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set up acquisition holding vs direct acquisition France 2026

Should I Set Up an Acquisition Holding or Buy the French Target Directly in 2026?

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Every buyer approaching a French target in 2026 faces the same structural fork in the road: set up an acquisition holding vs direct acquisition France 2026. Option A means incorporating a dedicated French holding company (often a société par actions simplifiée, or SAS) that borrows, acquires the target’s shares, and serves as the permanent ownership wrapper. Option B means the buyer, whether an individual, an existing group entity, or a fund vehicle, purchases the target’s shares or assets directly, skipping the intermediate layer altogether. The choice drives tax efficiency, financing capacity, liability exposure, and post-deal flexibility for years after closing.

France’s Finance Act 2026 (Loi de finances pour 2026) sharpens the stakes: new patrimonial-holding levies targeting certain passive financial and luxury-asset holdings, plus tightened interest-deductibility caps, change the cost calculus for both routes. This guide maps every dimension of the decision, gives you a concrete recommendation for each buyer profile, and identifies exactly when to bring in specialist M&A counsel.

Option A: The Acquisition Holding, Mechanics, Use Cases, and Pros and Cons

How an acquisition holding works

An acquisition holding is a special-purpose French company, typically an SAS, incorporated before signing. The holding raises equity from the buyer (and sometimes co-investors or management), draws acquisition debt from banks or mezzanine lenders, and then uses the combined funds to purchase the target’s shares. After closing, the target’s cash flows service the holding’s acquisition debt through upstream dividends or, once tax consolidation (intégration fiscale) is elected, through pooled group profits. The holding company vs direct acquisition France decision usually turns on whether this intermediate debt-equity structure is worth the additional setup and compliance burden.

Key mechanical steps include:

  • Incorporation. Form an SAS (or SA) with the French commercial registry (greffe du tribunal de commerce). Timeline: typically five to ten business days for standard incorporation, though expedited filings are available.
  • Capitalisation. Inject buyer equity. Minimum share capital for an SAS is €1, but lenders and sellers will require a commercially meaningful equity cheque.
  • Debt draw-down. Execute the senior facility agreement and draw acquisition debt at or before closing.
  • Share acquisition. The holding purchases 100 % (or a controlling stake) of the target.
  • Tax consolidation election. If the holding owns at least 95 % of the target’s capital, it can elect the intégration fiscale regime, allowing taxable profits and losses within the group to be consolidated for corporate income tax (CIT) purposes.

Typical use cases

The holding route dominates in three scenarios:

  • Leveraged buy-outs (LBOs). PE sponsors and management teams almost always use a holding (often called “BidCo”) to ring-fence acquisition debt, deduct interest against consolidated group income, and keep the target’s balance sheet clean.
  • Multi-jurisdictional groups. A foreign parent setting up a French holding can centralise ownership of multiple French subsidiaries, benefit from the parent-subsidiary (mère-fille) dividend exemption, and simplify future disposals.
  • Management reinvestment. When managers co-invest alongside financial sponsors, a dedicated holding provides a clean vehicle for management equity strips, ratchet mechanisms, and shareholder-agreement governance.

Should you use a holding company to buy in France? If your deal involves leverage, co-investors, or an expected future exit via share sale, the answer is almost always yes, subject to the 2026 tax adjustments explored below.

Option B: Direct Acquisition of the French Target, Mechanics, Use Cases, and Pros and Cons

Share purchase vs asset purchase

A direct acquisition means the buyer entity, an existing parent company, a natural person, or a fund, purchases the target’s shares (or, less commonly, its assets) without interposing a new French holding. The two sub-variants have different consequences:

  • Direct share purchase. The buyer acquires 100 % of the target’s equity. The target continues as a going concern with all contracts, employees, and liabilities intact. Registration duties (droits d’enregistrement) apply at the applicable rate on the share transfer.
  • Direct asset purchase (fonds de commerce). The buyer acquires the target’s business assets, goodwill, contracts, inventory, sometimes real estate, rather than its corporate wrapper. This route allows cherry-picking of assets and liabilities but triggers higher transfer taxes and VAT considerations, and requires compliance with employee-transfer rules under French labour law (article L. 1224-1 du Code du travail).

