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Paris, IL

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STR Regulations for Paris, Illinois

  • The search results you provided are about Paris, France (not Paris, Illinois). There is no Paris, Illinois–specific content in the sources.
  • If you meant Paris, IL, there are no city-specific short‑term rental regulations in the material you sent. Below, I provide the national rules that apply to STRs in France, including Paris, which you can use as the applicable framework unless you locate Paris, IL–specific municipal or county documents later.
  • No URLs were fetched here; only the content you supplied is referenced.

Short-Term Rentals in Paris, France: A Comprehensive Guide for Investors

Overview: Are short‑term rentals (STRs) allowed?

  • Yes. Short‑term rentals (also called “furnished tourist rentals” or “meublés de tourisme”) are allowed in Paris, subject to registration and other rules.
  • Key constraints in Paris include:
    • Registration with the city (mandatory for entire homes; not required for private rooms).
    • A 120‑night annual cap on entire‑home short‑term rentals in central Paris for your primary residence (90‑night cap can be set by the mayor from 2025).
    • For secondary homes: a “change of use” authorization is required, followed by city registration and a compensation payment to create housing stock.
    • A mandatory national registration system opens by May 20, 2026 (registration becomes universally required for all tourist furnished rentals).
    • Energy Performance Diagnostic (DPE) obligations ramp up starting in 2025; noncompliance exposes hosts to fines.
    • Reduced tax allowances apply to income earned from Jan 1, 2025 onward.

How to start a short‑term rental business in this market

  • Step 1: Decide what you will rent
    • Private room: registration is not required in Paris, but you should still check HOA rules, insurance, and fire safety.
    • Entire home:
      • Primary residence: you may proceed to registration (Paris portal), then list. Do not exceed 120 nights/year (90 nights if the mayor exercises new authority from 2025).
      • Secondary residence: you must obtain “change of use” authorization (Paris city hall), then declare your rental activity (CERFA 14004), and finally register with the city for your 13‑digit registration number before listing.
  • Step 2: Complete the Paris registration (teleservices portal)
    • Create an account, fill the declaration, and receive your 13‑digit registration number. Display this number on all platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com, VRBO, etc.).
    • For a secondary residence, obtain “change of use” approval first, then file the CERFA 14004 declaration, then register.
  • Step 3: Comply with national rules
    • All hosts must register in the national online service by May 20, 2026 and provide their tax notice for the rental property address when requested. A declaration is required before renting any tourist furnished accommodation.
  • Step 4: Prepare for energy performance (DPE)
    • New listings in “tense areas” applying for change of use must present a valid DPE:
      • A–E rating from Nov 21, 2024 to Dec 31, 2033.
      • A–D rating from Jan 1, 2034 onward.
    • Mayors can request a valid DPE at any time; failure to provide within two months triggers a €100/day administrative penalty. Renting without meeting DPE standards may lead to €5,000 fines.
  • Step 5: Track nights and stay within limits
    • Use platform counters and your own records. From 2025, mayors can lower the primary‑residence cap to 90 days per year.
  • Step 6: Tax and classification strategy
    • Decide whether to seek “classified furnished” status (higher allowable deductions but subject to stricter rules). New tax allowance rates apply to income received from Jan 1, 2025:
      • Classified and B&Bs: 50% allowance up to €77,700 (down from 71% up to €188,700).
      • Non‑classified: 30% allowance up to €15,000 (down from 50% up to €77,700).
  • Step 7: Check co‑ownership (condominium) rules
    • As of 2025, co‑owners who rent furnished tourist accommodations must inform the trustee. Condominiums can now prohibit STRs with a two‑thirds vote (previously unanimity).

Required documents, permits, licenses, and guidelines

  • Paris registration number (13‑digit) and display on listings.
  • For entire homes in central Paris:
    • If primary residence: Paris registration; track the 120‑night cap (or 90 nights from 2025 if the mayor exercises authority).
    • If secondary residence: “change of use” authorization from Paris city hall; CERFA 14004 declaration of rental activity; then city registration and a compensation payment.
  • National registration (by May 20, 2026) for all tourist furnished rentals; include your tax notice (avis d’imposition) with the property address as proof of primary residence if requested.
  • Energy Performance Diagnostic (DPE): required for new listings in tense areas requesting change of use (rating thresholds escalate in 2025–2034).
  • Proof of insurance and compliance with fire/safety norms (best practice).
  • HOA/condominium by‑law compliance (as of 2025, co‑owners must inform the trustee; STRs can be prohibited by two‑thirds vote).

