Buying London property from France? Use Unwildered’s AI for conveyancing to review the title, lease, searches, auction legal pack or agent papers before you bid or commit.
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  • Start with money movement and source-of-funds evidence before you become attached to a London flat.

  • London flats are often leasehold, so building fees, ground rent, lease length, required permissions and planned large repairs can matter more than appearance.

  • Auction property can sometimes be cheaper, but you may have to accept the property in its current condition and you may not get the usual chance to inspect it.

  • Use the free report first; the full review costs about EUR 35, runs a 40-point check and can generate an email asking the seller or agent for missing information.

What you will learn

  • 1. The money route from your country into the UK

  • 2. How UK source-of-funds checks work

  • 3. Mortgage financing: local bank, UK lender or cash?

  • 4. How buying in London differs from home

  • 5. Conveyancing, searches and surveys

  • 6. Covenants, listed buildings and conservation limits

  • 7. Leasehold, freehold and estate fees

  • 8. Taxes, rental income and ownership structure

  • 9. Auction legal packs and the about EUR 35 due-diligence workflow

  • 10. Representative cost example and document checklist

This guide is for buyers in France used to notaire-led transactions but considering a London leasehold or auction purchase. It is intentionally practical. London property can be attractive because demand can be high, international lenders understand the legal system, and there are many past sale prices to help compare value. Problems can also become expensive. A seller is not there to protect you, an estate agent usually acts for the seller, and at auction you may become legally committed before you have time to ask the obvious questions.

If you are searching for how to buy property in London, UK from France, the core steps are simple to name but technical to execute: move money cleanly, prove source of funds, understand UK taxes, review the title and lease, check the building, and only then decide whether the investment price makes sense.

The currency examples use an illustrative planning rate of £1 = EUR 1.17. Replace it with the live rate from your bank on the transfer day, because a 2% currency move on a London purchase can be bigger than the legal fee.

Why London may still make sense

  • For a French buyer, London can be a useful second property market: close enough to understand, different enough to diversify, and still attractive for study, work and international tenants.

  • A London flat can also be a flexible family asset. It might support a child at university, hold value in British pounds, or create a rental income stream outside the French market.

  • The key is accepting that England is not France with different paperwork. Without a notaire-led structure, the buyer must be deliberate about searches, survey, title and leasehold documents.

1. Money route: can you get funds into the UK?

France is not usually about exchange-control permission; it is about tax reporting, bank compliance and understanding that the UK process is not notaire-led. EU free movement of capital is the broad background, but the UK is now outside the EU, and UK taxes still apply to UK property.

Impots.gouv explains that foreign-source property income can be taxed under treaty methods and may still need to be declared in France. The France-UK tax treaty material matters for rental income and gains.

A £700,000 London flat is about EUR 819,000 at the illustrative rate used here. Add UK SDLT, legal fees, searches, survey, possible non-resident surcharge, service charge and a rent-void buffer.

On the UK side, source of funds is not just a routine form. The estate agent, auction house, conveyancer and sometimes lender may ask for bank statements, savings history, payslips, company accounts, dividend vouchers, sale contracts, inheritance papers, gift letters, loan agreements and tax evidence. They are checking source of funds and source of wealth: where this payment came from, and how you built the wealth behind it.

Unwildered’s AI for conveyancing helps at the property-risk end of the deal, not the currency-control end. Use it once you have a listing, legal pack, title register, lease, searches or management documents. The tool runs a 40-point check, raises early red flags, highlights possible deal breakers and can generate an email asking the seller, auctioneer or estate agent for missing information.

2. Mortgage financing: local bank, UK lender or cash?

A French buyer may use cash, a French facility secured on French assets, or a UK/international mortgage. The English property may not fit the same lending habits as a French notaire-led purchase.

If income is in euros and debt is in sterling, the exchange rate can change the real cost of the loan. If the property is rented, test the numbers after service charge, UK tax and letting costs.

For auction purchases, have finance agreed before bidding. A successful bid can create a binding deadline before a slow mortgage file is ready.

