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Home/Guides/Tax Declaration/Créteil (94)

French Tax Declaration for Expats: Complete Guide (2026) — Créteil (94)

If you lived in France for more than 183 days in a calendar year, you are a French tax resident and must file an annual declaration — even if you earned nothing. France uses a household-based system (quotient familial) and progressive tax brackets. Your first declaration must be done on paper; subsequent years are filed online at impots.gouv.fr. The deadline is typically mid-May to early June.

Cost

Free

Processing Time

N/A

Difficulty

Moderate

Specific to Créteil prefecture

Île-de-France — 94

The prefecture of Val-de-Marne in Créteil covers the southeastern suburbs of Paris. It is known for relatively efficient processing, with most applications handled within 2–4 months.

Address

21-29 avenue du Général de Gaulle, 94011 Créteil

Website

Official Website
ANEF online applications available

Required Documents

  • Tax identification number (numéro fiscal)

    Required
  • Proof of income

    Required
  • Pay slips (last 3 months)

    Required
  • Bank statements (last 3 months)

    Optional
  • Property tax notice (taxe foncière)

    Optional
  • Proof of foreign income

    Optional
  • Donation receipts (reçus fiscaux)

    Optional

Step-by-Step Process

  1. 1

    Create an account on impots.gouv.fr

    Official Website
  2. 2

    Receive your tax number (numéro fiscal)

  3. 3

    Review the pre-filled tax declaration

  4. 4

    Declare foreign income

  5. 5

    Submit your declaration online

  6. 6

    Receive your tax notice (avis d'imposition)

Practical Tips

Your first year in France, you must file a paper declaration (formulaire 2042) at your local tax office (centre des finances publiques). After that, everything moves online.

France has tax treaties with most countries to prevent double taxation. Report all worldwide income, then claim treaty credits on form 2047.

Your avis d’imposition (tax notice) is one of the most important documents in France — you need it for visa renewals, CAF, housing applications, and more.

Even with zero income, you must declare. A zero-income avis d’imposition can qualify you for reduced social charges and higher CAF benefits.

The prélèvement à la source (withholding tax) system means taxes are deducted from your salary monthly. Your declaration adjusts for the actual amount owed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to declare income from my home country?
Yes. As a French tax resident, you must declare worldwide income. However, France’s tax treaties prevent double taxation — you claim a credit for taxes already paid abroad using form 2047.
When is the tax declaration deadline?
Typically mid-May to early June, depending on your department. Paper declarations are due earlier (usually mid-May). Check impots.gouv.fr for exact dates each year.
What tax rate will I pay?
France uses progressive brackets: 0% up to ~11,600 €, 11% to ~29,579 €, 30% to ~84,577 €, 41% to ~181,917 €, and 45% above that (2026 brackets). The effective rate is usually much lower than the marginal rate.
What is the quotient familial?
France divides your household income by the number of "parts" (1 per adult, 0.5 per child for the first two, then 1 per additional child) before applying tax brackets. This significantly reduces taxes for families.

Related Guides

Visa RenewalFirst Visa ApplicationCAF BenefitsHealth Insurance (CPAM)Prefecture AppointmentHousing
Official Website

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