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how to terminate an employee in france

How to Terminate an Employee in France: Lawful Grounds, Entretien Préalable, Notice & Severance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to terminate an employee in France is essential for every employer operating under the Code du Travail, because French labour law treats dismissal not as a managerial prerogative but as a regulated act that must satisfy both substantive and procedural requirements. The central rule is that every dismissal of a permanent-contract (contrat à durée indéterminée, or CDI) employee must rest on a cause réelle et sérieuse, a real and serious reason, and must follow a mandatory sequence that begins with a preliminary interview and ends with the delivery of specific end-of-contract documents.

Failure at any stage exposes the employer to litigation before the Conseil de Prud’hommes (CPH), France’s specialised labour court, and to damages that can exceed months of salary. This guide walks HR managers, in-house counsel and business owners through every step: from confirming the lawful ground, through the entretien préalable and notice period, to the final severance pay in France calculation, with checklists, templates and worked examples.

Quick Employer Checklist: Can You Legally Dismiss This Employee?

Before initiating any termination procedure, run through the following preliminary checklist. Each item must be confirmed; a single “no” means the process should pause for legal review.

  • Contract type. Is the employee on a CDI? If so, ordinary dismissal rules apply. Fixed-term contracts (CDD) can only be terminated early in very limited circumstances (serious misconduct, force majeure, mutual agreement, or the employee securing a CDI elsewhere).
  • Reason category. Is the planned dismissal for a personal reason (misconduct, performance, professional incapacity) or an economic reason (redundancy, restructuring, business closure)? The procedural path differs significantly.
  • Protected status. Check whether the employee is a staff representative (membre du CSE), trade-union delegate, pregnant, on maternity/paternity leave, or a victim of a workplace accident. Protected employees require prior authorisation from the labour inspectorate (inspecteur du travail) before any dismissal can proceed, as set out in the Code du Travail.
  • Documentary evidence. Have you assembled written warnings, performance-improvement plans, medical certificates or economic data to support the stated ground? The employer bears the burden of proof before the CPH.
  • Timing restrictions. Has a disciplinary clock started? For misconduct, the employer must initiate the procedure within two months of becoming aware of the facts, per Article L. 1332-4 of the Code du Travail.
  • Collective consultation. If economic dismissal is planned and ten or more employees will be affected within a 30-day period, the employer must consult the Comité Social et Économique (CSE) and may need to prepare a plan de sauvegarde de l’emploi (PSE).

If every box is ticked, proceed to identify the precise legal ground and begin the formal procedure outlined below.

Legal Grounds for Dismissal in France (Cause Réelle et Sérieuse)

French law divides dismissal grounds into two broad families. Regardless of the category, every dismissal must satisfy the overarching legal standard of cause réelle et sérieuse, meaning the reason must be genuine, objective, verifiable and sufficiently serious to justify the termination of the employment relationship. This standard is codified principally in Articles L. 1232-1 and L. 1233-3 of the Code du Travail, as published on Legifrance. If the CPH concludes that the ground was neither real nor serious, it may award the employee compensation under the statutory scale (the “Macron scale,” Articles L. 1235-3 et seq.).

Personal Reasons (Motif Personnel)

A personal-reason dismissal relates to the individual employee’s conduct or capacity. French case law and the Code du Travail recognise several sub-categories:

  • Misconduct (faute). This ranges from simple misconduct (faute simple), through serious misconduct (faute grave), which justifies immediate departure with no notice or severance, to wilful misconduct (faute lourde), which implies an intention to harm the employer and historically removed even the right to paid-leave indemnity.
  • Professional inadequacy (insuffisance professionnelle). Persistent failure to meet the reasonable requirements of the role, supported by documented performance reviews and, ideally, a prior improvement plan.
  • Medical incapacity (inaptitude). Certified by the occupational physician (médecin du travail), this ground triggers a redeployment obligation before dismissal becomes lawful.