Before relying on finance, check whether the plan still works if the property is harder to mortgage than expected. Lenders can be cautious about:

  • short leases or high ground rent on older leaseholds

  • missing building-safety or cladding documents

  • unusual construction, ex-local authority blocks or heavy service charges

  • auction deadlines that are too short for standard mortgage completion

  • rental restrictions that damage buy-to-let affordability

How to finance a London property from France

Route

When it can work

Main caution

Cash or investment liquidation

Fastest for auction deadlines and avoids lender valuation delays.

Still needs evidence showing where the money came from and how the wealth was built.

Home-country borrowing

Can work if you borrow against local assets or portfolio wealth.

The local lender may not take a London property as security, and currency risk remains.

UK / international mortgage

Possible for some non-resident, expat and international buyers with strong documents and deposit.

Criteria vary; lease length, building safety, rentability and property type can affect lending.

Bridging finance

Sometimes used for auction or refurbishment purchases.

Usually expensive and needs a credible exit route.

3. What is different from buying at home?

Topic

French habit

London / England point

Notaire

The notaire structures and records much of the deal.

In England, buyer's conveyancer investigates; no notaire protects both sides.

Diagnostics

French diagnostic pack may feel familiar.

London searches and surveys are different: title, local, drainage, environmental, lease, management pack.

Co-ownership

Copropriété charges feel familiar.

Leasehold service charges and planned large building works need careful reading of the lease and accounts.

Tax reporting

French tax residence may require declarations.

UK taxes rent/gains; France may use treaty methods and effective-rate concepts.

The biggest cultural difference is responsibility. In England and Wales, the seller supplies information, but the buyer investigates. The estate agent markets and negotiates, but does not become a neutral safety net. The conveyancer checks title, searches, contract papers and completion mechanics, but will not normally inspect the building. The surveyor checks physical condition at the level you commission. Your job is to make sure the right questions are asked before exchange.

4. Conveyancing, searches and surveys

For a normal negotiated purchase, the broad sequence is offer, written confirmation of the agreed sale details, AML checks, mortgage offer if any, contract pack, searches, enquiries, survey, exchange, completion and registration. For an auction purchase, the legal pack may be available before bidding and exchange may happen immediately when the bid succeeds. Auctions can save money because sellers may prioritise speed and certainty, but there are important disadvantages: the property may be sold in its current condition, access for viewing may be limited, and the buyer may become responsible for defects, unpaid bills, extra contract rules or a short completion deadline.

Check

What it tells you

Why international buyers miss it

Title register and plan

Owner, tenure, rights, restrictions, lender entries

A clean-looking listing can still hide title restrictions or odd boundaries.

Local authority search

Planning, roads, conservation, enforcement and local issues

A cheap flat can be cheap because permissions or restrictions are awkward.

Drainage, water, environmental

Connections, flood, contamination and infrastructure risks

These are not always visible from the viewing or photos.

Survey

Physical condition, damp, movement, roof and structure depending on level

A mortgage valuation is not a building survey.

Lease and management pack

Lease length, building fees, ground rent, permissions, disputes, planned large repairs

This is often the main factor affecting the value of London flats.

A survey usually comes in levels. A valuation is mainly about lending value. A Level 2/HomeBuyer-style survey is common for conventional flats or houses in reasonable condition. A Level 3/building survey is more suitable for older, altered, unusual or visibly defective property. Auction lots, short leases, ex-local authority blocks, cladding-affected buildings, basement flats and mixed-use buildings deserve more caution.

5. Covenants, listed buildings and conservation limits

Many London homes are old, altered, converted, extended or sitting inside streets with planning sensitivity. That creates a different risk profile from places where a buyer may expect to knock down, rebuild or redesign freely. In England, the title, lease, planning history and local rules can restrict what you do even after you own the property.

  • A covenant is a promise or restriction affecting land. It may limit use, alterations, building height, extensions, business activity, parking, nuisance, short letting, external appearance or subdivision.

  • Some covenants are old but still relevant. Others may be difficult to enforce in practice, but you should not assume that until the title has been checked.

  • Listed buildings and conservation areas can require consent for works that feel cosmetic: windows, doors, roof changes, railings, internal features, satellite dishes, extensions, basement works or demolition.

