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Corporate Lawyers France 2026: Management Packages, M&A Thresholds & Finance Act Impacts

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: May 8, 2026

Two landmark pieces of legislation, the 2026 Finance Act (Loi de finances pour 2026), adopted by Parliament on February 2, 2026, and the Loi de simplification de la vie économique, published in the Official Journal on April 14, 2026, have materially altered the compliance landscape that corporate lawyers France deal teams must navigate before signing and closing transactions. The Finance Act refines the management package regime codified in Article 163 bis H of the Code général des impôts (CGI), adjusting the boundary between capital-gains treatment and employment-income classification for managers’ equity gains. The Loi de simplification, meanwhile, substantially raises French merger-control notification thresholds, removing a significant number of mid-market deals from the Autorité de la concurrence’s mandatory review process.

Together, these changes demand immediate revisions to shareholders’ agreements, share-purchase agreements (SPAs), escrow mechanics and closing timelines for every transaction in the pipeline.

Legislative Timeline and Immediate Effective Dates for Corporate Lawyers France

Understanding the precise chronology is critical for deal teams, because different provisions have different effective-date rules. The table below maps the key legislative milestones.

Event Date Source / Reference
Finance Act 2026 adopted by Parliament February 2, 2026 Legifrance, Loi de finances pour 2026
Finance Act 2026 published in Official Journal February 2026 (shortly after adoption) Legifrance, Official Journal
Management-package tax provisions apply Income earned from January 1, 2026 onward Finance Act 2026, Art. 163 bis H CGI (as amended)
Loi de simplification published in Official Journal April 14, 2026 Legifrance, Loi de simplification de la vie économique
Revised M&A notification thresholds enter into force First day of the fourth month following publication (anticipated: August 1, 2026) Loi de simplification; Paul Hastings client alert

Effective Dates Explained

The Finance Act’s management-package provisions apply on a tax-year basis: gains realised from January 1, 2026, fall under the new rules, regardless of when the underlying equity instruments were granted. In contrast, the Loi de simplification uses a delayed-commencement mechanism, the revised merger-control thresholds enter into force on the first day of the fourth month following publication in the Official Journal. Since publication occurred on April 14, 2026, industry observers expect the new thresholds to become effective on August 1, 2026.

How to Compute the Effective Date for a Transaction

For transactions currently in the pipeline, the relevant question is simple: will signing and/or closing occur before or after August 1, 2026? If a deal closes before that date, the previous (lower) merger-control thresholds still apply and notification obligations remain unchanged. If closing is expected after August 1, deal teams should re-run the threshold analysis under the new figures, because transactions that previously triggered mandatory notification may no longer need to be filed, and vice versa for deals near the boundary. On the tax side, any management-package gain crystallising in 2026 is already subject to the Finance Act amendments, irrespective of signing or closing date.

Management Packages, What the 2026 Finance Act Changes Mean

The 2026 Finance Act amends Article 163 bis H of the CGI, refining the specific tax regime for management packages that was first introduced by the Finance Act for 2025. The core architecture remains: gains derived from management equity instruments are subject to a dedicated tax framework rather than being automatically swept into either the standard capital-gains regime or the employment-income regime. However, the 2026 amendments introduce targeted adjustments to eligibility conditions, holding-period requirements and the social-security treatment of certain gains, creating both opportunities and traps for the unwary.

Tax Treatment, Capital Gains vs. Employment Income

Under the amended Article 163 bis H, a management-package gain qualifies for capital-gains treatment (currently subject to a flat tax of 30 % including social levies, or the progressive income-tax scale with partial abatement for holding period) only if a set of cumulative conditions is met. The 2026 Finance Act fine-tunes these conditions, notably by:

  • Clarifying the “genuine economic risk” test. The manager must demonstrate that the equity was acquired at fair market value or that any discount is treated as employment income at grant. Administrative guidance from the Direction générale des finances publiques (DGFiP) is expected to elaborate on valuation methods.
  • Adjusting holding-period thresholds. The Finance Act raises the minimum holding period required to benefit from enhanced abatements, applying to income earned from 2026 onward.
  • Narrowing anti-abuse provisions. Where a ratchet, preferred-return mechanism or liquidation preference is structured primarily to convert what is economically salary into capital gain, the tax administration retains the power to recharacterise the gain as employment income.