Industry observers note that is it difficult to be fired in France mainly because of the procedural burden and the employer’s obligation to justify the reason with evidence, not because French law prohibits dismissal outright. When the file is properly prepared, dismissal for personal reasons is a well-trodden legal path.

Economic Reasons (Motif Économique)

An economic dismissal in France must be linked to one of the grounds listed in Article L. 1233-3 of the Code du Travail: economic difficulties, technological change, business reorganisation necessary to safeguard competitiveness, or business closure. The employer must also demonstrate that no suitable redeployment within the company or group is possible. Economic dismissal carries additional obligations, CSE consultation, notification to the administrative authority (DREETS), selection criteria and, for larger-scale France redundancy situations, a PSE, which are covered in detail in Section 6 below.

How to Terminate an Employee in France: Procedural Steps for an Ordinary CDI Dismissal

The procedural rules for terminating an employee in France follow a mandatory sequence. Skipping or incorrectly performing any step can render the dismissal procedurally irregular, entitling the employee to additional compensation even if the substantive ground is valid. The timeline below applies to an individual dismissal for a personal reason; economic dismissals add further steps addressed in Section 6.

Step 1, Arranging the Entretien Préalable

The employer must send the employee a written convocation to a preliminary interview (entretien préalable au licenciement). This letter must be delivered either by registered post with acknowledgement of receipt (lettre recommandée avec accusé de réception, or LRAR) or by hand against a signed receipt. The convocation must state:

  • The date, time and place of the meeting.
  • The purpose of the meeting, namely, that dismissal is being considered.
  • The employee’s right to be assisted during the meeting by a person of their choice from within the company or, if there are no employee representatives, by an external adviser (conseiller du salarié) chosen from a list available at the local mairie or DREETS office.

A minimum of five clear working days (jours ouvrables) must elapse between delivery of the letter and the date of the meeting, per Article L. 1232-2 of the Code du Travail. This means if the letter is delivered on a Monday, the earliest the meeting can be held is the following Monday.

Step 2, Running the Meeting

At the entretien préalable, the employer (or its authorised representative) must explain the reasons being considered for dismissal and hear the employee’s explanations. Key practical points include:

  • The meeting must be a genuine exchange, not a formality. Courts have annulled dismissals where it was clear the decision had already been made before the meeting.
  • The employer may be assisted by a member of the company’s staff; external counsel for the employer is not permitted to attend.
  • If the employee does not attend, provided the convocation was properly served, the procedure may continue, but the employer should document the absence carefully.

Step 3, Drafting the Lettre de Licenciement

Following the meeting, the employer must observe a minimum reflection period before sending the dismissal letter. For a personal-reason dismissal, the letter may not be sent earlier than two clear working days after the entretien préalable (Article L. 1232-6 of the Code du Travail). For misconduct-related dismissals, it must also be sent within one month of the interview date.

The lettre de licenciement must be sent by LRAR and must set out all the reasons for the dismissal in a precise and materially verifiable way. Under reforms introduced in recent years, the employee may, within 15 days of receiving the letter, request clarification of the reasons stated; the employer then has 15 days to respond, also by LRAR. The reasons set out in the letter (and any subsequent clarification) fix the scope of any later judicial review, the employer cannot rely on grounds not mentioned.

Template, Personal Reason Dismissal Letter (English summary of required content):

[Company letterhead]
[Date]
Sent by LRAR

Dear [Employee name],

Following our preliminary interview held on [date], during which you were assisted by [name / or: you chose not to be assisted], we hereby inform you of our decision to dismiss you for the following reason(s): [state precise facts, e.g., repeated failure to meet sales targets as documented in reviews of [dates], despite the improvement plan implemented on [date]]. Your notice period of [X months] will begin on the date of first presentation of this letter. You will receive your statutory severance indemnity, end-of-contract documents and certificate of employment in accordance with the Code du Travail.

