Jean-François, comte de Durat (30 October 1736 – 1830) was a French Royal Army officer and colonial administrator who served as the governor of Grenada from 1779 to 1783.
He distinguished himself in the Siege of Fort St Philip, and was assigned to coastal defences until 1759, when he joined a planned expedition against Ireland that failed due to British blockades of French ports.
The following year he was part of Charles Henri Hector, Count of Estaing's expedition to capture Grenada, leading an advance unit that participated in the storming of Hospital Hill.
D'Estaing rewarded Durat by appointing him governor of the island, a post he held until the British retook control under terms of the 1783 Treaty of Paris.
By his second wife he had a son Sébastien Henri de Durat (1788–1806) who followed him into military service, joined the 34th Line Infantry Regiment and died of wounds sustained at Jena.