The practical consequence for deal teams is that every management-package instrument in the target group, free shares (actions gratuites), BSPCEs, stock options, management sweet equity and ratchets, must be reviewed against the updated Article 163 bis H conditions before signing.

Social Security and Payroll Reporting

The social-security treatment of management packages social charges is where the 2026 changes create the most significant financial exposure. The 2026 Finance Act and the accompanying Social Security Financing Act (Loi de financement de la sécurité sociale pour 2026) confirm that gains recharacterised as employment income are subject to employer and employee social-security contributions at standard rates. URSSAF has signalled enhanced scrutiny of management-package structures in the context of LBO exits, particularly where managers’ returns exceed what an arm’s-length investor would earn on comparable equity.

Key red flags that may trigger recharacterisation include:

  • Below-market acquisition price, where the manager’s entry price is significantly below the independent valuation at grant.
  • Disproportionate return relative to risk borne, ratchets or guaranteed floors that eliminate genuine downside risk.
  • Short holding period combined with a pre-arranged exit, suggesting the instrument is economically closer to a bonus than an investment.

Drafting Implications for SPAs, Shareholders’ Agreements and Management Agreements

Given the heightened compliance risk, corporate lawyers in France advising on transactions involving management packages should consider inserting or updating specific clauses. Below are two model clause excerpts for discussion purposes:

Model Clause 1, Tax-Character Representation (SPA Schedule)

“The Seller represents and warrants that each Management Package Instrument listed in Schedule [X] has been structured, documented and reported in compliance with Article 163 bis H of the CGI as amended by the Finance Act for 2026, and that no gain arising from such instruments is, or is reasonably expected to be, subject to recharacterisation as employment income for income-tax or social-security purposes.”

Model Clause 2, Specific Indemnity for Social-Charge Exposure (SPA)

“The Seller shall indemnify the Buyer on a euro-for-euro basis, without application of any cap or basket, for any Losses arising from (i) the recharacterisation by URSSAF or any tax authority of any Management Package Gain as employment income, or (ii) any employer social-security contributions, penalties or interest assessed against the Group in connection with Management Package Instruments granted prior to Closing.”

These clauses should be tailored to each deal’s specific management-package architecture and risk allocation.

M&A Notification Thresholds France, New Rules, Triggers and Timelines

The Loi de simplification de la vie économique 2026 substantially increases the turnover thresholds that trigger mandatory merger-control notification to the Autorité de la concurrence. The objective is to reduce the administrative burden on mid-market transactions and align French thresholds more closely with those of other major EU jurisdictions.

Transaction Type New / 2026 Threshold or Trigger Practical Impact & Timeline
Acquisition of control / merger (general regime) Combined worldwide turnover raised significantly; individual France-based turnover threshold for at least two parties also increased (exact figures per Legifrance and Autorité de la concurrence guidance) Many mid-market deals previously requiring notification will fall below the new thresholds. Deals closing after the anticipated August 1, 2026 effective date benefit immediately. Pre-notification discussions with the Autorité remain advisable for borderline cases.
Minority acquisitions with decisive influence or non-compete arrangements Same turnover tests apply; assess whether minority stake confers de facto control or decisive influence under the French Commercial Code Transactions below the revised threshold are exempt, but parties should still assess whether specific sector thresholds (e.g., retail, media) apply. Voluntary notification is recommended in ambiguous situations.
Share acquisitions with significant asset-transfer element Turnover allocation rules apply, local turnover of transferred assets must be assessed separately Asset-heavy deals may still trigger review even if group-level turnover is modest. Check the allocation methodology and compute local France turnover of the transferred business unit independently.