When direct purchase is the better route

A direct acquisition suits buyers who prioritise speed, simplicity, or specific tax profiles:

  • Small, profitable targets with no leverage. If the buyer self-funds the purchase with cash, there is no acquisition debt to shield and no need for a holding’s interest-deduction mechanics.
  • Carve-outs and asset deals. When the buyer wants specific business lines rather than the entire corporate entity, a direct asset purchase avoids inheriting hidden liabilities.
  • Individual founders or family offices. A natural person buying a single small company may prefer to avoid the cost and compliance overhead of maintaining an additional corporate layer.
  • Speed-critical transactions. When competitive auction dynamics demand a rapid signing, skipping the holding-incorporation step eliminates one workstream from the critical path.

The pros and cons of a holding company France equation shifts toward the direct route whenever leverage, co-investment, or multi-target strategies are absent from the deal thesis.

Holding vs Direct Acquisition: The Side-by-Side Comparison for France 2026

The table below is the centrepiece of the decision. Each row represents a dimension that should appear in your pre-deal structuring memorandum. Read it alongside the dimension-by-dimension analysis in the next section for the tax rates, statutory references, and Finance Act 2026 changes behind each cell. The acquisition vehicle France tax implications differ materially across these dimensions.

Dimension Acquisition Holding (Option A) Direct Acquisition (Option B)
Eligibility Any buyer (corporate, PE fund, individual via corporate wrapper) can form a French SAS/SA Any buyer can purchase directly; natural persons face higher personal-tax exposure on dividends and gains
Setup speed 5–10 business days for standard SAS incorporation; add 2–4 weeks for bank-account opening and debt documentation No setup required; buyer signs SPA immediately
One-time setup cost €2,000–€8,000 (legal fees, registration, notarial fees if real estate contributed); plus bank and legal due diligence costs for acquisition debt Minimal incremental cost (only SPA negotiation and registration duties)
Ongoing compliance Annual accounts filing, statutory audit (if thresholds met), tax returns for the holding entity, consolidation reporting No additional entity to maintain; target’s existing compliance continues
Corporate income tax Standard CIT at 25 %; intégration fiscale available if ≥ 95 % ownership; mère-fille dividend exemption (95 % exempt) available if ≥ 5 % held for 2 years CIT at 25 % at target level; no consolidation benefit; dividends taxed at buyer level per home-jurisdiction rules
Interest deductibility / LBO feasibility Acquisition debt interest deductible against consolidated group income (subject to 2026 interest-limitation cap); core LBO advantage No acquisition debt at target level; interest deduction unavailable unless buyer restructures post-deal
Finance Act 2026 exposure New patrimonial-holding levies may apply if the holding’s assets are predominantly passive financial or luxury holdings; tightened interest caps increase effective cost of leverage Lower direct exposure to patrimonial levies; but no interest shield to offset
Liability exposure Ring-fenced: holding’s liability limited to its equity and debt; buyer’s other assets insulated Buyer directly exposed to target’s liabilities (share deal) or selected liabilities (asset deal)
FDI screening Triggered by the same ownership thresholds regardless of structure; holding does not add or remove FDI filing obligations for non-EU buyers Same FDI thresholds apply; no structural advantage
Reversibility / future exit Holding shares can be sold to a successor buyer; clean exit via share sale of HoldCo; post-deal merger (fusion rapide) possible but triggers tax consequences Direct sale of target shares on exit; simpler if no holding exists, but no ability to sell the “wrapper” separately
Post-deal restructure complexity Low if holding is set up pre-deal; high if created post-deal (contribution, share exchange, potential tax charges) Low at closing; high if buyer later decides to interpose a holding (transfer taxes, possible gain recognition)
Typical buyer profile PE sponsors, management teams, multi-target acquirers, cross-border corporates Individual founders, family offices, single-asset buyers, cash-rich corporates with no leverage need

