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The French rental market uses a room-count classification system that confuses most newcomers. Instead of "one-bedroom" or "two-bedroom," French listings use codes like T2, F3, or "studio." These codes refer to the number of main habitable rooms — not bedrooms — and follow rules set by French housing law. Understanding the system takes about five minutes and will immediately make French rental listings readable.
Key takeaways
- The T/F number counts pièces principales (main habitable rooms), not bedrooms.
- T and F designations are interchangeable: T2 and F2 are the same thing.
- A studio has an open-plan kitchen; a T1 has a separate enclosed kitchen. That is the only difference.
- A room must be at least 9 m² with a 2.20 m ceiling height to qualify as a main room.
- Kitchen, bathroom, WC, hallway, and storage never count toward the classification number.
- T5 and above covers large family apartments; anything labelled "T1 bis" has a mezzanine or extra sleeping area that does not reach the threshold for a full pièce principale.
The T/F numbering system
The classification is based on the number of pièces principales — main habitable rooms. The "T" stands for type and the "F" stands for fonction (or sometimes just pièces). Both refer to exactly the same thing. Usage varies by region and era: you will see F-designations more often in older Parisian listings and in some southern cities, while T-designations dominate current listings nationwide.
The number that follows — 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 — tells you how many main rooms the apartment contains. It says nothing about which rooms are bedrooms and which are living rooms. A T3 could be a living room with two bedrooms, or a living room, a dining room, and one bedroom. The designation only guarantees the count.
ℹ Info: You may also see listings use "pièces" directly. "Un 3-pièces" means the same as a T3 or F3. The terms are fully interchangeable in practice.
What counts as a main room (pièce principale)?
Under French housing law — specifically the décret du 30 janvier 2002 — a room qualifies as a pièce principale only if it meets all three of the following criteria:
- Minimum floor area of 9 m².
- Minimum ceiling height of 2.20 m, or a minimum volume of at least 20 m³.
- Natural daylight from a window or skylight opening directly to the outside.
The following rooms never count as pièces principales regardless of their size:
| Room type | Counts as pièce principale? |
|---|---|
| Living room (séjour) | Yes, if it meets area, height, and daylight criteria |
| Bedroom ≥ 9 m² with natural light | Yes |
| Open-plan kitchen/living area (combined) | Counts as one pièce principale (not two) |
| Separate kitchen (cuisine fermée) | No |
| Bathroom / shower room | No |
| WC / toilet | No |
| Hallway / landing / corridor | No |
| Mezzanine without full ceiling height | No |
Each apartment type explained
Here is what each classification means in practice, from the smallest to the largest.
Studio
A studio is a single main room in which the kitchen is open-plan and integrated into the living and sleeping space. By definition, a studio has only one pièce principale. There is no separate bedroom. The living area, sleeping area, and kitchen occupy the same room. Studios are the most compact apartments on the French market and are common in city centres where space is expensive.
T1 / F1
A T1 has one main room — typically used as a combined living room and bedroom — plus a separate, enclosed kitchen. The separate kitchen is the defining feature that distinguishes a T1 from a studio. The kitchen has its own walls and a door. It does not count as a pièce principale, but its presence as a distinct room raises the apartment out of the studio category.
T1 bis
"T1 bis" is an informal, non-statutory designation. It describes a T1 that includes a mezzanine level, alcove, or secondary sleeping area which does not qualify as a full pièce principale — usually because the space is under 9 m² or lacks a ceiling height of 2.20 m. The "bis" signals that the apartment offers more sleeping flexibility than a standard T1. This layout is common in Haussmann-era buildings in Paris, where high ceilings allowed mezzanine installations. Because it is informal, the threshold applied varies between landlords and agents.
T2 / F2
A T2 has two pièces principales. The typical layout is a living room and one separate bedroom, plus a kitchen, bathroom, and WC. In smaller T2s, especially outside Paris, the kitchen may be open-plan onto the living room, counting as part of the first pièce principale, with one separate bedroom forming the second. A T2 does not mean two bedrooms. It means two main rooms total, one of which is usually the living room.