Threshold Calculation Examples

The threshold calculation uses consolidated, worldwide turnover for the combined group and France-specific turnover for at least two parties. Turnover is computed on the basis of the most recent audited annual accounts. For private-equity sponsors, the relevant turnover is that of the portfolio companies in the same fund (not the management company’s fee income). Deal teams should request the target’s audited figures and compute thresholds early in the process to determine whether a filing obligation exists.

Timeline and Intake Checklist for Notifiers

Where notification is required, the process typically involves:

  1. Pre-notification phase. Informal contact with the Autorité’s merger unit to discuss the scope of the filing, market definitions and any potential concerns. This phase is not mandatory but is strongly recommended for complex transactions.
  2. Formal filing. Submission of the notification form (formulaire de notification) with all required supporting documents. The review clock starts on the date the Autorité confirms the file is complete.
  3. Phase I review. The Autorité has 25 working days to issue a decision. Most transactions are cleared in Phase I.
  4. Phase II review (if triggered). An additional in-depth investigation of up to 65 working days, extendable in certain circumstances.

Parties must not close the transaction before receiving clearance. The SPA should include a condition precedent referencing the notification obligation and a long-stop date that accounts for both Phase I and, if necessary, Phase II timelines.

Sanctions and Mitigation

Failure to notify a transaction that meets the thresholds can result in administrative fines of up to 5 % of the turnover realised in France by the parties involved. The Autorité de la concurrence may also order the unwinding of the transaction or impose structural or behavioural remedies. Late or voluntary self-notification, while not eliminating the risk of fines, is typically treated as a mitigating factor. Corporate lawyers France practitioners uniformly advise that proactive engagement with the Autorité is the most effective risk-management strategy.

Tax and Social Due Diligence for Private Equity France and LBO Transactions in 2026

The combined effect of the Finance Act 2026 and the Loi de simplification 2026 means that tax and social due diligence in private equity France transactions must now cover a broader set of issues. The following checklist identifies the priority areas.

Due Diligence Area Key Searches / Documents to Request Risk Level (2026)
Management-package instruments (free shares, BSPCEs, options, ratchets) Grant documentation, board resolutions, valuation reports at grant, tax filings, URSSAF correspondence High
Payroll / URSSAF audit history URSSAF audit reports (last 3 years), outstanding assessments, pending appeals High
Corporate income tax, CIT returns and rulings CIT returns (last 3 FY), tax rulings (rescrits), transfer-pricing documentation Medium
VAT / e-invoicing 2026 France readiness E-invoicing implementation status, AP/AR process mapping, Chorus Pro or PPF platform registration Medium
Transfer pricing (intercompany flows) TP master file, local file, benchmarking studies, intragroup service agreements Medium
Group restructuring history Merger, spin-off or contribution-in-kind documentation, rollback risk assessment Low–Medium

Payroll and URSSAF Red Flags

URSSAF audits of management-package structures have intensified since 2025. Buyers should specifically request:

  • Copies of all URSSAF audit reports and lettres d’observations from the past three years.
  • Details of any ongoing disputes regarding the characterisation of management equity gains.
  • Confirmation that employer social-security contributions have been paid on any portion of management-package gains previously treated as employment income.
  • Evidence that the target has complied with the déclaration sociale nominative (DSN) reporting obligations for management-package distributions.

Any open URSSAF exposure should be quantified and reflected in the SPA as either a price adjustment or a specific indemnity backed by an escrow or holdback.

VAT and E-Invoicing 2026 Operational Checks

France’s phased rollout of mandatory e-invoicing continues through 2026. For deal teams, the key operational concern is whether the target’s accounts-payable and accounts-receivable systems are compliant with the new electronic-invoicing requirements. Non-compliance can delay input-VAT recovery and create cash-flow issues post-closing. During due diligence, buyers should verify the target’s registration with the Plateforme de dématérialisation partenaire (PDP) or the public Portail Public de Facturation (PPF), and assess any remediation costs that should be factored into the enterprise-value calculation.

