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Paris Real Estate +


               
2013 Jan 1, 12:08am   21,565 views  51 comments

by David9   follow (0)  

Bon Jour,

Just got back from Paris and recovering from jet lag and thought I would post my vacation tourist observations.

1.) Paris real estate is expensive. (Duh, I know.) At least in the Latin Quarter, did not speak with any Realtor but any stroll will usually accompany an old fashioned window of paper real estate listings. Didn't see a Studio for less than 225K Euros and small two bedrooms went for 685k Euro plus. Sorry, no Versailles available in this price range.

2.) Paris rentals are reasonable. Again, from store front listings, many apartments available from 650 Euros to 1000 Euros in a decent area.

3.) Call me crazy, many dark windows in these apartment buildings, sure, it's Paris, they could be 2nd homes.

4.) Other notables, the food is wonderful and fresh, the people like to dress fashionably, everyone uses the metro, taxis are available but not anything like New York, it's easy to get lost as the streets are a collection of star shapes, and there are no 24 hour shops.

5.) For whatever reason, no one was rude to me and I found the French rather friendly actually. Just start with a formal greeting and everything is ok. Noticible difference if the formal greeting is forgot or omitted.

#housing

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1   David9   2013 Jan 1, 2:44am  

Agree and noticed that as well. Even without knowing the exact math on interest rates, taxes and maintenance, it couldn't be a huge profit, or one at all, to buy (take a loan out) and rent in Paris.

Wonderful, additive free, fresh baked daily food though and a three course meal for 10 Euro. :)

2   Peter P   2013 Jan 1, 3:08am  

David9 says

Call me crazy, many dark windows in these apartment buildings, sure, it's Paris, they could be 2nd homes.

Paris is a very popular 2nd home destination. Who is not to like to have a pad in a beautiful pre-war building on Avenue Foch?

3   Peter P   2013 Jan 1, 3:10am  

I really prefer food in Switzerland. The VAT on the bill in Paris makes me cry.

4   David9   2013 Jan 1, 3:40am  

Peter P says

Who is not to like to have a pad in a beautiful pre-war building on Avenue Foch?

No disagreement there. Also, the other European countries are easily accessable by train also, making the possibility of a purchase even greater. The streets and metro are constantly full of people with suitcases on wheels.

5   lostand confused   2013 Jan 1, 4:00am  

I guess it probably make sense to have a second or third home there. if you live there and make more than a million euro, you have to pay 75% tax.

6   David9   2013 Jan 1, 4:17am  

At night, this is a Paris City Lights View..

7   pdh   2013 Jan 1, 4:19am  

2.) Paris rentals are reasonable. Again, from store front listings, many apartments available from 650 Euros to 1000 Euros in a decent area.

Are you sure that's monthly? Europeans sometimes list weekly rent instead of monthly.

8   David9   2013 Jan 1, 4:22am  

pdh says

Are you sure that's monthly?

My first two days there, I was greeted by a friend of a friend, he pays 670 Euro for small studio monthly, by the Eiffel Tower.

9   New Renter   2013 Jan 1, 4:33am  

David9 says

pdh says

Are you sure that's monthly?

My first two days there, I was greeted by a friend of a friend, he pays 670 Euro for small studio monthly, by the Eiffel Tower.

Awesome!

10   David9   2013 Jan 1, 4:41am  

New Renter says

Awesome!

I don't have a copy of a bill but I was told the French Government capped cell phone and internet rates for it's citizens to around 40 Euro, here is a link:

http://www.orange.fr/

11   Patrick   2013 Jan 1, 4:48am  

David9 says

5.) For whatever reason, no one was rude to me and I found the French rather friendly actually. Just start with a formal greeting and everything is ok. Noticible difference if the formal greeting is forgot or omitted.

Were you speaking French or English?

My French is not so good.

12   David9   2013 Jan 1, 5:07am  


Were you speaking French or English?

I would always start out with a French formal greeting 'bonjour' for the daytime and 'bonsoir' for evening time, this is manadatory, otherwise you get a raised French eyebrow. Depending on the situation, I would usually ask: 'Parlez- vous anglais?' (Do you speak English?) Not one person said 'No', most would say 'a little' accentuated by a thumb and index finger gesture. Then we began to speak in English.

I am not fluent French, but did learn enough to get reactions from people, I love to do this when overseas. Like the time there was a French couple waiting with me at the Hotel door, I gave a sweeping gesture and said: 'Sil vous plait' (Please) both smiled and jerked upward a bit. 'Merci beaucoup' (thank you very much) and 'bonne journée' (have a good day) when used in the right situation go over very well.

