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Joint Ownership and Inheritance in French Guiana: Turning a Family Property into Rental Income

Published on May 8, 2026 · by Ismael Samuel

Joint Ownership and Inheritance in French Guiana: Turning a Family Property into Rental Income

In French Guiana, nearly every family knows this scenario: a house in Cayenne, a plot of land in Roura or an apartment in Kourou left behind by a parent, and suddenly several heirs jointly own the same property. This is called indivision (joint ownership). In our territory, this status is rarely a mere legal detail: it intertwines with French Guiana’s land-title puzzle, with sometimes unclear deeds, and with families scattered across French Guiana, the West Indies and mainland France. The result: empty properties that deteriorate instead of generating income.

At Hostel Toucan, we regularly support jointly owning families who finally want to make the most of their inheritance. Here, drawing on our hands-on experience, is how to turn an inherited family property into a high-performing rental, without tearing the family apart.

Understanding joint ownership in the French Guianese context

Joint ownership describes the situation where several people hold the same property together, each owning a share (for example one third each for three siblings). In French Guiana, an Overseas Department and Region (DROM) where French law applies, the rules of the Civil Code are identical to those in mainland France. But the local context adds very real difficulties.

French Guiana’s land-title puzzle

Three local specificities often complicate inheritances here:

  • Incomplete property deeds: many plots of land, especially outside the urban centres of Cayenne, Matoury or Rémire-Montjoly, have never been properly surveyed or given a clear title. Houses have been built on family land without any notarised deed.
  • The weight of State-owned land: a large share of French Guiana’s land belongs to the State. Some long-standing occupations have never been regularised, which can block a sale or a rental.
  • Scattered and large families: it is not uncommon to find a joint ownership bringing together eight, ten or twelve heirs, sometimes spread across French Guiana, Martinique and Paris (a time difference of -5h in winter, -6h in summer), which slows down any decision-making.

What you can do together

Good news: you don’t have to sell or exit the joint ownership in order to rent. The Civil Code distinguishes between:

  • acts of administration (signing a standard residential lease, carrying out maintenance work): these require the agreement of co-owners representing at least two thirds of the rights;
  • acts of disposal (selling, granting a commercial lease): these require unanimity.

For a furnished holiday rental — the heart of the French Guianese tourism market — you generally remain within the logic of administration. The two-thirds majority therefore makes it possible to act, even if a minority heir stays passive or unreachable.

Maison creole de Cayenne en Guyane entierement renovee avec une pancarte d'agence immobiliere « a louer » sur la facade
Maison creole renovee a Cayenne, remise en location — © Cayambe (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Securing the property before putting it up for rent

Before thinking about income, you need to clean up the situation. Here are the steps we systematically recommend.

1. Obtain the certificate of ownership

Visit a notary to have the property certificate (attestation immobilière) drawn up after the death, which formalises the transfer of the property to the heirs. Allow generally 2 to 6 months depending on the complexity of the estate and the availability of civil-status records. In French Guiana, plan for more time if old records have to be reconstituted.

2. Draw up a joint-ownership agreement

This is the most useful and most underused tool. This agreement, signed before the notary, can:

  • appoint a joint-ownership manager (an heir or a third party) authorised to sign rental contracts and collect rents;
  • set the distribution of income in proportion to the shares;
  • establish the breakdown of charges (property tax, insurance, maintenance).

A clear agreement prevents 90% of the family conflicts we see arise once the money starts coming in.

3. Check that the property is compliant

A property inherited more than twenty years ago often needs upgrading: air conditioning, mosquito nets (essential against mosquitoes carrying dengue), wiring brought up to standard, treatment of the damp linked to the equatorial climate. Budget for this step before putting it on the market.

Why holiday rental is often the best option

Faced with a jointly owned property, many hesitate between selling, renting long-term or renting short-term. Holiday rental offers decisive advantages in the French Guianese context.

A market driven by a growing niche tourism

French Guiana attracts a specific clientele: families coming to watch an Ariane 6 or Vega launch from the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou (free visits), nature lovers heading for the Kaw marshes, the Nouragues reserve or the Salvation Islands, travellers heading up the Maroni river by pirogue towards Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni and its Transportation Camp. Not forgetting business tourism linked to the space sector and visiting-family tourism. The best period, the dry season from mid-July to mid-November, concentrates strong demand.

Flexible and reversible income

Unlike a three-year residential lease, short-term rental leaves the joint ownership free to recover the property quickly, for example if an heir wishes to live in it or if a sale goes through. It’s a strong argument for winning over hesitant co-owners.