Drafting and Negotiation Checklist, SPA, SHA and Management Package Clauses

Every SPA, shareholders’ agreement and management-package agreement executed in 2026 should be reviewed against the following checklist to reflect the Finance Act 2026 and Loi de simplification 2026 changes.

Standard vs. Bespoke Clauses

  • Tax representations and warranties. Update standard tax reps to include explicit reference to Article 163 bis H (as amended) and confirm that management-package instruments have been correctly classified and reported.
  • Specific indemnities. Carve out management-package social-charge risk from any general tax indemnity cap. This exposure is often too significant and uncertain to be subject to a de minimis or aggregate basket.
  • Escrow / holdback. Size a dedicated escrow tranche for management-package reclassification risk, calibrated to the estimated employer social-security contribution exposure (typically 40–45 % of the gain at risk).
  • Conditions precedent. Verify whether the transaction triggers merger-control notification under the revised thresholds. If so, include a CP requiring Autorité clearance and a realistic long-stop date.
  • Earn-out adjustments. If management packages include earn-out components, adjust the earn-out formula to account for potential social-charge leakage and specify whether gross-up applies.
  • Board / shareholder approvals. Confirm that any new or amended management-package instruments granted post-2026 have received the requisite corporate authorisations (AGM resolution for free shares, board decision for BSPCEs), reflecting the updated statutory requirements.

How to Allocate Social-Charge Risk

Social-charge risk on pre-closing management packages is fundamentally a seller-side liability, because it relates to instruments granted and gains crystallised during the seller’s ownership period. However, the employer (i.e., the target company) is the entity liable to URSSAF. This mismatch makes a specific indemnity, backed by an escrow, the most effective allocation mechanism. The indemnity should cover not only the principal social-security contributions but also any late-payment interest, penalties and professional costs of defence.

Private Equity and LBO Structuring 2026, Closing Mechanics

LBO structuring 2026 requires recalibration at several levels. The Finance Act’s refined management-package rules and the higher M&A notification thresholds change the mechanics of waterfall design, rollover structuring and distribution timing.

  • Waterfall adjustments. Sponsors should model the tax and social cost of management sweet equity under the amended Article 163 bis H before finalising the distribution waterfall. If a ratchet or preferred return creates recharacterisation risk, the waterfall should include a gross-up mechanism or a claw-back right.
  • Management rollover. Rollovers structured at fair market value are less vulnerable to recharacterisation. The rollover price should be supported by an independent valuation and documented in the SHA.
  • Distribution timing. Accelerating distributions to managers before exit may trigger immediate employment-income treatment. Industry observers expect that aligning distribution timing with the exit event, and ensuring the minimum holding period is met, will reduce social-charge exposure.

Example LBO Clause for Management Rollover

“Each Rollover Manager shall subscribe for Rollover Shares at a price per share equal to the Fair Market Value determined by an independent valuer appointed jointly by the Sponsor and the Management Representative, such valuation to comply with the requirements of Article 163 bis H of the CGI as amended by the Finance Act for 2026. Any difference between the Fair Market Value and the subscription price paid by the Rollover Manager shall be treated as employment income for tax and social-security purposes and reported accordingly.”

Conclusion, Practical Next Steps for Corporate Lawyers France Deal Teams

The 2026 legislative changes are not cosmetic, they alter deal economics, risk allocation and compliance timelines in tangible ways. Corporate lawyers France practitioners and their clients should take the following immediate steps:

  • Audit all in-flight management-package instruments against the amended Article 163 bis H conditions and quantify potential social-charge exposure.
  • Re-run merger-control threshold analyses for transactions expected to close after August 1, 2026, under the new Loi de simplification figures.
  • Update SPA templates with refreshed tax representations, specific indemnities and escrow mechanics calibrated to the 2026 regime.
  • Verify e-invoicing readiness at the target level during due diligence to avoid post-closing VAT-recovery disruptions.
  • Engage specialist France corporate counsel early, the interaction between the Finance Act, the Loi de simplification and existing URSSAF enforcement practice creates layered compliance obligations that require coordinated tax, social-security and M&A advice.