  • A landlord, freeholder, management company or local council may all have a say, especially with leasehold flats or period buildings.

This matters for value. A cheap property that cannot be extended, modernised, rented as planned or insured easily may not be cheap. Before bidding, ask these questions:

  • Are there restrictive covenants on the title?

  • Is the building listed, or is it inside a conservation area?

  • Were past works properly consented and signed off?

  • Are there indemnity policies, and what do they actually cover?

  • Does the lease restrict alterations, renting the property to someone else, pets, short lets or business use?

  • Has the seller produced planning, building-control and landlord-consent evidence?

6. Leasehold, freehold and London flat risk

Freehold generally means owning the land and building outright, subject to restrictions and obligations. Leasehold means owning a long lease for a fixed number of years. London flats are commonly leasehold. That is not automatically bad, but there are many rules. The remaining lease length affects value and mortgage availability. Service charge affects rental profit. Ground rent can affect future cost and lender appetite. Planned large repairs can turn a profitable rental into a property that needs a large extra payment.

Read the lease for rules about transferring the lease, renting the property to someone else, Airbnb or short-let restrictions, pets, alterations, use, repairs, insurance, the risk of losing the lease for serious breach, and notice fees. Ask for service-charge accounts, budget, reserve fund, fire-safety papers, building-safety documents where relevant, insurance schedule, planned works, disputes, permissions and unpaid bills. If the seller cannot answer, that is exactly where a one-click email from the Unwildered property tool can save time.

7. Taxes and holding costs

For England and Northern Ireland, Stamp Duty Land Tax is usually the first tax to model. HMRC has standard residential rates, higher rates for additional dwellings, and a 2% non-resident surcharge where the rules apply. Non-resident buyers should model that surcharge early, not as an afterthought. If a company or overseas entity buys, also check the Register of Overseas Entities and possible ATED exposure. If you rent the property while living abroad, the Non-resident Landlord Scheme can matter. If you sell later as a non-resident, UK capital gains tax reporting may matter.

Cost / tax

What to check

Reservation / auction deposit

Often 10% at exchange. Keep cleared funds ready before bidding.

SDLT

Depends on price, residence and additional-property status. Non-UK residents may face the 2% surcharge.

Legal and searches

Covers legal ownership work, local checks, bank-transfer checks and missing-document questions.

Survey

A lender valuation is not a building survey. Choose the survey level based on age, condition and construction.

Leasehold costs

Check service charge, ground rent, reserve fund, notices, planned works and unpaid bills.

Holding costs

Budget for council tax, insurance, repairs, letting fees and empty periods without rent.

Council tax is local and can vary by borough. Some councils charge premiums for second homes or long-empty homes. Leasehold flats may also have service charge, reserve fund contributions, building insurance through the landlord, ground rent for older leases, notice fees, deed of covenant fees, managing-agent fees and consent fees. Model net yield after all of those, not just rent minus mortgage.

8. Auction legal packs: where the about EUR 35 review fits

The AI for conveyancing tool is designed for the moment when you have a property that looks attractive but you do not yet know what is inside the legal pack. You can get a free report, then use the about EUR 35 full review for a 40-point check across title, lease, searches, special conditions, rent charges, service charges, planning, restrictions and missing-document risks. That helps you spot possible deal breakers early, before you spend time, energy and professional fees on a property that may not be right.

If you are comparing several auction lots or shortlisting flats from abroad, the five-review pack costs about EUR 117. That makes it easier to review multiple properties in one go, reject weak options quickly and focus on the few that deserve deeper attention.

The tool is especially helpful for international buyers because the risk is often not the advertised price. It is the clause you do not recognise: a short lease, a rule that changes rent at set times, a missing management pack, a special condition making the buyer pay the seller's costs, insurance for a title problem, a restriction on letting, a notice fee, a bill for planned large repairs, no reliable viewing access, or a completion deadline that is unrealistic for overseas funds.

After the review, use the one-click email to ask the auctioneer, seller or agent for missing information. Examples: Please provide the last three years' service-charge accounts; please confirm whether any Section 20 major works are planned; please provide the EWS1/building-safety documents; please confirm whether the lease permits subletting; please explain the seller's special condition requiring buyer payment of legal costs.