To answer your question succinctly, I would always start off in basic French and this most always turned into speaking in English.

13   New Renter   2013 Jan 1, 8:00am  

When I visited Paris a decade ago I did experience some rudeness but most people were friendly and helpful. My wife came down with stomach bug so we were able to experience the wonders of the French health care system. It was not that different from what I have experienced here at Kaiser (in a good way). It helped that my wife looked up her symptoms and wrote everything down BEFORE we saw the doc.

In addition to antibiotics the doc recommended warm, flat non-diet coca cola. She told us she had learned that trick in Africa. It worked to settle my wife's stomach until we could get the prescription filled.

14   Philistine   2013 Jan 2, 3:12am  

David9 says

I would always start out with a French formal greeting 'bonjour' for the daytime and 'bonsoir' for evening time, this is manadatory, otherwise you get a raised French eyebrow.

This was true for us except in the restaurants. They get itchy when you order gin martinis in fluent French w/Parisian accent--you still get a terse English reply and raised eyebrow (and a cocktail glass with an ice cube in it: merde!)

15   bob2356   2013 Jan 2, 4:20am  

Philistine says

This was true for us except in the restaurants. They get itchy when you order gin martinis in fluent French w/Parisian accent--you still get a terse English reply and raised eyebrow (and a cocktail glass with an ice cube in it: merde!)

No wonder they call you philistine :-). Gin is a Brtiish abomination looked upon with disdain like the German fixation with fried pork. Barbarian. You need to order a good cognac or eaux de vie. Although I will admit that I do have trouble telling some of the rural area's local eaux de vie from paint stripper.

16   David9   2013 Jan 2, 4:30am  

Philistine says

This was true for us except in the restaurants. They get itchy when you order
gin martinis in fluent French w/Parisian accent

Usually, after a formal greeting in a restaurant, they would speak English if they knew how too. We screamed tourist and did not speak fluent French, but hopefully someday I'll get the chance again to order a drink in fluent French :)

17   Another Miner   2013 Jan 2, 11:42pm  

Don't forget that many of the apartments are inherited. In fact, there is probably an oversupply of such apartments that are effectively driving down rents.

Also, I have a friend (born in Lorraine) who is a professional in the Palo Alto area. He purchased a 2bd in the 4th(?) in sometime around 1999 when the euro was 1.3 to the dollar - the inversion of now. I think he paid something less than 300,000E. Backed out in today's dollars, that is not expensive, nor was it really that long ago. (all numbers are from memory, but I think I have it approximately right)

If you are overseas French or French with a principle residence in the outlying regions of France, then Paris is the only place to have a beachhead. It makes for a property market that does not really resemble anything we have in Cal.

The comment that someone made that the food was better in Switzerland is one that I can't really believe....on a cost basis, I don't think most people would reach that conclusion.

18   RentingForHalfTheCost   2013 Jan 2, 11:53pm  

Another Miner says

It makes for a property market that does not really resemble anything we have in Cal.

Also, houses and apartments are build to last. Not to be rebuild after 30 years. Lets see, straw, wood, or brick/stone. I'll take the later any day. Build a house once and live in it forever. Wood warps, cracks, doesn't handle moisture well, and is a favorite food for termites.

19   SiO2   2013 Jan 3, 12:05am  

David9 says

I would always start out with a French formal greeting 'bonjour' for the daytime and 'bonsoir' for evening time, this is manadatory, otherwise you get a raised French eyebrow. Depending on the situation, I would usually ask: 'Parlez- vous anglais?' (Do you speak English?) Not one person said 'No', most would say 'a little' accentuated by a thumb and index finger gesture. Then we began to speak in English.

When I visited Paris as a tourist, I did the same, and found that people were friendly. It seems to make a big difference if you ask if they speak English, vs just assuming. This is about the extent of my French so it was good that most people spoke English.

The worldwide prevalence of English makes travel relatively easy. It would be difficult for someone speaking only Spanish, Russian, or Chinese.

20   David9   2013 Jan 3, 1:09am  

SiO2 says

It seems to make a big difference if you ask if they speak English,

Precisely, just go up to someone and ask 'Parlez- vous anglais?' and you get crinkled noses and raised eyebrows, but say 'Bon Jour', wait for a response, then ask, and they are sweethearts.

