Understanding how to deal with strikes in France is essential for every employer operating in the country, where industrial action remains a deeply entrenched feature of the labour landscape. France consistently records among the highest strike rates in Europe, and the recurring waves of industrial action through 2025 and into 2026, spanning transport, energy, education and the private sector, underscore the urgency of having a legally compliant response framework in place. This guide provides HR directors, in-house counsel and business managers with the step-by-step compliance procedures they need: from the constitutional foundations of the right to strike, through lawful pay deductions and minimum-service obligations, to the mandatory CSE consultation process and day-by-day operational checklists.
Every recommendation is grounded in the Code du travail, official Ministry of Labour guidance and established French court practice, last reviewed as at May 2026.
The short answer is yes. The right to strike is a constitutionally protected freedom in France. Paragraph 7 of the Preamble to the 1946 Constitution, which retains full legal force under the current Fifth Republic Constitution, declares that “the right to strike is exercised within the framework of the laws that regulate it.” This constitutional guarantee is further implemented through the Code du travail and supplemented by a substantial body of case law from the Cour de cassation (France’s highest court for civil and labour matters).
Crucially, no prior authorisation from any authority is required for a lawful strike in the private sector. The Code du travail does not impose a mandatory notice period on private-sector employees; a strike may begin as soon as the employer has been informed of the strikers’ professional demands. This stands in marked contrast to the public sector, where specific procedural requirements apply.
For a work stoppage to qualify as a protected strike under French law, three conditions must generally be met: the action must be collective (involving at least two employees, or one employee joining a national call to action), it must involve a complete cessation of work (not merely a slowdown), and it must be motivated by professional demands directed at the employer or public authorities.
In the private sector, every employee has the right to strike regardless of union membership. No advance notice to the employer is legally required, although in practice unions typically publicise planned action.
In the public sector, the right to strike is subject to additional constraints. A representative union must file a strike notice (préavis de grève) at least five clear days before the planned start, specifying the duration, the location and the grounds for the action. Certain categories of public servants, including military personnel, police officers, magistrates and some prison staff, are prohibited from striking entirely. The Ministry of Labour and service-public.fr publish regularly updated lists of these excluded categories.
Employer obligations during a strike in France are extensive. Failure to comply can expose the company to damages claims, criminal sanctions for obstruction of the right to strike, and unfair-dismissal liability. The following framework divides obligations into the pre-strike and active-strike phases.
The principle of strike pay in France follows a straightforward rule: no work, no pay. Because a strike suspends, but does not terminate, the employment contract, the employer is relieved of the obligation to pay remuneration for the exact period of the work stoppage. However, the mechanics of calculating and applying that deduction are heavily regulated and frequently litigated.
The deduction must be strictly proportional to the duration of the strike. An employer may not deduct more than the hours actually not worked. The standard calculation divides the employee’s monthly salary by the number of working hours in the month and multiplies by the hours of strike absence. Any deduction that exceeds the proportional amount, for example, docking a full day’s pay for a two-hour stoppage, has been repeatedly struck down by the Cour de cassation as an unlawful financial penalty.
The following sample illustrates the standard approach:
| Variable | Example Value |
|---|---|
| Gross monthly salary | €3,500 |
| Working hours in the month | 151.67 hours |
| Hourly rate (€3,500 ÷ 151.67) | €23.08 |
| Strike absence | 7 hours (1 full day) |
| Lawful deduction | €23.08 × 7 = €161.56 |
Employers should note that the payslip must clearly show the deduction and the reason (strike absence). Disguising the deduction under a different heading or rounding it up exposes the employer to a claim before the Conseil de Prud’hommes (labour tribunal).
Participation in a lawful strike cannot, by itself, constitute a ground for disciplinary action. The Code du travail expressly provides that no employee may be sanctioned or dismissed for the normal exercise of the right to strike. The sole exception is serious misconduct (faute lourde) committed during the strike, for example, deliberate destruction of company property, physical violence against non-strikers, or sequestration of managers. Even where faute lourde is alleged, the employer must follow the full disciplinary procedure (convocation to a pre-disciplinary meeting, right to be assisted, written notification of the sanction) and bear the burden of proving the individual’s personal involvement.
