in which municipalities has it increased the most (and why)?

by time news

2023-09-08 17:12:24

Every fall, the little music of the property tax returns. This local tax, due no later than October 21 this year, is increasing in almost all municipalities, sometimes piano, sometimes fortissimo, with levies doubled in certain municipalities. What are the reasons for this increase and why is it not uniform?

What is the property tax?

The “property tax” is a generic term grouping together a set of taxes (on built properties, non-built properties, and the collection of household waste) set up as such at the beginning of the 20th century – but it exists in several forms since Antiquity. This tax only concerns owners, whether or not they reside in their property. To this was added until last year the housing tax, payable in principle by all inhabitants, tenants or owners – it was completely abolished for main residences on January 1, 2023.

The amount of the property tax depends both on the value of the property on the rental market and on the taxes that local authorities (commune and community of municipalities or agglomeration) wish to collect. Since 2011, the regions can no longer claim a share of property tax and since 2021, town halls have received the share which was formerly allocated to the departments, the State having undertaken to compensate “to the nearest euro” the missing revenue resulting from the abolition of the housing tax.

The calculation is based on half the rental value of the property, revised each year by the Ministry of the Economy to take inflation into account – a deeper reform including the value of the sector or surface is scheduled for 2028. The tax rate set by each local authority is then applied to this base.

In 2023, the property tax is on average 35.6% according to data made available by the General Directorate of Public Finances (DGFIP), but it includes significant variations. The municipal rate in the town of Chambord is 80.98% – six times more than in Neuilly-sur-Seine (Hauts-de-Seine, 13.05%), and nine times more than in Mamoudzou ( Mayotte, 9.17%).

What are the reasons for its increase?

First part of the equation, the rental value was revalued by 7.1% this year at the national level, which constitutes the biggest increase in almost forty years. This increase applies to all municipalities. On the other hand, the second part of the equation, the tax rate, is the responsibility of the municipality.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Why the property tax will soar this year

The largest increases correspond to “catch-ups” taxation hitherto lower than the average, justify the municipalities. “In a context of successive reforms of local taxation, property taxes are one of the last fiscal levers for communities”, indeed recognized the Court of Auditors, at the beginning of 2023.

When it comes to finding additional income, in addition to State grants, the municipalities are not equal in front of their books of accounts – whether they are taxes on real estate transactionson commercial surfaces, income from local public services or European structural funds.

And, even when a city has the capacity to generate additional revenue, the property tax remains essential for its functioning: the judges of the Court of Auditors calculated that in 2021, the property tax represented almost 30% of municipal revenuesan average which varies greatly from one community to another, depending on the rate chosen but also depending on the number of new constructions and therefore new owners.

On the expenditure side, municipalities have suffered the explosion in energy costs, up to 400% to 500%, according to the Urban France association, which represents the twenty-two metropolises and large cities of France. In addition, high interest rates on loans strain the budgets of communities which have a significant debt.

Where is it increasing the most?

If we put aside the national revaluation of 7.1% (which applies to the theoretical rent serving as a basis for taxation), the rate applied by the communities has evolved in contrasting ways depending on the municipalities. “We haven’t increased the property tax in years”explains to Monde the mayor of Charmes-en-l’Angle, a small town in Haute-Marne, where the tax rate has increased the most this year (+114%). ” At the same timespecifies Charles Dubois, several resources have disappeared: we no longer have wood to sell and the psychiatric hospital which rented part of the town hall has given notice. »

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In Paris, the property tax was “ the lowest in France, at 13.5% compared to 41.61% on average in large French cities”, said the mayor, Anne Hidalgo. She justifies this increase (which breaks her campaign promise to freeze taxes) by insufficient state allocations. In Meudon, the property tax jumps to almost 30% and thus joins its neighbors in Hauts-de-Seine such as Vanves or Sèvres.

In the end, around 14% of municipalities increased their property tax rate, while only 1.3% lowered the tax burden. (-50% approximately in Berlancourt, in Aisne, or in Bajonnette, in Gers). Between the two, the vast majority of some 35,000 French municipalities have opted for the status quo.

#municipalities #increased

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