The table above shows that the holding company vs direct acquisition France choice is not a one-size-fits-all answer. The holding route wins on leverage, liability insulation, and exit flexibility; the direct route wins on speed, cost, and simplicity. The Finance Act 2026 provisions, examined in detail below, add a third variable: whether the holding’s asset mix exposes it to the new patrimonial levies.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Set Up Acquisition Holding vs Direct Acquisition France 2026

Tax implications

Tax is the single most consequential dimension. France’s standard corporate income tax rate stands at 25 %, applicable to both the holding and the target. The critical differences arise in how income flows between entities and how gains are taxed on exit.

Tax item Acquisition Holding (Option A) Direct Acquisition (Option B)
Standard CIT rate 25 % 25 % (at target level)
Dividend flow (mère-fille) 95 % exempt from CIT if holding owns ≥ 5 % of target for ≥ 2 years; effective tax on dividends: ~1.25 % (5 % taxable quota × 25 % CIT) Dividends taxed under buyer’s home-jurisdiction rules; no French mère-fille benefit unless buyer is a French entity already holding ≥ 5 %
Capital gains on share disposal Long-term capital gains on qualifying participations (≥ 5 % held ≥ 2 years) benefit from a participation exemption with a 12 % quote-part of expenses taxed at 25 % CIT, effective rate approximately 3 % Same exemption available if buyer is a French corporate entity meeting the conditions; not available to individual or non-resident buyers without treaty relief
Tax consolidation (intégration fiscale) Available if holding owns ≥ 95 % of target; allows offset of holding’s interest expense against target’s taxable profits Not available (no parent-subsidiary relationship)
Finance Act 2026, patrimonial-holding levy New levy targeting holdings whose assets are predominantly passive financial instruments or luxury assets; rates of 2 % on certain financial holdings and up to 20 % on designated luxury-asset holdings as introduced by the Loi de finances pour 2026 Generally not applicable (buyer holds an operating company, not a portfolio of passive assets)
Interest-limitation cap (Art. 212 bis CGI, as amended 2026) Net interest expense deductible up to the higher of 30 % of tax EBITDA or €3 million; 2026 Finance Act tightens anti-avoidance conditions for related-party debt No acquisition debt at target level to deduct

The holding company tax 2026 France landscape is therefore a trade-off: the holding unlocks the interest shield and the participation exemption, but it now potentially attracts the new patrimonial-holding levies if its asset composition tips toward passive financial holdings rather than operating participations. Industry observers expect the Direction Générale des Finances Publiques (DGFiP) to issue administrative guidance clarifying which types of operating holdings fall outside the scope of the new levy.

Financing and interest deductibility

The core LBO advantage of an acquisition holding is that it borrows to buy the target’s shares, then deducts the resulting interest expense against consolidated group income under the intégration fiscale regime. Under Article 212 bis of the Code général des impôts (CGI), net interest expense remains deductible up to the higher of 30 % of tax EBITDA or €3 million per annum. The Finance Act 2026 tightens anti-avoidance measures around related-party debt, imposing stricter substance and arm’s-length pricing requirements. The likely practical effect is that purely intra-group or back-to-back funding structures face greater scrutiny, while third-party bank debt remains fully deductible within the cap.

For direct acquisitions, there is no acquisition-level debt to deduct, so this entire dimension is neutral or irrelevant.

Timing and setup

If you decide to set up a holding for your acquisition, the company must be incorporated and capitalised before closing, ideally before signing the SPA, so the holding is named as the buyer. Incorporating an SAS takes five to ten business days; opening a bank account and completing KYC typically adds two to four weeks. A pre-deal holding vs post-deal restructure approach matters enormously: interposing a holding after the buyer has already acquired the target triggers share-transfer taxes, potential capital-gains recognition, and disruption to financing covenants.