For access to a searchable directory of qualified practitioners, visit the corporate lawyer directory, France.

This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should obtain tailored guidance from qualified French corporate counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thierry Lévy-Mannheim at DaringLaw, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Legifrance, Loi de simplification de la vie économique
  2. Legifrance, Loi de finances pour 2026 (Finance Act 2026)
  3. Autorité de la concurrence, Merger Control Guidance
  4. DGFiP, Direction générale des finances publiques
  5. URSSAF, Social Security Contribution Guidance
  6. CMS Legal Alert, Management packages et loi de finances pour 2026
  7. RÖDL, Update of the Management Package Regime: 2026 Finance Act
  8. Paul Hastings, France Eases Merger Control Burden With Major Thresholds Increase

FAQs

How does the 2026 Finance Act change the management package regime in France?
The 2026 Finance Act amends Article 163 bis H of the CGI, refining eligibility conditions for capital-gains treatment on management-package gains. It tightens the “genuine economic risk” test, adjusts minimum holding-period thresholds and preserves the tax administration’s power to recharacterise gains as employment income where anti-abuse criteria are met. These changes apply to income earned from January 1, 2026 onward.
The Loi de simplification de la vie économique substantially increases the turnover thresholds that trigger mandatory merger-control notification to the Autorité de la concurrence. The revised thresholds enter into force on the first day of the fourth month following publication in the Official Journal, anticipated as August 1, 2026. Many mid-market transactions that previously required notification will fall below the new thresholds.
The law provides that the revised thresholds become effective on the first day of the fourth month following publication. Since the Loi de simplification was published on April 14, 2026, the likely effective date is August 1, 2026. Transactions closing before that date remain subject to the previous thresholds.
The classification depends on whether the specific instrument satisfies all conditions of Article 163 bis H CGI. Three key red flags that may trigger recharacterisation as employment income include: acquisition below fair market value, disproportionate return relative to risk borne (e.g., ratchets with guaranteed floors), and a short holding period combined with a pre-arranged exit. DGFiP and URSSAF guidance should be consulted for each instrument type.
Buyers and sellers should: (1) audit all management-package instruments against the updated Article 163 bis H criteria; (2) request URSSAF audit reports and verify payroll compliance for the past three years; (3) update SPA schedules with refreshed tax representations and specific indemnities; (4) size an escrow tranche for social-charge reclassification risk; and (5) re-assess merger-control notification obligations under the revised thresholds if closing is expected after August 1, 2026.
Yes. The Autorité can impose administrative fines of up to 5 % of the turnover realised in France by the parties involved. It may also order the unwinding of a completed transaction or impose structural or behavioural remedies. Late voluntary self-notification is typically treated as a mitigating factor but does not eliminate the risk of penalties.
France’s phased mandatory e-invoicing rollout can affect post-closing cash flow if the target’s invoicing systems are non-compliant. Non-compliance may delay input-VAT recovery and create cash-flow gaps. During due diligence, buyers should verify the target’s PDP or PPF registration and assess remediation costs before closing.
This article includes two sample clause excerpts (a tax-character representation and a specific social-charge indemnity). A more detailed set of drafting checklists and model clauses is covered in the companion guide, Management packages France 2026: drafting checklist and sample clauses, which provides worked numerical examples, negotiation playbooks and clause-by-clause commentary for SPAs and shareholders’ agreements.

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Corporate Lawyers France 2026: Management Packages, M&A Thresholds & Finance Act Impacts

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