Perfect Completion & Biennial Warranty: Complete Guide
You’ve just had your home handed over, the completion certificate is signed, and you think the “building site” chapter is closed. Not so fast. For the first two years after handover, you benefit from two powerful but often overlooked legal shields: the garantie de parfait achèvement (perfect completion warranty, 1 year) and the garantie biennale de bon fonctionnement (biennial warranty, 2 years). Unlike the décennale warranty which targets major structural defects, these two warranties cover everything else — from hairline cracks in partition walls to stuck roller shutters and faulty taps. This guide explains how to use them to the fullest so that every defect is repaired at the contractor’s expense.
Note: These warranties are grounded in French law (Code civil, articles 1792-3 and 1792-6). They apply specifically to construction projects carried out in France and governed by French law.
The Perfect Completion Warranty: your total safety net for 1 year
What is it?
The garantie de parfait achèvement (GPA) is codified in article 1792-6 of the French Code civil. It obliges the contractor to repair all defects reported by the client (maître d’ouvrage):
- Those listed as snags (réserves) in the handover completion certificate
- Those that appear within the year following handover and are notified by recorded delivery letter
This is the broadest warranty that exists: no minimum severity threshold. Whether it’s a partition crack, a door that won’t close properly, a cracked tile or a badly fixed socket — everything qualifies.
What it covers in practice
| Type of defect | Concrete example | Covered by the GPA? |
|---|---|---|
| Cosmetic defects | Peeling paint, uneven render | Yes |
| Poor finishes | Missing tile grout, loose skirting board | Yes |
| Faulty equipment | Socket that doesn’t work, boiler poorly set | Yes |
| Badly fitted joinery | Window that won’t close, door that sticks | Yes |
| Structural defects | Load-bearing wall crack, roof leak | Yes (and also décennale) |
| Defects listed at handover | Any snag itemised in the completion certificate | Yes |
| Normal wear and tear | Scratched floor after 8 months of use | No |
| Damage caused by occupant | Tile cracked by heavy furniture | No |
Tip — The GPA is your best weapon during the first 12 months. Don’t wait until the last minute: as soon as you notice a defect, even a minor one, notify the relevant contractor by recorded delivery letter with acknowledgement of receipt. A simple text or email has no legal value in the event of a dispute. Keep a defect log and do a full walk-through of the house at 1 month, 6 months and 11 months.
Snags at handover: the starting point
On handover day, you sign a completion certificate (procès-verbal — PV) listing all snags — defects visible on the day. This is the founding document of the GPA:
- Snags listed in the PV → the contractor has an agreed timeframe (usually 90 days) to remedy them
- No snag listed = acceptance → visible defects not listed are deemed accepted
- Unresolved snags → you can withhold the 5% balance (the “retention”) until they are remedied
Warning — If the contractor fails to clear snags within the agreed timeframe, you can have the work done by another professional and claim reimbursement. However: keep proof of the formal notice that went unheeded (recorded delivery letter + reasonable deadline) before bringing in someone else. Without this proof, you risk being unable to claim against the original contractor.
The 5% retention
When signing the building contract, it is common to provide for a 5% retention (retenue de garantie) on the total amount. This mechanism, governed by French law n°71-584 of 16 July 1971, protects you:
- You withhold 5% of the price until all snags are cleared or the one-year deadline expires
- If all snags are resolved, you release the balance
- If snags remain, you retain the corresponding sum and lodge it with a third party (usually the notaire or the Caisse des Dépôts)

Who is bound by the GPA?
The GPA falls on the contractor who carried out the works. Not the architect, not the project manager, not the materials supplier. It is a personal liability of the executing company.
In self-build, this means:
- Lots entrusted to tradespeople are covered by each tradesperson’s GPA
- Lots you carried out yourself are not covered — you cannot sue yourself
- Defective materials that you installed yourself fall under the manufacturer’s warranty, not the GPA
Best practice — Before paying the final balance to a tradesperson, insist on written confirmation that all snags have been cleared. A simple “it’s all done, I’ve fixed everything” over the phone is not enough. Carry out a joint inspection on site and sign a snag clearance document that is dated and co-signed by both parties.
