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Property slump eases in France but sellers still need to be patient
The drop in prices is steadying but the situation is not the same across the country
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Small increase in notaire fees for property buyers expected in France
The fee is expected to generate revenue of €30 million a year to fight against coastal erosion
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More owners will pay French empty home tax in December 2024
The criteria for charging the taxe sur les logements vacants (TLV) were extended last year
French property watch - Midi-Pyrénées North
DEPARTMENTS: Aveyron, Tarn-et-Garonne, Tarn, Lot MAIN CITIES: Rodez, Millau, Villefranche-de-Rouergue, Cahors, Figeac, Gourdon, Albi, Castres, Montauban, Castelsarrasin
There are quieter, more rural areas of France than the northern end of the former Midi-Pyrénées region, which has now been subsumed into the larger Occitanie ... but not many.
The 58,000-population Montauban, capital of Tarn-et-Garonne, is the largest town in the four departments, which boast a total area that is a little larger than Wales and has a combined population about that of Birmingham.
The landscape veers from the sheer drama of the Causse du Larzac moonscape in the Aveyron, to the rolling, easy-on-the-eye green hills, winding rivers, vineyard-dotted countryside and shamelessly pretty villages of the Tarn that have prompted some to dub the department “The Tuscany of France”. The area has reasonable transport links. The roads are generally well maintained, while Rodez has an airport with flights to the UK, and the European hub of Toulouse is within easy travelling distance.
It is about to get easier still. After more than 20 years, approval has finally been given for a motorway connecting Castres to Toulouse, making the Tarn town even more attractive to property buyers wanting an easy commute to the Pink City while avoiding the price tag of actually living there.
The advice, then, is to get in quick, as property prices look set to rise in the years to come from their current Notaires de France averages of €1,270/m2 in the Tarn; €1,060 in the Aveyron; €1,300 in Tarn-et-Garonne; and €1,200 in Lot to more closely match the €2,250/m2 average in the Toulousain department of Haute-Garonne.