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France’s merger control landscape shifted materially in April 2026 when the French Parliament adopted higher turnover thresholds for mandatory notification to the Autorité de la concurrence, marking the first significant recalibration in more than a decade. Alongside those changes, the 2026 Finance Bill and transpositions linked to the Capital Requirements Directive VI (CRD6) have tightened the foreign direct investment screening France applies to sensitive-sector acquisitions by non‑EU investors. For general counsel, private equity sponsors, and international acquirers seeking cross‑border M&A lawyers France can now offer, understanding how these parallel regimes interact, and how to sequence filings to avoid suspension risk, is no longer optional.
This guide sets out every practical step deal teams need to take, from threshold arithmetic through Autorité filing to FDI clearance and EU call‑in contingencies.
The sections below cover the exact threshold figures and effective dates, a step-by-step notification flowchart, the filing process (forms, documents and antitrust filing fees France imposes), the updated FDI screening regime, interaction and sequencing strategies including EU call‑in powers, a practical deal timeline checklist, and worked examples for EU buyers, non‑EU buyers, and asset purchases.
Under Articles L. 430‑1 and L. 430‑2 of the French Code de commerce, a concentration must be notified to the Autorité de la concurrence when the parties’ combined and individual turnovers exceed the statutory thresholds. The April 2026 legislation raised those thresholds substantially, as outlined by the Autorité de la concurrence and published in the Journal officiel via Legifrance. The new figures took effect for any transaction whose agreement, bid, or acquisition of control was concluded on or after the date of publication in the Journal officiel in mid‑April 2026.
| Threshold | Previous level | 2026 level |
|---|---|---|
| Combined worldwide turnover (all parties) | €150 million | €250 million |
| Individual French turnover (at least two parties) | €50 million | €80 million |
| Retail-sector combined French turnover (special test) | €75 million | €150 million |
Consider a US‑based industrial group (worldwide turnover €4 billion, French turnover €90 million) acquiring a French target (worldwide turnover €120 million, French turnover €85 million). Under the previous thresholds the deal would clearly have been notifiable: combined worldwide turnover exceeded €150 million and each party exceeded €50 million in France. Under the 2026 thresholds the deal remains notifiable, combined worldwide turnover far exceeds €250 million, and both parties exceed the new €80 million French turnover test. However, if the target’s French turnover were only €70 million the transaction would fall below the revised individual French threshold and no mandatory merger notification France requires would arise, even though it would have been caught under the old regime.
Industry observers expect the higher thresholds to remove a significant number of mid‑market transactions from the Autorité’s docket, accelerating deal timelines for smaller cross‑border acquisitions while focusing the authority’s resources on deals with the greatest competitive impact on the French market.
Even with the raised thresholds, understanding exactly which transactions trigger a mandatory merger notification France imposes under the Code de commerce remains critical. The obligation is suspensory: parties may not close the transaction before receiving clearance.
A notifiable concentration arises where there is a lasting change in the control of one or more undertakings. This includes full mergers, acquisitions of sole or joint control (whether by share purchase, asset purchase, or contract), and the creation of full‑function joint ventures. Minority shareholdings that confer decisive influence, through veto rights, board seats, or contractual provisions, can also constitute a concentration.
Turnover must be calculated on a group‑wide basis, including all entities over which a party exercises decisive influence. For cross‑border M&A compliance, this means a small French target can trigger notification if the acquirer’s global group pushes combined worldwide turnover above €250 million and both sides clear the €80 million French turnover line.
Certain intra-group restructurings where ultimate control does not change are exempt. Temporary acquisitions by financial institutions acting as underwriters may also fall outside the scope, provided shares are resold within a defined period. Transactions exclusively subject to the EU Merger Regulation (because they meet the EU-level thresholds under the EUMR) are reviewed by the European Commission rather than the Autorité, unless they are referred back to France under Article 9 of the EUMR.
Once a deal is confirmed as notifiable, the parties must submit a complete notification to the Autorité de la concurrence before closing. The filing is made using the Autorité’s standard notification form, which requires detailed information on the parties, market definitions, competitive overlaps, and vertical relationships. The Autorité’s official website publishes the current form and procedural guidelines.
Parties should prepare the following as part of any Autorité de la concurrence filing:
| Procedure type | Filing fee |
|---|---|
| Standard (Phase I) notification | €50,000 |
| Simplified procedure notification | €25,000 |
| Phase II (in-depth review), additional fee | No additional fee beyond the initial filing fee |
The simplified procedure is available for transactions that do not raise horizontal overlaps above defined market-share thresholds or significant vertical concerns. It substantially shortens the review timeline.
The procedural clock starts once the Autorité confirms the notification is complete. The key stages are:
The likely practical effect of the 2026 threshold increases is that the Autorité will handle a smaller caseload at Phase I, potentially resulting in faster processing for the deals that remain notifiable.