Realistic ballpark figures

As a guide, on the current French Guianese market:

  • a well-located furnished studio in Cayenne (near Place des Palmistes or the market) or in Rémire-Montjoly rents for between €45 and €75 per night;
  • a 3-bedroom family house in Matoury, Macouria or near Félix-Éboué airport can reach €110 to €180 per night in high season;
  • the annual occupancy rate is often between 50 and 65% for a well-managed property, with peaks during space-launch campaigns.

Split between three or four heirs, this income turns a dormant property into an asset that at minimum covers the property tax and maintenance — often a good deal more.

Maison creole traditionnelle a deux etages avec balcon et volets, a l'angle d'une rue de Cayenne en Guyane
Maison creole familiale d'angle a Cayenne, patrimoine guyanais — © Cayambe (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Managing a jointly owned property without living in it: the role of property management

The main obstacle for French Guianese joint ownerships is distance. When the heirs live in Paris or Martinique, who welcomes the guests, handles the cleaning, steps in if the air conditioning fails on a Sunday evening? With a car being indispensable in French Guiana and the municipalities being vast (Saint-Laurent is over 250 km from Cayenne, almost 3 hours’ drive), a local presence is essential.

This is precisely where Hostel Toucan comes in. Our property-management service takes on the entire operation on behalf of the joint ownership:

  • creation and optimisation of the listing, professional photos, dynamic pricing based on the launch calendar and the season;
  • welcoming guests, handing over keys, cleaning between each stay;
  • routine maintenance and coordination of local tradespeople;
  • clear payout of income, ideally to a single joint-ownership account to simplify the distribution.

For a property held by several people and managed remotely, delegating the management is not a luxury: it’s what makes the rental project viable without family tension. Discover our dedicated support on our owners page and our rental properties in French Guiana.

Anticipating tax and family questions

A few points to watch before you get started.

The taxation of rental income

Furnished rental income falls under the Industrial and Commercial Profits (BIC) category. In joint ownership, each heir declares their share of the income. French Guiana also benefits from specific overseas tax schemes: a conversation with a local chartered accountant at the start of the project allows you to legally optimise everyone’s situation.

Preserving family harmony

Our most valuable advice, after years on the ground: put everything in writing from the outset. A property that generates income sometimes reveals latent tensions. A joint-ownership agreement, a dedicated account and a neutral manager such as a property-management service protect family relationships as much as the estate.

Taking action with peace of mind

Turning a jointly owned inheritance into rental income is entirely achievable in French Guiana, provided you proceed in order: secure the title, formalise the agreement between heirs, bring the property up to standard, then entrust the operation to a trusted local partner.

At Hostel Toucan, we offer direct booking with no platform fees, free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival and WhatsApp assistance 7 days a week for your guests as well as for you. Whether you’re an heir on site or thousands of kilometres away, we bridge the gap.

Do you own a jointly held family property and would like to assess it? Contact us for a personalised diagnosis, and check out our complete guide to French Guiana to better understand the territory that will welcome your future guests.

FAQ

Can a jointly owned property be rented without all the heirs’ agreement?

Yes. Signing a rental lease, considered an act of administration, requires the agreement of co-owners representing at least two thirds of the rights, not unanimity. Only acts of disposal such as a sale require everyone’s agreement. This makes it possible to act even if a minority heir stays passive or unreachable, provided their financial rights to the income are respected.

How long does it take to be able to rent an inherited property in French Guiana?

Allow generally 2 to 6 months to obtain the certificate of ownership from the notary, longer if old civil-status records have to be reconstituted or if the land title is incomplete, a frequent situation in French Guiana. Once the certificate is established and the joint-ownership agreement signed, putting the property up for rent can be very fast, especially with a property manager handling the listing and marketing.

How is rental income shared between the joint heirs?

Income is split in proportion to each person’s share, for example one third each for three heirs with equal shares. We recommend opening a single joint-ownership account into which the property manager pays the rents, which simplifies distribution, transparency and the payment of common charges such as property tax and insurance.

Can Hostel Toucan manage a property if the heirs live outside French Guiana?

Absolutely, it’s even our core business. We handle the entire operation locally: welcoming guests, cleaning, maintenance and coordination of tradespeople, with a clear payout of income. Heirs living in Paris, Martinique or elsewhere have nothing to manage on site and benefit from our WhatsApp assistance 7 days a week.

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