The True Cost of Buying Property in France: What Currency Exchange Could Mean for Your Budget
Purchasing a property in France is one of life's great milestones. For many buyers, it represents years of planning, whether the dream is a stone farmhouse in the Périgord, a sundrenched villa in Languedoc or a pied-à-terre in the heart of Lyon. Yet most buyers can be caught off guard by one of the most significant and least discussed costs in the entire transaction: currency exchange.
Every euro you spend on a French property has to come from somewhere. For buyers paying in pounds, that means converting sterling and the rate at which that conversion happens can quietly add or subtract thousands from your budget. Understanding this dynamic before you make an offer, rather than discovering it at completion, is one of the most valuable steps you can take.
Regency FX, a specialist currency exchange provider has helped countless buyers navigate exactly this challenge. In this guide, written in partnership with them, we walk through the key stages of a French property purchase and explain where currency exposure arises, what it costs in practice and how to protect yourself.
Why the Exchange Rate Deserves Your Attention
A rate movement of a few percent between the day you agree a price and the day you complete is entirely plausible over a period of months. On a large property purchase, that movement can add thousands of pounds to the final cost for the same bricks and mortar. This is not a hypothetical risk. It is one of the most common financial surprises buyers encounter when purchasing abroad and it is largely preventable.
Stage One: Setting Your Budget Before the Search
The currency question begins before you find the property. Knowing what your pounds will buy in euros today and building in a margin for potential rate movement gives you a more honest budget to search within.
Regency FX recommend getting in touch with a currency specialist at the very start of your search, not when you have found the property but before. At this stage, a specialist can walk you through the current rate, model the impact of potential movements on your target budget and explain the tools available to protect it.
One of those tools is a forward contract: an agreement that allows you to lock in today's exchange rate for a future payment. With a modest deposit, you can fix the pound cost of your euros before you have even had an offer accepted, giving you a firm foundation to budget from.
Stage Two: The Compromis de Vente and Initial Deposit
Once you agree a price and move to the compromis de vente, the preliminary contract that formalises the purchase in France, an initial deposit falls due, typically within a couple of weeks of signing.
This is often the moment buyers first think about currency exchange and by then the clock is already ticking. High street banks are a common default but they come with a significant drawback: their exchange rate margins sit well above the real mid-market rate. On a deposit of this size, that margin can cost considerably more than necessary before any transfer fees are applied.
Critically, this cost is invisible. It is embedded in the rate rather than shown as a separate charge, which means many buyers never notice it at all.
Using a specialist currency provider for this payment instead can deliver a rate substantially closer to the true market rate. Regency FX charges no transfer fees and provides each client with a dedicated account manager from the outset, someone who oversees the timing and execution of every payment throughout the transaction.
Stage Three: Notary Fees and Ancillary Costs
French property purchases involve notary fees (frais de notaire) that can be considerable. For older properties these are a meaningful percentage of the purchase price, meaning the total currency requirement is significantly higher than the headline figure alone. New build properties attract lower fees but they remain a substantial sum.
These costs are paid in euros, usually at or before completion. Many buyers convert this amount separately from the main purchase price, often in a rush as the completion date approaches. Each of those conversions carries the same exchange rate risk and a last-minute bank transfer rarely secures a favourable rate.
The better approach is to plan all your euro requirements together. Regency FX's account managers are experienced in mapping out the full currency exposure across every payment, deposit, fees and final balance, and structuring conversions to minimise overall cost and avoid timing errors.
Stage Four: The Acte de Vente and Final Completion Payment
The acte de vente is the final legal step in a French property purchase, signed at the notary's office with all parties present. Before or on the day of signing, the full outstanding balance of the purchase price must be available in euros and cleared in the notary's account.
This is the largest single currency conversion in the process and two risks apply simultaneously: rate movement and transfer timing.
Rate movement is the concern we have already addressed. The difference between your agreed purchase price and what it costs in sterling can shift materially between offer and completion, particularly on a transaction that spans several months.
Transfer timing is equally important and often underestimated. French notaries will not proceed with completion if funds have not cleared. Delays arising from SWIFT routing, compliance checks or banking processing times can postpone a signing with legal and financial consequences.
Regency FX manage this risk directly. Their account managers coordinate the timing of completion transfers around notary deadlines and can confirm receipt of cleared funds ahead of the signing date, a level of personal oversight that banks and online transfer platforms simply do not offer on high-value transactions.
What the Numbers Look Like in Practice
For a buyer purchasing a French property, here is a realistic comparison of the currency costs involved:

The saving on a transaction of this size, when working with a specialist rather than a bank, is routinely measured in thousands of pounds. The difference in exchange rate margin alone can be significant and it compounds across every payment made during the transaction.
The Role of a Dedicated Account Manager
What distinguishes a specialist currency provider from a bank or online transfer service is not simply the rate. It is the human expertise and coordination that comes with it.
At Regency FX, every client is assigned a dedicated account manager at no additional cost.
That person:
* Provides a clear, honest assessment of current rates and available options
* Advises on whether to lock in a rate or monitor the market for a better entry point
* Tracks GBP/EUR movements and provides timely updates
* Coordinates transfers around notary deadlines to ensure funds clear on time
When a French property transaction involves strict legal timelines and significant sums of money, this kind of dedicated support makes a material difference. Estate agents, notaries and lawyers are each focused on their own part of the process. Having a currency specialist focused exclusively on yours means nothing falls through the gaps.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are all the costs involved in buying a property in France? Beyond the purchase price, budget for notary fees which vary depending on whether the property is old or new, plus any survey, legal or agent fees. Everything is payable in euros so your total currency requirement is considerably higher than the headline price alone.
When is the right time to think about currency exchange? As early as possible, ideally before you begin your search in earnest. Having a clear picture of how your funds translate into euros helps you set a realistic budget and gives you time to explore rate protection tools before the pressure of a deadline arrives.
What is a forward contract and how does it protect me? It lets you lock in today's exchange rate for a payment you will make in the future. You secure it with a deposit on the amount you want to convert. For a French property purchase, that means the sterling cost you agree today stays the same even if the rate shifts before you complete.
Can buyers purchase property in France without any restrictions? Yes, there are no restrictions. Whether you are buying a permanent home, a holiday property or an investment, the process is the same. A notary oversees the transaction and the two key stages are the compromis de vente and the final acte de vente.
How does Cle France work with Regency FX? Cle France has partnered with Regency FX to give buyers access to specialist currency support as part of their search. If you would like an introduction, just mention it when you enquire and we will connect you directly.
A Final Word
The currency element of a French property purchase is not a minor administrative detail. Buyers who address it early and work with a specialist who understands the French property process consistently achieve better outcomes than those who leave it to their bank or deal with it at the last minute.
Regency FX offer a free, no-obligation quote at any stage of your property search. Whether you are beginning to explore the market or approaching a completion date, it costs nothing to find out how much more of your money you could retain.
To get your free quote, contact Regency FX directly here.
This article has been produced in partnership with Regency FX, specialists in currency exchange for international property transactions. Cle France is the French Property Network, connecting buyers with properties, professionals and resources across France
For everything you need to know about French property visit www.clefrance.co.uk