Yours sincerely,
[Authorised signatory]

Template, Economic Dismissal Notification Letter (English summary of required content):

[Company letterhead]
[Date]
Sent by LRAR

Dear [Employee name],

Following our preliminary interview held on [date], we regret to inform you that we are obliged to dismiss you for economic reasons, namely: [describe economic ground, e.g., a significant and sustained decline in orders over [X] consecutive quarters, as evidenced by [documents]]. We confirm that a search for redeployment was carried out and that no suitable alternative position within the company [or group] was identified. You are entitled to the contrat de sécurisation professionnelle (CSP) [if applicable, companies with fewer than 1,000 employees]; the relevant documentation is enclosed. Your notice period is [X months], and your statutory severance indemnity will be calculated in accordance with the applicable collective agreement and the Code du Travail.

Yours sincerely,
[Authorised signatory]

Note: these templates are for illustrative purposes. Local counsel should review all dismissal letters before dispatch to ensure compliance with the applicable collective agreement and current legislation.

Step 4, Employee Rights to Challenge

After receiving the dismissal letter, the employee may challenge the dismissal before the Conseil de Prud’hommes. The statute of limitations for contesting a dismissal is 12 months from notification for personal-reason dismissals and 12 months for economic dismissals, per Article L. 1471-1 of the Code du Travail. The employee may also request clarification of the reasons within 15 days, as noted above.

Notice Periods and Ending the Contract: CDI Contract Notice Period Rules

Once the dismissal letter is received, the notice period (préavis) begins. The notice period in France for a CDI is set by a combination of statute, the applicable collective agreement (convention collective) and the individual employment contract, whichever is most favourable to the employee applies.

Statutory and Typical Notice Periods

Employee category Seniority less than 6 months Seniority 6 months to < 2 years Seniority 2 years or more
Workers / Employees (ouvriers / employés) Per collective agreement (often 1 week to 1 month) 1 month (statutory minimum) 2 months (statutory minimum)
Supervisors / Technicians (agents de maîtrise) Per collective agreement 1 month 2 months
Managers / Executives (cadres) Per collective agreement (often 1–3 months) 3 months (common under most collective agreements) 3 months (common under most collective agreements)

Important exceptions: In cases of faute grave or faute lourde, no notice period applies, the employee must leave immediately. The employer may also choose to release the employee from working the notice period, but must still pay the corresponding salary (indemnité compensatrice de préavis). Collective agreements frequently provide longer notice periods than the statutory minimum, particularly for cadres, so employers must always check the applicable convention collective.

Notice Calculation Example

A mid-level employee (agent de maîtrise) with three years’ seniority, dismissed for performance reasons under a collective agreement that tracks statutory minimums, would be entitled to a two-month notice period. If the employer requests immediate departure, it must pay two months’ full salary as an indemnité compensatrice de préavis, plus the corresponding holiday-pay accrual.

Severance Pay in France: Entitlements and Calculations

Statutory severance pay in France (indemnité légale de licenciement) is owed to any CDI employee dismissed for a reason other than faute grave or faute lourde, provided the employee has at least eight months’ continuous service with the employer, per Article L. 1234-9 of the Code du Travail. The formula set out in Article R. 1234-2 is as follows:

  • First 10 years of service: one quarter (1/4) of a month’s reference salary per year of seniority.
  • Beyond 10 years of service: one third (1/3) of a month’s reference salary per year of seniority.

The reference salary is the higher of: (a) the average monthly gross salary for the last 12 months preceding notification, or (b) one third of the total gross salary for the last three months (including prorated bonuses). Collective agreements and individual contracts frequently provide for enhanced severance, often referred to as indemnité conventionnelle, which always prevails if more favourable. France redundancy pay under a plan de sauvegarde de l’emploi is typically negotiated above the statutory floor.