The Biennial Warranty: 2 years for equipment
What is it?
The garantie biennale (or garantie de bon fonctionnement — warranty of good working order) is codified in article 1792-3 of the French Code civil. It covers separable equipment (éléments d’équipement dissociables) — those that can be removed, replaced or repaired without touching the main structure — for 2 years from handover.
Separable vs non-separable: the key distinction
This is the boundary between the biennial warranty and the décennale. An item of equipment is separable if it can be removed without damaging the building fabric. It is non-separable if its removal would damage the structure.
| Equipment | Separable? | Applicable warranty |
|---|---|---|
| Roller shutters | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Taps, mixer taps | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Wall-mounted radiators | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| MVHR/extract fans | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Boiler, hot water cylinder | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Intercom, doorbell | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Motorised garage door | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Tiles bonded to floating screed | Yes | Biennial (2 years) |
| Underfloor heating cast into slab | No | Décennale (10 years) |
| Joinery sealed into masonry | No | Décennale (10 years) |
| Tiles bedded in mortar screed | No | Décennale (10 years) |
| Masonry fireplace | No | Décennale (10 years) |

What the biennial warranty covers in practice
The biennial warranty covers malfunctions of separable equipment. In practice:
- A roller shutter that no longer rises or descends crookedly
- An MVHR unit making abnormal noise or no longer extracting
- A radiator that doesn’t heat up or leaks at a joint
- A switch or socket that no longer works (where the equipment itself is at fault, not the embedded wiring)
- A hot water cylinder losing pressure or not heating
- Joinery (windows, doors) whose opening/closing mechanism is faulty
Tip — The biennial warranty only covers functional defects, not normal wear and tear or damage caused by misuse. If your roller shutter fails at 18 months because you force it daily when it is blocked by an obstacle, that is not biennial warranty territory. However, if it fails because the motor was undersized or poorly installed, it is covered.
Who is liable?
As with the GPA, the biennial warranty falls on the contractor who supplied and installed the equipment. It is a presumption of liability: you do not need to prove their fault, only the malfunction.
In self-build:
- Equipment installed by a tradesperson → that tradesperson’s biennial warranty
- Equipment you installed yourself → only the manufacturer’s warranty (often also 2 years, but contractual) protects you
- Equipment you supplied, installed by a tradesperson → the biennial warranty covers installation defects, not material defects
How to activate these warranties: step by step
Step 1: identify the right warranty
Step 2: notify the contractor
Whether for the GPA or the biennial warranty, the procedure is the same:
- Document the defect: dated photographs, precise description
- Send a recorded delivery letter with acknowledgement of receipt to the contractor describing the problem, the date it appeared and citing the applicable legal article (1792-6 for the GPA, 1792-3 for the biennial warranty — these are French law references)
- Set a reasonable repair deadline (15 to 30 days depending on urgency)
- Keep a copy of everything: letter, acknowledgement, photos, correspondence
Step 3: in case of refusal or inaction
If the contractor does not respond or contests:
- Formal notice by recorded delivery letter (reminder of legal obligations + new deadline)
- Mediation via a consumer mediator (free, mandatory before court action in France)
- Emergency injunction (référé) at the civil court to obtain a judicial expert report and/or repairs under penalty
- If the contractor has gone bankrupt, direct action against their insurer (which is why you keep the décennale and public liability certificates)
Warning — Warranty deadlines are absolute. If you notify a defect at month 13, the GPA has expired and you can no longer invoke it. You still have the biennial warranty (if separable equipment) or the décennale (if serious defect). This is why it is vital to carry out a full home audit at month 10-11 so nothing slips through before the deadline.