Specific regulations at the city, county (department), and state (national) level

  • City of Paris
    • Registration required for entire homes; not required for private rooms.
    • Change of use required for secondary residences; followed by CERFA 14004, city registration, and compensation payment.
    • Primary‑residence annual cap: 120 nights in central Paris (60 days in the “队列 A” zone outside central arrondissements; verify your zone). From 2025, the mayor may lower the cap to 90 days for primary residences.
    • Penalties for unregistered listings: up to €5,000; for misuse of change of use/secondary residence rules: up to €50,000 per unit.
  • Department/County level (France is divided into departments; Paris is both city and department)
    • Mayors/department authorities receive expanded powers from 2025 to set quotas, designate restricted zones, and enforce registration.
  • National (France)
    • Mandatory declaration of all tourist furnished rentals and national registration by May 20, 2026.
    • Energy Performance Diagnostic (DPE) thresholds:
      • 2025–2033: minimum DPE A–E for new listings in tense areas requesting change of use; mayors can request DPE anytime and fine €100/day if not provided.
      • 2034 onward: minimum DPE A–D for all tourist furnished rentals.
    • Mayors may set the primary‑residence cap at up to 90 days per year (down from 120 days).
    • Civil fines for exceeding permitted days: up to €15,000.
    • Administrative fines:
      • €10,000 for failure to register with the national service.
      • €20,000 for false registration or use of a fake registration number.
    • Condominium reform (from 2025): co‑owners renting furnished tourist accommodations must inform the trustee; STRs can be prohibited by a two‑thirds majority vote.

Contact information (local authority in charge of STRs)

  • Paris City Hall—Tourist Furnished Rentals (Meublés de tourisme) registration portal:
    • Website: teleservices.paris.fr/meubles-tourisme/ (see Source 3)
  • City of Paris—FAQ and information on STRs and change of use:
    • Website: www.paris.fr/services-et-infos-pratiques/urbanisme-et-architecture/demandes-d-autorisations/exercer-une-activite-dans-un-logement-172 (see Source 3)
  • National declaration—Service‑Public portal for “Declare in the town hall a furnished tourist or a bed and breakfast”:
    • Website: www.service-public.gouv.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/R14321?lang=en (see Source 1)
  • CERFA 14004—France declaration of rental activity form:
    • Website: www.formulaires.modernisation.gouv.fr/gf/cerfa_14004.do (see Source 3)
  • Key hotline:
    • Allo Service Public (France): call 0 801 01 01 01 (see Source 1)

Links to source pages (direct references)

  • Service‑Public (France): Tourist rentals—new rules in 2025: www.service-public.gouv.fr/particuliers/actualites/A17883?lang=en (Source 1)
  • Rental Scale‑Up: France’s New Anti‑Airbnb Law—analysis: www.rentalscaleup.com/france-anti-airbnb-law-vacation-rental-regulations/ (Source 2)
  • Keycafe (Paris STR guide): blog.keycafe.com/understanding-short-term-rental-regulations-in-paris/ (Source 3)
  • Short‑Term Rentalz: Stricter tourist rental laws effective Jan 2025 (France): shorttermrentalz.com/news/france-stricter-laws-effective-january-2025/ (Source 4)
  • Booking.com Partner Hub: Laws and regulations for short‑term rentals (France page): partner.booking.com/en-gb/legal-resources/laws-and-regulations-short-term-rentals (Source 5)

Practical compliance checklist for Paris investors

  • Confirm property type and location (zone within Paris; “tense area” vs. other).
  • For private rooms: registration not required; confirm co‑ownership and insurance.
  • For entire homes:
    • Primary: register in Paris; track nights (120, or up to 90 from 2025); prepare national registration by May 20, 2026.
    • Secondary: secure change of use, file CERFA 14004, register with Paris, and budget the compensation payment.
  • Prepare DPE; ensure rating meets the threshold for your timeline (A–E through 2033, A–D from 2034).
  • Display Paris registration number on all platforms; include in property description.
  • Maintain records: nights booked, guest ledger, DPE certificate, CERFA filing, correspondence with the city, tax notice.
  • Review condo rules; if applicable, file the trustee notice from 2025 onward.
  • Reassess tax strategy for 2025+ based on classified vs. non‑classified status and the reduced allowances.
  • Set a monitoring cadence for new municipal bylaws (quotas, zones, and caps).

Notes for Paris, IL (if that was your target)

  • There are no Paris, Illinois short‑term rental specifics in your provided sources. If you proceed in Paris, IL, use the state‑level Illinois framework and local county/city ordinances (if any). The above guide cannot be assumed to apply to Paris, IL.

What do Airbnb hosts actually earn in Paris?

Paris hosts earn a median $19,900/year with $171 ADR and 54% occupancy.

Top performers pull in $33,035+ per year.

See the full Paris market breakdown →

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Paris

Market Saturation Score

036912
High Saturation
8/ 12
months with declining YoY revenue
8–10 declining months: high saturation - supply likely outpacing demand.
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Photos of Paris

Overview of Paris

Paris is a city in Edgar County, Illinois, 165 miles (266 km) south of Chicago and 90 miles (140 km) west of Indianapolis. The population was 8,291 at the 2020 census. It is the county seat and largest city of Edgar County.

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