Worked Severance Examples

Scenario Seniority Monthly reference salary Statutory minimum severance
Junior employee dismissed for performance 3 years €3,000 3 × (€3,000 × 1/4) = €2,250
Senior manager (economic dismissal) 15 years €6,500 [10 × (€6,500 × 1/4)] + [5 × (€6,500 × 1/3)] = €16,250 + €10,833 = €27,083
Mid-level employee (collective redundancy with PSE) 8 years €4,200 Statutory: 8 × (€4,200 × 1/4) = €8,400; likely enhanced to €12,000–€15,000+ under PSE

Comparison of Dismissal Types, Procedures and Typical Outcomes

Dismissal type Employer key procedural steps Typical notice / severance outcome
Personal dismissal (misconduct / performance) Entretien préalable → reasoned lettre de licenciement → notice (unless faute grave) → end-of-contract documents Notice per contract / collective agreement; statutory severance (unless faute grave/lourde); damages if dismissal found unfair
Economic dismissal (individual or collective) Economic analysis → CSE consultation (collective) → redeployment search → PSE if required → notification to DREETS Statutory severance (formula) + enhanced package under PSE where applicable; notice periods apply in full
Mutual termination (rupture conventionnelle) Negotiation and agreement → homologation via online filing → 15-day retraction period → administrative validation Agreed settlement (minimum = statutory severance); often higher; no litigation on dismissal grounds

Collective Dismissal in France: The Economic Dismissal Process and CSE Consultation

Where an employer plans an economic dismissal in France affecting multiple employees, additional procedural layers apply. The obligations increase with the number of dismissals contemplated and the size of the workforce.

  • Fewer than 10 dismissals in a 30-day period (company with 11+ employees): the employer must consult the CSE and provide written economic justification, but a formal PSE is not required.
  • 10 or more dismissals in a 30-day period (company with 50+ employees): the employer must prepare a PSE containing measures to avoid or limit redundancies (redeployment, retraining, early retirement, outplacement). The PSE must be submitted to the DREETS for validation (if negotiated with unions) or approval (if drawn up unilaterally). The DREETS has 15 days (negotiated agreement) or 21 days (unilateral plan) to respond, per the Ministère du Travail guidance.

CSE Consultation Checklist for Employers

The following documents must be provided to the CSE before the first consultation meeting:

  • Detailed statement of the economic grounds and their impact on employment.
  • Number and categories of employees affected.
  • Proposed selection criteria (seniority, family responsibilities, disability, professional skills, Article L. 1233-5 of the Code du Travail).
  • Proposed redeployment measures and timeline.
  • Draft PSE (where required), including training, outplacement and financial support provisions.
  • Planned schedule for notifications and departures.

The CSE must have sufficient time to examine the documents and issue its opinion. For a collective dismissal in France involving 10 or more employees, the Code du Travail prescribes consultation periods that range from two months (10–99 dismissals) up to four months (250+ dismissals). Failure to respect these timelines or to consult the CSE at all can result in the nullity of the entire dismissal procedure, a risk addressed further in Section 8 below.

Alternatives and Special Paths: Mutual Termination, Resignation and Summary Dismissal

Not every employment separation in France follows the standard dismissal procedure. Three alternative paths are commonly encountered.

  • Rupture conventionnelle (mutual termination agreement France). Introduced by legislation in 2008, this mechanism allows employer and employee to agree to terminate a CDI by mutual consent, without either party needing to prove fault or economic grounds. The procedure requires at least one meeting, a written agreement signed by both parties, a 15-calendar-day retraction period, and administrative homologation via the online TéléRC platform. The agreed severance must be at least equal to the statutory minimum. Because it avoids litigation risk and entitles the employee to unemployment benefits, the rupture conventionnelle has become one of the most widely used termination methods in France.
  • Resignation (démission). Resignation is an employee-initiated act and does not require employer approval. The employee must observe the contractual or collective-agreement notice period. Employers should be cautious: if an employee resigns under duress or because of a hostile work environment, a court may recharacterise the resignation as an unfair constructive dismissal.
  • Summary dismissal for serious or wilful misconduct. Where the employee has committed faute grave (e.g., theft, violent behaviour, gross insubordination) or faute lourde (intention to harm the employer), the employer may dismiss without notice and without paying severance. The entretien préalable must still be held, and the procedure must be initiated within two months of the employer becoming aware of the facts. A mise à pied conservatoire (precautionary suspension) may be imposed while the procedure is carried out.

