrated, the city of Paris will no longer need to manually hunt for illegal listings. The data flow will automatically highlight any property that breaches the 90-night limit or operates without a valid registration, triggering swift and automated enforcement. For professional property managers and investors, absolute regulatory compliance is now the only viable business strategy.

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