9. Representative cost example

The figures below are not a quote and not a tax calculation. They are a practical way to look at all major costs, not only the purchase price. The real number depends on residence, whether you already own property, mortgage structure, borough, lease terms and the live exchange rate.

Cost item

Estimated cost in EUR

Plain English note

Example property

EUR 936,000

Two-bedroom leasehold flat in Battersea.

Deposit / auction deposit

EUR 93,600

Assumes a 10% deposit is required.

SDLT planning range

EUR 53,820 to EUR 100,620

Depends on non-resident and additional-property position.

Conveyancing and searches

EUR 1,755 to EUR 4,680

This is not a notaire-style cost structure.

AI for conveyancing

Free report, then EUR 35

Full 40-point review before paying for more work.

Survey

EUR 585 to EUR 1,755

More if the property is older or altered.

Mortgage / bank costs

EUR 1,170 to EUR 5,850+

Depends on lender, valuation, broker and transfer costs.

Money transfer and FX margin

EUR 9,360 if the margin is 1%

Calculated on the example purchase price.

Viewing trip to London

EUR 1,170 to EUR 4,680+

Flights, hotel and local travel.

Council tax first year

EUR 1,755 to EUR 3,510

Depends on borough and council tax band.

Leasehold reserve

Keep several months of EUR-equivalent cash

For service charge, reserve fund, insurance and repairs.

Contingency budget

EUR 93,600

10% allowance for improvements, delays, major works or vacancy.

Rough full cash-purchase budget

EUR 1.09 million to EUR 1.14 million, plus holding reserve

Before any mortgage proceeds and before live exchange-rate changes.

10. Document checklist before you transfer money

  • Passport or ID, proof of address and tax residence information.

  • Bank statements showing the build-up of funds, not only the final transfer.

  • Payslips, bonus letters, company accounts, dividend vouchers or sale contract proving source of wealth.

  • Gift letter and donor evidence if family money is involved.

  • Foreign-exchange or outward-transfer approval where your country requires it.

  • Property listing, auction pack, title register, title plan, lease, searches and special conditions.

  • Covenant, listed-building, conservation-area, planning and building-control documents where relevant.

  • Mortgage agreement in principle, if using finance.

  • Survey quote or report, especially for older, auction, leasehold or unusual property.

Watch for property scams and pressure tactics

London property fraud is not always dramatic. Sometimes it looks like speed, vague documents or a bargain that is just a little too convenient. Be careful with listings priced far below comparable properties, sellers who push for secrecy, agents who only communicate through messaging apps, or requests for reservation money before the title, seller and payment route have been verified.

  • Check that the estate agent or auctioneer is real.

  • Verify bank details using a phone number found independently, not just a number in an email.

  • Be especially cautious if bank details change near completion.

  • Do not rely only on screenshots, forwarded PDFs, remote-viewing videos or a professional introduced only by the seller.

  • If you are overseas, watch for unavailable keys, 'tenant in place' excuses, no proper viewing access, and pressure to transfer money before the legal pack has been checked.

For leasehold flats, the danger may be quieter: missing management packs, fake or incomplete service-charge figures, undisclosed major works, short leases marketed as bargains, absent building-safety documents, or special conditions shifting unusual costs onto the buyer.

This is another reason to use the free report and the about EUR 35 best AI for conveyancing review early. The 40-point check helps raise red flags while there is still time to ask questions, compare options or move away from a likely deal breaker before wasting time and energy.

A calmer way to move forward

The happy ending for a French buyer is a file that feels organised: French tax reporting considered, UK SDLT modelled, lease and management pack understood, and every missing point turned into a clear question before exchange. London then becomes less mysterious and much more manageable.

If a listing now looks interesting, upload the papers, run the free report, and use the about EUR 35 AI for conveyancing review before you bid or commit. The aim is not to remove every risk. The aim is to identify risk early enough to decide whether the price is fair, ask better questions, or decide not to buy without regret.

This article is general information, not legal, financial, medical or tax advice.

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