When Mutual Termination Is Preferable

Industry observers suggest that the rupture conventionnelle is often preferable when the ground for dismissal is weak or contested, when the employer wishes to avoid CPH proceedings, or when both parties recognise that the employment relationship has run its course. The negotiated nature of the agreement typically results in severance packages higher than the statutory minimum, but the total cost may still be lower than a contested dismissal followed by litigation.

Litigation Risk and How the Labour Court (CPH) Assesses Dismissals

Any dismissed employee may bring a claim before the Conseil de Prud’hommes within 12 months of notification. The CPH examines both the substantive ground (cause réelle et sérieuse) and the procedural regularity of the dismissal. Key principles include:

  • Burden of proof. The burden is shared: the employee must present facts supporting their claim, but the employer must prove the reality and seriousness of the reason relied upon. In practice, an employer with a thin file faces significant risk.
  • Procedural irregularity alone. Even where the substantive ground is valid, a procedural failure (e.g., insufficient notice for the entretien préalable, missing right-to-assistance notice) entitles the employee to compensation, typically up to one month’s salary for a procedural defect that does not affect the merits.
  • Unfair dismissal without real and serious cause. For employees with at least two years’ seniority in a company of 11 or more employees, the statutory compensation scale (the “Macron scale,” Article L. 1235-3) provides a range of between three and 20 months’ gross salary, depending on seniority.
  • Nullity. Certain dismissals, those violating fundamental rights, discriminating, or retaliating against whistle-blowers, may be declared null, entitling the employee to reinstatement or at least six months’ compensation regardless of seniority.

The likely practical effect for employers is clear: investing time in building a complete documentary file, following each procedural step scrupulously and obtaining legal advice before dispatching the dismissal letter substantially reduces exposure. Settlements at the CPH conciliation stage remain common and are often based on a discount to the Macron-scale midpoint, but an employer who has committed both a substantive and a procedural error will have very little negotiating leverage.

Practical File Checklist to Reduce CPH Exposure

  • Written warnings or performance-improvement plans with employee acknowledgement.
  • Signed convocation letter to the entretien préalable with proof of delivery.
  • Meeting notes (internal, not given to the employee) confirming what was discussed.
  • Dismissal letter sent within the required timeframes, clearly stating every relied-upon reason.
  • Proof that notice and severance were paid correctly.
  • End-of-contract documents delivered: certificat de travail, attestation France Travail (formerly attestation Pôle Emploi) and solde de tout compte, as required by the Service-public guidance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Margaux Goetz-Nectoux at MAGE AVOCATS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Practical Templates and Downloadable Resources

The following resources are referenced throughout this guide and are available for illustrative use. Employers should have all templates reviewed by qualified French employment counsel before use, as collective agreements and evolving legislation may alter required content.

  • Entretien préalable convocation script. A model letter containing all mandatory information (date, time, place, subject, right to assistance) in French and English.
  • Lettre de licenciement, personal reason. Template dismissal letter for performance or misconduct-based terminations (see Section 3 above).
  • Lettre de licenciement, economic reason. Template notification letter for individual economic dismissal, including redeployment and CSP references (see Section 3 above).
  • Employer HR checklist. A printable step-by-step procedural checklist covering all stages from initial assessment to delivery of end-of-contract documents.
  • Severance worked-example spreadsheet. A calculation tool pre-loaded with the statutory formula for employers to input salary and seniority data and obtain a minimum severance estimate.