Unlike some jurisdictions that impose a general minimum-service obligation across the economy, France applies minimum service requirements only in specific sectors where public safety or essential public needs are at stake. The rules are found in a patchwork of legislation and sectoral decrees, and understanding how to deal with strikes in France requires familiarity with these sector-specific frameworks.
| Sector | Minimum Service Rule | Employer Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Public transport (SNCF, RATP, regional operators) | Loi n° 2007-1224 requires operators to publish a predictable service plan and obliges striking employees to declare their intention at least 48 hours in advance. Minimum timetables must be maintained on key routes. | Coordinate with the transport authority, collect individual declarations, publish revised timetables and notify passengers. Maintain records of declarations for audit. |
| Health & emergency services | Hospital directors may designate essential posts that must remain staffed (service minimum). Prefects may requisition healthcare workers under public-order powers if patient safety is at risk. | Maintain up-to-date staffing rosters, notify the Agence Régionale de Santé (ARS) of anticipated shortfalls, engage the CSE on contingency staffing, and comply with any prefectoral requisition orders. |
| Education / schools | Loi n° 2008-790 requires communes to organise a childcare/reception service (service d’accueil) for primary-school pupils when more than 25 % of teachers declare a strike. | Consult the local authority (mairie), identify available non-striking staff or municipal employees for reception duties, implement the minimum reception roster, keep attendance records. |
| Energy (nuclear, gas, electricity) | Operators must maintain safety-critical functions. Sectoral decrees and the Code de l’énergie require continuity of nuclear safety monitoring and essential grid operations. | Identify safety-critical roles in advance, notify the relevant regulator (ASN for nuclear), ensure minimum technical staffing, document compliance. |
In the private sector outside the above categories, no general legal obligation to maintain a minimum service exists. However, employers retain their duty to protect the health and safety of non-striking employees, clients and third parties present on the premises.
CSE consultation during a strike in France is not merely a formality, it is a legal obligation that, if neglected, can invalidate employer decisions and generate substantial liability. The Comité Social et Économique, which replaced the former comité d’entreprise, delegates’ representatives and CHSCT in enterprises with 11 or more employees, must be informed and consulted on any measure that materially affects working conditions, employment levels or organisational structure.
Employers should prepare the following documents in advance of any anticipated strike:
Knowing how to deal with strikes in France means having an operational playbook ready before the first picket line forms. The following phased checklists translate the legal obligations above into concrete daily actions.
Litigation avoidance depends on the quality of an employer’s documentation. French labour courts scrutinise employer behaviour during strikes closely, and the burden of proof frequently falls on the employer to demonstrate compliance. Essential records include:
Industry observers expect that employers with complete, contemporaneous records are significantly less exposed to successful claims before the Conseil de Prud’hommes or the criminal courts.
Employers should consider engaging specialist employment counsel in the following situations:
| Entity Type | Key Obligations | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Private company | No mandatory notice period from employees; no general minimum-service obligation; CSE consultation required; proportional pay deductions permitted; no replacement by temps. | Focus on pre-strike operational planning and CSE engagement, these are your primary compliance levers. |
| Public enterprise (e.g., SNCF, RATP, EDF) | Five-day union notice period; individual 48-hour declarations (transport); sector-specific minimum-service decrees; CSE or equivalent body consultation; heightened regulatory reporting. | Use the advance-notice window strategically: finalise contingency timetables, coordinate with regulators and notify the public. |
| State / public service | Five-day union notice; some categories prohibited from striking; prefectoral requisition powers may apply; minimum service in health, education and security functions. | Maintain an up-to-date register of essential posts and requisition procedures; liaise with the prefecture early. |
For any employer seeking to understand how to deal with strikes in France lawfully and effectively, the following summary captures the non-negotiable steps:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Henri Guyot at aerige, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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