AdminLanding

About AdminLanding

Founded by Julien Maurice — a tool, not a law firm.

Why this exists

French administrative procedures are not difficult because the rules are obscure — they are difficult because the rules are scattered across two dozen agencies, each with its own portal, its own form codes, its own deadlines, and its own preferred channel for replies. Knowing what to do is half the problem. Knowing in what order, with which exact wording, and to whom, is the other half.

I built AdminLanding because I lived the problem. When I moved back to France from the UK, I ran straight into the system — and quickly understood that British nationals and newcomers face a particular kind of friction the existing tools weren't built for. The first year was a stress test: carte de séjour, social security, healthcare, tax registration, opening a French bank account, finding a rental, signing a bail. Every one of those steps had its own portal, its own form codes, its own deadlines, its own preferred channel for replies. That's when it became obvious to me that expats and newcomers needed a real administrative companion, not another marketing site.

Then through the routine paperwork that came after — rental contracts, quittances de loyer, états des lieux, demandes diverses — it became clear that a lot of those documents could be produced more cleanly than the manual templates and back-and-forth the market was offering.

And then a third realization, when I started working across the border in Switzerland: being a frontalier is its own administrative universe — Permit G, LAMal vs CMU, the 49.9% telework rule, cantonal taxation, the Swiss 2nd pillar — and the information landscape for French nationals working in Switzerland is genuinely thin. Most guides are written from the Swiss employer's perspective. The frontalier's perspective — what to do when you cross back, what changes if you move cantons, how to coordinate retirement contributions — was scattered across forums and outdated articles. ExpatAdminHub came out of that gap; AdminLanding ships the operational tools that go with it.

Every relocation, every contract, every administrative round-trip on both sides of the France-Switzerland border has cost time that should not have been spent and stress that did not have to exist. AdminLanding is what I'd have wanted on day one — a single place that knows what each procedure actually requires and produces the right document, in the right language, on the first try.

What AdminLanding does

AdminLanding generates legally compliant administrative documents (rental documents, CERFA forms, official letters, estate-planning paperwork) in French and English, provides AI guidance across 50+ official French government sites (Ameli, CAF, ANTS, impôts.gouv.fr, France Travail, and more), and ships dedicated guidance for the situations expat residents in France actually run into: a free Post-Brexit Guide for British nationals navigating the carte de séjour, French tax filing for first-year expats, France-Switzerland cross-border worker tools (LAMal vs CMU, cantonal tax simulation, retirement coordination), and rental management for landlords. Everything stored in a zero-knowledge encrypted vault with EU eIDAS-compliant electronic signature.

It is a paid product, structured as packs rather than a subscription. Free tier covers 3 documents and 5 AI credits per month. Packs start at €19. There is no recurring billing unless you want it.

The editorial ecosystem

AdminLanding is the operational tool. The deeper context lives on two editorial sites I also publish:

  • ExpatAdminHub — long-form guides for European expats and France-Switzerland cross-border workers. Permit G, LAMal/CMU, Swiss 2nd pillar, taxation by canton, the 49.9% telework rule, and everything else that catches frontaliers off guard in their first year.
  • GreenDailyFix — practical guides on French renovation aid, energy policy, and the administrative side of the energy transition. MaPrimeRénov', CEE, DPE, the 2026 renovation reform, heat-pump installation realities.

The editorial sites do not exist to drive traffic to the SaaS. They exist because the underlying problem is genuinely complex and deserves more than a product page can give. Where an article overlaps with a procedure that AdminLanding handles, we link there; where it does not, we don't.

Editorial standards

Every administrative procedure on AdminLanding cites its sources (service-public.fr, légifrance, ANAH, France Rénov', impôts.gouv.fr, the relevant Code articles, the relevant CERFA codes), carries a verification date, and is re-verified on a 6-month cadence. When a regulation changes — and they change often — the dependent documents are updated and the verification date moves.

We are explicit about what AdminLanding is not: it is a technology platform, not a law firm. We do not practise law, do not provide personalised legal advice, and do not act as avocats, notaires, or any regulated legal professional under French Law n° 71-1130 of 31 December 1971. Templates and guidance are general-purpose. For a specific case with material consequences — an inheritance, a tax dispute, a litigation — talk to a qualified professional. AdminLanding helps you get the routine paperwork right so you can spend professional fees on the actual hard problems.

The company

AdminLanding SASU is a French company incorporated on 25 February 2026, registered in La Tour (74250, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes), serving British (post-Brexit), European and other international residents in France, plus cross-border workers in Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Monaco. It is bootstrapped, independently owned, and not affiliated with any government agency.

Contact

For product questions, support, or media enquiries: contact@adminlanding.com


Julien Maurice — Founder & President

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