Note: templates are provided for general informational purposes. They do not constitute legal advice and must be adapted to the specific circumstances, the applicable collective agreement and current legislation on Legifrance.

Conclusion

Knowing how to terminate an employee in France means mastering a structured, evidence-based process that French law imposes to protect both parties. Employers who identify the correct legal ground, conduct a genuine entretien préalable, draft a precise and timely dismissal letter, respect the applicable notice period, and calculate severance accurately will navigate the system with confidence. Where the facts are ambiguous, a mutual termination agreement France employers increasingly favour, the rupture conventionnelle, offers a pragmatic alternative. For every scenario, building a robust documentary file remains the single most effective tool for reducing litigation risk. Employers considering any form of dismissal in France are strongly encouraged to consult a qualified French employment lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to obtain case-specific advice before initiating the procedure.

Sources

  1. Legifrance, Code du Travail
  2. Service-public.fr, Termination of permanent employment contract
  3. Ministère du Travail, DREETS guidance on collective redundancies and CSE
  4. CMS Law, Dismissals & Termination in France
  5. Rippling, Termination in France
  6. Safeguard Global, Terminating an Employee in France
  7. Boundless, End of Employment in France
  8. Cour de cassation, Jurisprudence summaries

FAQs

How do you terminate an employee in France?
You must follow a mandatory process: confirm the lawful ground for dismissal, send a formal convocation to an entretien préalable with at least five working days’ notice, hold the preliminary interview, observe a minimum reflection period, and then send a reasoned dismissal letter (lettre de licenciement) by registered post. After the notice period, you must deliver end-of-contract documents including the certificat de travail, attestation France Travail and solde de tout compte.
Dismissal requires a “real and serious reason” (cause réelle et sérieuse) and strict procedural compliance. The employer bears the burden of proving the reason before the labour court. While this makes the process more demanding than in some other jurisdictions, dismissal is entirely achievable when the grounds are properly documented and the procedure is correctly followed.
For a CDI, the employer must hold an entretien préalable, produce a written, motivated dismissal letter, respect the contractual or statutory notice period, and pay statutory severance (unless the dismissal is for faute grave or faute lourde). Economic dismissals add CSE consultation and, for larger-scale redundancies, a PSE.
The statutory minimum is one quarter of a month’s reference salary per year of seniority for the first ten years, plus one third of a month per year beyond ten years. Collective agreements often provide more generous terms. For example, an employee with 15 years’ seniority and a monthly salary of €6,500 would receive a statutory minimum of approximately €27,083.
Statutory notice depends on seniority: generally one month for employees with six months to two years of service, and two months for those with two or more years. Managers (cadres) typically have three months’ notice under most collective agreements. No notice applies in cases of faute grave or faute lourde.
Yes, in limited circumstances. An employer may dismiss an employee on sick leave for an economic reason or for a reason unrelated to the health condition (e.g., misconduct discovered before the leave). However, dismissal that is motivated by the employee’s state of health or disability is discriminatory and will be declared null. Careful legal analysis is required before proceeding.
A rupture conventionnelle is a mutual termination agreement between employer and employee that ends a CDI by consent, without the need to establish fault or an economic ground. It must follow a specific procedure, at least one meeting, a written agreement, a 15-day retraction period and administrative homologation, and the agreed severance must meet or exceed the statutory minimum. The employee retains eligibility for unemployment benefits.
Failure to consult the CSE when required can result in the procedural nullity of the entire dismissal process. Affected employees may seek reinstatement or substantial compensation. The DREETS may also refuse to validate or approve the PSE, blocking the employer from proceeding with notifications. The financial and operational consequences can be severe, making CSE consultation a non-negotiable step in any collective dismissal in France.
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How to Terminate an Employee in France: Lawful Grounds, Entretien Préalable, Notice & Severance

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