Liability and indemnities

An acquisition holding creates a structural firewall. The holding’s liability is limited to its own equity and the acquisition debt for which it is the obligor. The buyer’s other assets, whether personal or held in a separate group entity, sit behind the corporate veil. In a direct acquisition, the buyer is the direct owner of the target and bears full exposure to its known and unknown liabilities (in a share deal) or to transferring-employee and environmental claims (in an asset deal). Warranty and indemnity packages in the SPA become correspondingly more critical in a direct deal because there is no holding buffer.

Regulatory and FDI screening

France’s foreign-direct-investment screening regime (Articles L. 151-3 and R. 151-1 et seq. of the Code monétaire et financier) applies to non-EU/EEA investors acquiring control of, or significant influence over, French entities operating in sensitive sectors. The triggering event is the acquisition itself, not the choice of vehicle. Using a holding does not exempt a foreign buyer from FDI notification, nor does a direct purchase add an extra filing. The practical impact is the same under both routes, although structuring through a French holding may marginally simplify post-clearance compliance reporting because the French holding, rather than a distant foreign parent, serves as the direct contact for the Ministry of the Economy.

What Changes in 2026: The Finance Act Impact on Holding Structures

The Loi de finances pour 2026, published in the Journal officiel and codified via Légifrance, introduces three measures that directly affect the holding-vs-direct decision:

  • Patrimonial-holding levy on passive financial holdings. A 2 % annual levy applies to French entities whose assets consist predominantly of passive financial instruments (listed securities, bonds, cash-equivalent holdings) rather than operating participations. Holdings that own active operating subsidiaries, such as a typical acquisition holding in an LBO, are expected to fall outside the scope, though final administrative guidance from the DGFiP is pending.
  • Luxury-asset holding surcharge. A 20 % levy targets entities holding certain luxury assets (yachts, aircraft, high-value real estate used for personal purposes) through corporate wrappers. This measure is aimed at wealth-structuring vehicles, not at commercial M&A holdings, but buyers acquiring targets with significant luxury-asset portfolios should model the exposure.
  • Tightened interest-limitation anti-avoidance. The Finance Act 2026 reinforces the substance requirements under Article 212 bis CGI for deducting related-party interest expense. Early indications suggest that arms-length-priced, third-party bank debt will remain fully deductible within the existing 30 %-of-EBITDA / €3 million cap, but that back-to-back or mirror-debt arrangements will face potential denial.

The bottom line: for a standard M&A holding that owns an operating subsidiary and carries third-party acquisition debt, the 2026 changes increase compliance costs marginally but do not eliminate the core tax advantages. For holdings that accumulate passive financial assets or luxury holdings, the new levies can be punitive, making the direct-acquisition route or an alternative offshore structure worth modelling.

Decision Framework: When to Choose a Holding, When to Buy Direct

Use the framework below to map your deal to the right structure. Each bullet is an actionable trigger condition, if one or more conditions in a list apply, that route is the recommended starting point.

Choose the acquisition holding (Option A) when:

  • You are financing any part of the purchase with acquisition debt (LBO, mezzanine, vendor loan)
  • You plan to elect intégration fiscale to offset interest expense against the target’s profits
  • Multiple investors or a management team are co-investing alongside the buyer
  • You expect to acquire additional French targets and want a centralised ownership platform
  • Liability ring-fencing is a priority (e.g., target operates in a high-risk sector)
  • Your exit strategy is a secondary buyout or trade sale of the holding entity

Choose direct acquisition (Option B) when:

  • You are funding the purchase entirely with equity and have no acquisition debt
  • Speed to signing is critical and there is no time to incorporate and capitalise a new entity
  • You are buying a single small target with no plan for further French acquisitions
  • The target’s assets include significant passive financial or luxury holdings that would trigger the 2026 patrimonial-holding levies if held through a French holding
  • You are an individual buyer or family office and want to avoid the compliance overhead of maintaining a separate corporate entity
  • You are performing a carve-out or asset deal where no share-transfer structure is needed
If your priority is… Choose…
Maximising interest tax shield Acquisition holding
Fastest possible signing Direct acquisition
Liability insulation Acquisition holding
Lowest ongoing compliance cost Direct acquisition
Clean exit via share sale of wrapper Acquisition holding
Avoiding 2026 patrimonial-holding levies Direct acquisition (or non-French holding)
Multi-target platform in France Acquisition holding
Buying assets, not shares Direct acquisition (asset deal)