The warranty timeline: don’t miss a single deadline
Here is the standard timeline to follow after handover:
| Milestone | Action | Warranty concerned |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Handover with detailed completion certificate + snag list | GPA (start of deadline) |
| D + 8 days | Sending supplementary snags if handed over without a list (art. L231-8 CCH for CCMI contracts — French law) | GPA |
| D + 1 month | First full walk-through, test all equipment | GPA |
| D + 3 months | Check after first heating cycle/season | GPA + biennial |
| D + 6 months | Inspect sealants, paintwork, tiles after initial settlement | GPA |
| D + 10-11 months | Full audit — last chance to notify under GPA | GPA (final window) |
| D + 12 months | GPA expires — release 5% if all snags cleared | End of GPA |
| D + 18 months | Test all equipment before biennial expires | Biennial |
| D + 22-23 months | Final audit — last possible notification under biennial | Biennial (final window) |
| D + 24 months | Biennial warranty expires | End of biennial |
Best practice — Set calendar reminders at D+1 month, D+6 months, D+10 months (final GPA walk-through), D+18 months and D+22 months (final biennial walk-through). This is the simplest method to ensure no defect slips through before the deadlines expire.
The self-build special case
In pure self-build (you do everything yourself), the situation is simple and harsh: you have neither a GPA nor a biennial warranty on your own work. You cannot sue yourself.
But in mixed self-build (the most common scenario), the situation is more nuanced:
What is covered
- Lot entrusted to a tradesperson (e.g. roofing, plumbing, electrics) → GPA + biennial + décennale from that tradesperson
- Partial subcontracting (e.g. the tradesperson installs a boiler you purchased) → the installation is covered by the tradesperson’s biennial warranty, not the equipment itself
What is not covered
- Your own work: no legal warranty; only the manufacturer’s warranty on materials applies
- Equipment you supplied and a tradesperson installed: if the defect comes from the equipment itself, the tradesperson’s biennial warranty does not apply
Tip — In self-build, the winning strategy is to entrust critical technical lots to insured professionals: foundations, frame, roof, electrics, plumbing. Keep the finishing work for yourself (painting, tiling, fit-out) where the warranty stakes are lower. This maximises your GPA + biennial + décennale coverage on the most costly items to repair.
Legal warranty vs manufacturer’s warranty: don’t confuse them
Many self-builders confuse legal warranties (GPA, biennial, décennale) with commercial/manufacturer’s warranties.
| Legal warranty (GPA/biennial) | Manufacturer’s warranty | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | French Code civil (statute) | Manufacturer’s contract |
| Mandatory | Yes, automatic | No, voluntarily offered |
| Liable party | The contractor who installed | The product manufacturer |
| Duration | 1 year (GPA) or 2 years (biennial) | Variable (2, 5, 10, 25 years…) |
| Condition | Notification by recorded delivery | Per manufacturer’s T&Cs |
| Applies in self-build | Only on lots entrusted to a professional | Yes, even if you install yourself |
The manufacturer’s warranty is complementary but never replaces the legal warranties. And vice versa: a tradesperson’s GPA does not cover a manufacturing defect in a material you supplied.
Official resources
- Service-public.fr — Garantie de parfait achèvement : official French government fact sheet
- Code civil — Article 1792-3 : statutory text on the biennial warranty (French law)
- Code civil — Article 1792-6 : statutory text on the perfect completion warranty (French law)
- Agence Qualité Construction : defect fact sheets and best practices
- ADIL — Agence d’information sur le logement : free legal advice on construction warranties in France
To complete this guide, also read our articles on the décennale warranty, the DAACT completion declaration and site insurance and public liability.
Checklist
Checklist: making the most of the GPA and biennial warranties
- Handover completion certificate drawn up with detailed snag list
- Dated photographs of all defects noted
- Snags notified by recorded delivery letter to each contractor
- 5% retention provided for in the contract
- Full walk-through of the house at D+1 month
- Inspection after first heating cycle (D+3 months)
- Check sealants and finishes after settlement (D+6 months)
- Final GPA audit scheduled at D+10-11 months
- All equipment tested individually (shutters, MVHR, hot water, sockets)
- Public liability and décennale certificates from each tradesperson archived
- Calendar reminders set for key deadlines
- Biennial audit scheduled at D+22-23 months
- Snag clearance formalised in writing and co-signed
- 5% balance released only after full clearance of all snags
The perfect completion and biennial warranties are your first lines of defence after handover. They don’t last long — 1 year and 2 years respectively — but they cover everything, including minor defects that the décennale would ignore. The key is rigour: note, photograph, notify by recorded delivery, and above all don’t let deadlines slip. A home properly handed over and carefully monitored during its first two years is a home that ages well.