T3 / F3
A T3 has three pièces principales. The standard layout is a living room and two bedrooms. Some T3s are configured as a living room, a dining room, and one bedroom — particularly in older properties where a dedicated dining room was conventional. At this size, an apartment comfortably accommodates a couple with one child or two adults sharing.
T4 / F4
A T4 has four pièces principales. Common configurations are a living room and three bedrooms, or a living room, a dining room, and two bedrooms. T4s are family-sized apartments and are found more readily in suburban areas and in larger buildings. In Paris, a T4 above 80 m² is a premium product.
T5 and above
T5 and above covers large family apartments or, in some cases, houses. A T5 has five pièces principales — typically a living room and four bedrooms, or a living room, a dining room, and three bedrooms. T6 and T7 designations exist but are rare in urban apartment buildings. At this level, the property often functions more like a maison de ville (townhouse) than a standard flat.
Studio vs T1: why the kitchen matters
The only functional difference between a studio and a T1 is the kitchen. In a studio, the kitchen is open-plan: it sits in the same room as the living and sleeping area, with no separating wall or door. In a T1, the kitchen is a separate room with a wall and a door enclosing it.
This distinction matters for two practical reasons. First, studios are typically cheaper and smaller — the open-plan kitchen takes no additional floor area away from the main room. Second, the open-plan kitchen in a studio counts as part of the single pièce principale. It does not add a room to the count. In a T1, the enclosed kitchen remains excluded from the count, but its presence changes the apartment's classification from studio to T1.
In terms of livability, a T1 generally offers more separation between cooking smells and sleeping space. Studios require more careful ventilation management, especially in smaller footprints.
Tip: When viewing a listing labelled "studio," always check whether the kitchen is truly open-plan or whether a frosted-glass partition or curtain is being used to suggest separation. A genuinely separate kitchen would make the property a T1, not a studio — and that distinction can affect rent benchmarks and tenant expectations.
How to read French rental listings
A typical French rental listing looks like this:
T2 - 45 m² - Paris 11e - 1 400 EUR/mois CC
Each element carries specific meaning:
| Element | Meaning |
|---|---|
| T2 | Two pièces principales (main habitable rooms) |
| 45 m² | Total surface habitable (total liveable floor area) |
| Paris 11e | Located in the 11th arrondissement of Paris |
| 1 400 EUR/mois CC | 1,400 EUR per month charges comprises — all-in rent including service charges |
The surface habitable is the total liveable floor area as defined by law. It includes the kitchen and bathroom but excludes any space where the ceiling height is below 1.80 m. This means attic rooms and mezzanines with sloped ceilings report a lower surface habitable than their total footprint.
Context matters for the floor area figure. A T2 of 30 m² is a very compact two-room flat — functional but not spacious. A T2 of 55 m² is genuinely comfortable, even by Paris standards. Always read the surface habitable alongside the classification, not instead of it.
ℹ Info: "CC" means charges comprises — the rent includes service charges (building maintenance, caretaker, shared utilities). "HC" means hors charges — service charges are billed separately on top of the listed rent. Always check which applies before comparing prices.
Minimum size rules for rental properties
French law sets minimum standards for rental properties through the loi du 6 juillet 1989 and associated décrets. A property is considered indécent — legally unfit to rent as a principal residence — if any of the following apply:
- The main room is under 9 m².
- The ceiling height is under 2.20 m in the main room.
- The total floor area is under 9 m² for a single person (or under 16 m² for two people).
The practical minimum for a habitable studio in France is 9 m². Properties below this threshold cannot legally be offered as a principal residence. Landlords who rent out non-compliant properties are liable to be ordered by a court to carry out works or to reimburse rent.
The Agence Nationale pour l'Information sur le Logement (ANIL) offers a free advisory service for tenants who believe their property does not meet the logement décent standard. The local préfecture or the Tribunal judiciaire can also receive complaints.
Warning: Listings for chambres de bonne (former maid's rooms) often appear on rental platforms at attractive prices. Many are under 9 m² and have been technically unlawful to rent as a main residence since 2023 regulations tightened enforcement in Paris. If a listing looks very cheap and very small, check the floor area against the 9 m² minimum before signing any contract.