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Holding vs Direct Acquisition Decision

This is not a decision to make on a spreadsheet alone. Engage specialist M&A counsel when any of the following apply:

  • Pre-LOI tax modelling. You need a tax-structuring memo comparing the after-tax cost of the holding route vs direct acquisition, incorporating the 2026 interest-limitation and patrimonial-levy rules, before you submit your binding offer.
  • Pre-signing holding incorporation. If you decide to use a holding, the company must be formed, capitalised, and bank-ready before the SPA is signed, your lawyer coordinates incorporation, articles of association, and shareholder agreements under tight deal timelines.
  • FDI notification. If you are a non-EU buyer acquiring a target in a sensitive sector, counsel must prepare and file the FDI notification with the Ministry of the Economy and manage the clearance timeline.
  • Negotiating warranty and indemnity packages. The allocation of risk between buyer and seller, and the structural protection a holding provides, should be reflected in bespoke SPA clauses drafted by transactional counsel.
  • Post-deal restructure or merger. If you closed a direct acquisition and now want to interpose a holding, or if you want to merge the holding into the target (fusion rapide), the tax and corporate-law consequences require specialist modelling.

You can search for qualified M&A counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mathieu de Korvin at Alkeom M&A Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Légifrance, Loi de finances pour 2026 and Code général des impôts
  2. Direction Générale des Finances Publiques (impots.gouv.fr), Corporate income tax and participation-exemption guidance
  3. BOFiP-Impôts, Administrative commentary on interest-limitation rules (Art. 212 bis CGI)
  4. Ministère de l’Économie, des Finances et de la Souveraineté industrielle et numérique, Finance Act 2026 explanatory notes
  5. Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF), Regulatory guidance on equity-holding thresholds and reporting
  6. OECD, BEPS reports on interest limitation and cross-border tax avoidance

FAQs

Should I buy a French company through a holding or directly?
Use a holding when your deal involves acquisition debt, co-investors, or a need for liability ring-fencing. Buy directly when you are self-funding with cash, need speed, and are acquiring a single target with no leverage requirement.
The new patrimonial-holding levies target entities holding predominantly passive financial or luxury assets, not standard acquisition holdings that own operating subsidiaries. For a typical LBO or M&A holding, the core tax advantages survive, though compliance costs increase marginally.
Yes. The holding must be incorporated, capitalised, and named as the buyer in the SPA before signing. Interposing a holding after closing triggers share-transfer taxes, potential capital-gains recognition, and disrupts existing financing arrangements.
An acquisition holding adds €2,000–€8,000 in one-time formation costs plus ongoing annual-accounts and audit obligations. A direct purchase avoids these but forfeits interest-deduction benefits and liability insulation.
Restructures are possible, through share contributions, mergers, or share exchanges, but each triggers registration duties, potential capital-gains taxation, and may require lender consent. Reversing a post-deal holding insertion is costly and administratively complex.
France’s FDI screening applies based on the identity and nationality of the ultimate investor and the target’s sector, not on whether a holding is used. Both routes carry the same FDI notification obligations for non-EU buyers acquiring control in sensitive sectors.
Engage counsel at the pre-LOI stage, before your binding offer, so the tax-structuring memo, holding incorporation timeline, and FDI clearance workstream are mapped into the deal timetable from the start.
You can, but it is expensive. Inserting a holding post-acquisition requires a share contribution or sale that attracts transfer taxes and potential gain recognition. Removing a holding requires a merger or liquidation with its own tax and corporate-law consequences. Getting the structure right before closing is significantly cheaper than fixing it afterward.
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