Non-resident does not always mean no French filing
A person who is not French tax resident can still have French-source income. Typical examples include French rental income, certain salaries, pensions, property sales or other income connected to France.
- French rental property
- French employment income
- French pensions
- Property capital gains
- Prior French tax number or notices
Treaties and source rules matter
Cross-border cases depend on income type, residence country and applicable treaty rules. The platform does not give treaty advice automatically; it collects facts so ORAVIA can decide whether the case is in scope.
- Residence country
- Income source
- Foreign tax paid
- French withholding
- Previous filings
Documents to collect
Prepare French property statements, income documents, foreign tax residence details and any previous French correspondence. Complex situations may require a quote rather than the base package.
- French tax notices
- Rental statements
- Sale documents
- Foreign tax residence proof
- Bank account information
Questions people ask
Can a non-resident use the same service?
Yes, if ORAVIA accepts the case after review. Some cases require a quote.
Is foreign income always taxable in France?
No. It depends on residence, source, treaty rules and income type.