How to Find a Roommate in France: A Step-by-Step Guide to Colocation

Finding a roommate (colocation) in France is one of the most effective ways to reduce rent in expensive cities. This guide walks you through every step: where to search, what to say in your profile, and how to protect yourself legally once you find the right person.

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Key takeaways

  • La Colocation (lacolocation.fr) and Appartager.com are the two largest dedicated roommate-finding platforms in France.
  • A compelling colocation profile includes a photo, lifestyle description, schedule, and budget — not just a name and city.
  • Under French law, co-tenants can either both sign the main lease (co-titulaires) or one tenant sublets to the other (sous-location, with landlord consent).
  • The main tenant cannot sublet without the landlord's written consent. Doing so without permission can result in lease termination.
  • Always meet a potential roommate in person before agreeing, and check that your schedules, cleanliness standards, and noise levels are compatible.

Why colocation?

Colocation (shared housing) is widespread in France, particularly in Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, and other university cities where rents are high relative to average incomes. Sharing a two or three-bedroom apartment can reduce housing costs by 30–50% compared to renting a studio alone.

For newcomers to France, colocation also provides an immediate social network and someone to help navigate practical life. The French colocation market is well-developed: there are dedicated platforms, standardised contracts, and clear legal rules.

Where to search

Several platforms cater specifically to the French colocation market. The table below lists the most useful options, along with who they suit best.

Platform Best for Cost
lacolocation.fr Largest French-specific database Free (basic), paid features available
appartager.com Wide national coverage Free (basic)
leboncoin.fr General classifieds, good volume Free
facebook.com/groups Local city groups, fast responses Free
immojeune.com Students and young professionals Free

ℹ Info: Most Paris colocation listings move quickly. Set up email alerts on platforms with that feature and respond within hours of a listing appearing.

Writing a strong profile

Whether you are looking for a room or looking for someone to fill a room in your apartment, your profile is your first impression. A strong profile includes:

  • A clear, friendly photo
  • Your name, age, and profession or student status
  • Your schedule: early riser or night owl, working from home or in an office
  • Your lifestyle: smoker or non-smoker, pets, cooking habits, how often you have guests
  • Your budget and preferred area
  • How long you are looking to stay

Profiles that read as thoughtful and specific receive significantly more relevant responses than generic ones. Avoid one-liners such as "I'm clean and quiet" — everyone says that. Give concrete details instead.

💡 Tip: Write in French if you can — even imperfect French signals that you will be able to communicate with a French-speaking landlord or neighbours.

Screening potential roommates

Finding someone who looks good on paper is only the first step. The screening process below helps you assess real compatibility before you commit.

  1. Step 1: Initial message exchange

    Look for prompt, clear responses. Vague or overly brief replies are a yellow flag. Someone who cannot communicate clearly in writing often cannot communicate clearly in person either.

  2. Step 2: Video call

    A 15-minute video call reveals more than 10 messages. Discuss schedules, cleanliness standards, and whether guests are frequent. If they seem reluctant to video call, treat that as a signal worth noting.

  3. Step 3: In-person meeting at the apartment

    Visit the apartment together if possible. See how the other person behaves in the space. Do they look at the kitchen? Do they ask about storage? Practical questions suggest practical thinking.

  4. Step 4: Check compatibility on friction points

    The issues that most commonly cause colocation problems are noise levels, kitchen cleanliness, shared versus separate food, bathroom schedules, and guest frequency. Discuss these directly rather than assuming agreement.

  5. Step 5: Request references

    If you are filling a room in a lease you hold, request a reference from a previous flatmate or landlord. Most people who have been good roommates will have someone willing to confirm it.

⚠ Warning: Never pay a deposit or advance rent to a private individual before you have visited the apartment and confirmed it exists. Colocation scams — where a "landlord" posts fake ads and requests payment before viewing — are common in Paris and Lyon.

Agreeing house rules

Before moving in together, agree in writing on the following:

  • Rent and charges split
  • How household bills are divided (electricity, internet, water)
  • Cleaning responsibilities for shared areas
  • Guest policy: overnight guests, frequency, advance notice
  • Quiet hours
  • Shared versus separate food and household supplies
  • Notice period if one person wants to leave

A simple shared document reduces friction later. Even a WhatsApp message acknowledged by both parties creates a reference point if disputes arise.

ℹ Info: A written house rules document has no formal legal status, but it can prevent misunderstandings. Some co-tenants use a shared spreadsheet to track household costs and contributions month by month.

Frequently asked questions

Can a landlord refuse to allow colocation in my apartment?

Yes. A landlord can restrict or prohibit subletting (sous-location) in the lease agreement. For co-titulaires arrangements, the landlord must agree to add additional names to the lease. If your current lease is a standard individual tenancy, you cannot simply invite a roommate to move in and split the rent without the landlord's knowledge and, in most cases, consent. Check your lease before approaching a potential roommate.

What happens to the lease if my roommate leaves?

In a co-titulaires arrangement, the departing roommate must give written notice (typically one to three months depending on the lease and location). Once they leave, their solidarity obligation under the clause de solidarité ends six months after their notice period, under the Loi ALUR. The remaining tenants are responsible for finding a replacement and getting the landlord to add the new person to the lease. The lease itself continues — it does not end because one co-tenant leaves.

Do both roommates need to be on the lease in France?

Not necessarily. Under sous-location, only the main tenant is on the lease. However, the roommate (subletter) has fewer legal protections in this structure: their tenancy depends entirely on the main tenant's lease remaining active. For better protection, the co-titulaires structure — where both names are on the lease — is preferable. When you are moving into an existing colocation, ask to see the current lease and check which structure applies.

Can I find a roommate for a bail mobilité lease?

Yes, but with restrictions. The bail mobilité (mobility lease) is a short-term furnished tenancy of 1 to 10 months. It was designed for professionals on assignment, students, and people in training. Subletting a room under a bail mobilité is subject to the same rules as any other lease: you need the landlord's written consent. The short duration of the lease means colocation arrangements under bail mobilité tend to be informal. Always confirm the landlord's position in writing before inviting a roommate.

How do I handle a roommate who stops paying their share of the rent?

In a co-titulaires arrangement with a clause de solidarité, the landlord can hold any or all co-tenants responsible for the full rent — not just the non-paying party's share. This means you may be required to cover the shortfall. If your roommate is in financial difficulty, communicate directly and early. If they are simply refusing to pay, you can contact the landlord, who may be willing to pursue the matter directly. For ongoing non-payment, seek advice from ADIL (Agence Nationale pour l'Information sur le Logement), which provides free legal guidance on rental disputes.

Sources

WH

Editorial team

WunderHub editors

Our editorial team writes practical, evidence-based guides for renting and letting in Europe. Every piece is fact-checked and refreshed quarterly.

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