France operates one of the most extensive FDI screening regimes in the European Union, governed by Articles L. 151‑3 and R. 151‑1 et seq. of the Code monétaire et financier. The regime requires prior authorisation from the Ministry of Economy for investments by non‑French investors that result in the acquisition of control, or, in certain cases, the crossing of specific shareholding thresholds, in entities operating in sensitive sectors. Guidance is published on the Ministry’s foreign investment portal.
The scope of foreign direct investment screening France applies depends on the investor’s origin:
The sensitive sectors subject to screening encompass defence, dual-use technologies, critical infrastructure (energy, water, transport, telecoms), cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, semiconductor manufacturing, food security, media, and, following the 2026 updates, certain financial-sector activities linked to CRD6 systemic stability provisions.
The FDI clearance process runs on its own timeline, separate from merger control:
Conditions attached to FDI clearance frequently include obligations to maintain strategic activities on French soil, restrictions on transferring intellectual property outside France, and ongoing reporting requirements. Non-compliance can result in injunctions, fines, and, in extreme cases, forced divestiture. Early indications suggest the 2026 amendments have broadened the Ministry’s toolkit for imposing conditions, particularly in the semiconductor and advanced-materials sectors.
One of the most strategically consequential aspects of cross‑border M&A compliance in France is managing the interaction between the Autorité de la concurrence’s merger control review, the Ministry of Economy’s FDI screening, and the European Commission’s ability to call in transactions. Getting the sequencing wrong can add months to a deal timeline or, worse, expose the parties to fines for gun‑jumping.
| Authority | When to notify | Effect on deal timing |
|---|---|---|
| Autorité de la concurrence (France) | When 2026 turnover thresholds are met, regime is suspensory | Phase I (25 working days) + potential Phase II (65+ working days) must complete before closing |
| French Ministry of Economy (FDI screening) | When a non-French investor acquires control or crosses shareholding thresholds in a sensitive sector | Phase 1 (30 business days) + potential Phase 2 (45 business days), may run in parallel but can extend the critical path |
| European Commission (call‑in under Article 22 EUMR) | When a Member State or the Commission identifies that a transaction affects trade between Member States, even below national thresholds | If called in, the Commission takes over review, significantly longer timeline and potentially broader remedy requirements |
Under Article 22 of the EU Merger Regulation, as interpreted by the European Commission’s competition policy guidance, a Member State (or the Commission itself) may request that a transaction be referred to Brussels for review even if it falls below national thresholds. This mechanism has been used with increasing frequency since 2021, particularly for deals involving innovative or digital-economy targets with low turnover but significant competitive potential. For cross‑border M&A in France, the risk is that a deal which falls below the new 2026 French thresholds could still be captured by an EU call‑in, resetting the review timeline entirely.
Acquirers and their advisers should build regulatory-clearance timelines into the deal structure from the letter-of-intent stage. The following checklist provides a practical framework for both straightforward (Phase I only) and complex (Phase II and FDI) scenarios.
A German technology group (worldwide turnover €2 billion, French turnover €100 million) acquires 100 % of a French SaaS company (worldwide turnover €60 million, French turnover €55 million). The combined worldwide turnover exceeds €250 million, but the target’s French turnover (€55 million) falls below the €80 million individual threshold. Result: no mandatory notification to the Autorité. However, since the target operates in cybersecurity, the acquirer should assess EU call‑in risk and may voluntarily engage with the Autorité to reduce uncertainty.
A South Korean industrial conglomerate (worldwide turnover €15 billion, French turnover €200 million) acquires a French company manufacturing dual-use components (worldwide turnover €500 million, French turnover €120 million). Both the combined worldwide threshold (€250 million) and the individual French threshold (€80 million) are exceeded. Result: mandatory Autorité notification and FDI authorisation required because the target operates in a sensitive defence-related sector and the buyer is non‑EU. Expected timeline: 16–22 weeks with parallel filings.
A French retailer (combined French retail turnover €1 billion) acquires a portfolio of 40 stores from a competitor (turnover attributable to the stores: €60 million). The combined French retail turnover exceeds the revised retail-sector threshold of €150 million, but only the turnover of the stores being acquired is counted for the individual test. At €60 million, this falls below the €80 million individual threshold. Result: no notification required under the general test. Cross‑border M&A lawyers France-based practitioners consult in such cases should nonetheless check whether any specific local-market analysis could trigger scrutiny under the Autorité’s residual powers.
The 2026 changes to France’s merger control thresholds and FDI screening regime create both opportunities and new complexity for international deal teams. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be threefold: fewer mid-market deals will require Autorité notification, those that do will face an authority with a more focused caseload and potentially faster review, and non-EU acquirers in an expanded list of sensitive sectors must plan for longer parallel clearance timelines.
Engaging experienced cross‑border M&A lawyers France can provide is essential for navigating these overlapping regimes efficiently. Early pre-notification engagement with both the Autorité and the Ministry of Economy, combined with a well-structured SPA (hold-separate provisions, escrow, and appropriate long-stop dates), remains the most reliable way to minimise deal risk.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Prof. Dr. Jochen Bauerreis at abci Avocats, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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