
Deputy Frédéric Falcon filed Amendment 186 to the 2026 finance bill in the early hours of 24 October 2025, proposing that non-French nationals must demonstrate five years’ lawful residence—or equivalent social-security contributions—before qualifying for housing allowances (APL, ALF, ALS).
The exposé des motifs notes that 859,000 non-EU households received housing aid in 2022, representing €2.4 billion in spending. Proponents argue the tighter eligibility would deter what they term “unsustainable immigration” and free up funds for French low-income families.
Housing-policy experts caution that restricting benefits could push newly arrived foreign workers into overcrowded or informal accommodation, complicating corporate relocations to secondary cities where private rental supply is tight. Employers may face higher lump-sum housing allowances to attract talent.
The amendment will be examined alongside other social-welfare measures in Article 67 of the budget. Whether it passes or not, its tabling reflects growing parliamentary momentum to link social benefits to length of stay, a factor mobility professionals must watch closely.
The exposé des motifs notes that 859,000 non-EU households received housing aid in 2022, representing €2.4 billion in spending. Proponents argue the tighter eligibility would deter what they term “unsustainable immigration” and free up funds for French low-income families.
Housing-policy experts caution that restricting benefits could push newly arrived foreign workers into overcrowded or informal accommodation, complicating corporate relocations to secondary cities where private rental supply is tight. Employers may face higher lump-sum housing allowances to attract talent.
The amendment will be examined alongside other social-welfare measures in Article 67 of the budget. Whether it passes or not, its tabling reflects growing parliamentary momentum to link social benefits to length of stay, a factor mobility professionals must watch closely.









