-
French MP presses ministry over easier visas for second-home owners
Philippe Lottiaux says he regularly hears of problems from British homeowners in his Var constituency
-
Photos: The best places to buy a second home in Provence named in new ranking
The list considered 28 criteria to rank 90 villages in the sought-after region
-
Can a French residency card holder buy a second-home in EU and spend time there?
Beware of over-extending your stay in another country
French TV licence for my second home?
Do I need a French TV licence at my holiday home? Are there detector vans?

If you have a television in the property, you need to pay the contribution à l’audiovisuel public (€139 in 2019) along with your taxe d’habitation local property tax.
This holds even if you do not watch French TV and use the TV only for videos.
You pay once no matter how many TVs you have at the home.
If not, there is a box to cross on the front of your French income tax form to state you do not have a TV and should not therefore be charged for a licence.
If you do not declare for French income tax, you will need to contact your tax office directly to inform them.
Checking involves information sharing relating to TV purchases, subscriptions to paid-for channels or internet packages with television. Home visits do also happen.