21   bubblesburst   2013 Jan 3, 5:07am  

Peter P says

I really prefer food in Switzerland. The VAT on the bill in Paris makes me cry.

Huh? Food in Switzerland is crazy expensive. I spent 3 weeks there this summer traveling around with my family. I also spent a full month in Paris and food prices were MUCH cheaper in Paris vs. Switzerland.

Switzerland is crazy expensive. I travel around the world quite often and in any major city I've been able to find cheap Chinese fast food type places. The only place where I didn't see that exist is Switzerland. Don't get me wrong. They DO have places like that but they are around $25 to $30 an entree. The same thing in Paris or London or Amsterdam or any other major city is less than $9 or so. Even at Pizza places a pizza was around $27 each or so.

Paris is really an amazing city. Definitely real estate prices are very expensive there. As others mentioned, many Europeans own property there and use it as a second home. We always rent a property or do a home exchange there and it's always been from someone else that lived somewhere else in Europe and had a place in Paris as well.

Paris is one of the greatest cities in the world. I wouldn't want to live there but it's amazing to go on vacation.

22   Peter P   2013 Jan 3, 5:15am  

bubblesburst says

Huh? Food in Switzerland is crazy expensive.

I went in 2008, when EUR was high and CHF was low. Perhaps that explains it.

I remember seeing EUR 190 appetizers at a restaurant in Paris. For the first time in my life I was scared looking at the menu. Worse yet, ladies were given BLIND menus.

23   RentingForHalfTheCost   2013 Jan 3, 5:22am  

bubblesburst says

Huh? Food in Switzerland is crazy expensive.

I lived there for a while and got used to expresso and chocolate. The two cheap things in the country. ;) Forget eating salads and meat. $30-$40US salads are not abnormal. Entries for 50-60 at mediocre restaurants.

24   bubblesburst   2013 Jan 3, 5:22am  

Ah ok. I was just there this summer and I've honestly never spent so much on dining out. EVERYTHING is expensive in Switzerland. We spent 3 months traveling around Europe including Monte Carlo and the French Riviera and everywhere else seemed cheap compared to Switzerland.

We have young kids and I remember one day in the train station our son wanted a plain hamburger at McDonalds or Burger King (can't remember which it was) and it was literally $4 for one plain hamburger.

Food prices were really expensive there. I remember going to some nothing special Chinese restaurant and ordering 3 entrees (one for me, one for wife and one for kids to split) and with 2 sodas it was over $100 dollars.

25   Philistine   2013 Jan 3, 5:24am  

bubblesburst says

cheap Chinese fast food type places. The only place where I didn't see that
exist is Switzerland. Don't get me wrong. They DO have places like that but they
are around $25 to $30 an entree. The same thing in Paris or London or Amsterdam
or any other major city is less than $9 or so. Even at Pizza places a pizza was
around $27 each or so

LOL, going to Paris and eating Chinese takeout and pizza. Fantastic!!

26   Peter P   2013 Jan 3, 5:24am  

Where in Switzerland? We stayed in Vevey and it was not that bad.

27   bubblesburst   2013 Jan 3, 5:24am  

Ah ok. I was just there this summer and I've honestly never spent so much on dining out. EVERYTHING is expensive in Switzerland. We spent 3 months traveling around Europe including Monte Carlo and the French Riviera and everywhere else seemed cheap compared to Switzerland.

We have young kids and I remember one day in the train station our son wanted a plain hamburger at McDonalds or Burger King (can't remember which it was) and it was literally $4 for one plain hamburger.

Food prices were really expensive there. I remember going to some nothing special Chinese restaurant and ordering 3 entrees (one for me, one for wife and one for kids to split) and with 2 sodas it was over $100 dollars.RentingForHalfTheCost says

bubblesburst says

Huh? Food in Switzerland is crazy expensive.

I lived there for a while and got used to expresso and chocolate. The two cheap things in the country. ;) Forget eating salads and meat. $30-$40US salads are not abnormal. Entries for 50-60 at mediocre restaurants.

Exactly Renting! Many places we went to had entrees at $50 each for nothing too fancy restaurants. I remember in Bern we ordered a few pizzas and they were about $30 each for nothing too special pizza.

Well we were in Europe for 3 months. I don't know about you but I'm not going to eat French or Swiss food for 3 months straight. When we live abroad we like variety just like at home. Including Pizzas, burgers and Chinese food.

3 months is a long time.

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