Our Expert in France
No results available
Any cross‑border acquisition that touches France forces deal teams to answer a threshold question before the share‑purchase agreement is even signed: does this transaction require notification to the European Commission, to the Autorité de la concurrence, or to both? Understanding how to coordinate EU and French merger filings in 2026 is now more critical than ever, because France raised its national merger control thresholds with effect from 1 September 2026, the European Commission published draft revised Merger Guidelines on 30 April 2026, and the Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) screening regime continues to add a parallel layer of prior‑authorisation analysis.
This guide sets out the entire merger filing process France vs EU in a sequential, actionable format designed for corporate counsel, private‑equity sponsors, in‑house legal teams and M&A project managers who need to map out notification obligations, SPA timing and closing conditions.
EU and French merger control are complementary regimes that operate on an exclusivity principle: a transaction that meets the turnover thresholds in Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004 (the “EUMR”) is notified to the European Commission, and the Commission normally has sole jurisdiction. A transaction that falls below EUMR thresholds but meets national French thresholds under Articles L.430‑1 to L.430‑10 of the French Commercial Code must be notified to the Autorité de la concurrence instead. In limited circumstances, referral requests under Articles 4(4), 4(5), 9 and 22 EUMR, jurisdiction can shift between the two authorities.
The merger filing process France vs EU therefore begins with a four‑way decision:
This guide applies to horizontal mergers, vertical mergers, conglomerate concentrations and joint‑venture creations that constitute a “concentration” within the meaning of the EUMR or the French Commercial Code. It is relevant to any acquiror, target, financial sponsor or adviser involved in structuring a deal with a French nexus. For deal teams that also need to navigate other jurisdictions, the procedural logic here mirrors the approach used in other multijurisdictional filings, readers may compare the process with, for example, how to get merger approval in Brazil.
Before preparing any filing, the deal team must run two parallel threshold tests: the EUMR test and the French national test. If either set of thresholds is met, a mandatory suspensory obligation applies, the transaction cannot close until clearance is obtained.
Under Article 1(2) EUMR, the European Commission has jurisdiction where:
An alternative test under Article 1(3) EUMR applies where worldwide turnover exceeds €2.5 billion, combined turnover in each of at least three Member States exceeds €100 million, and individual turnover of at least two undertakings in each of those Member States exceeds €25 million, with each of at least two undertakings having aggregate EU‑wide turnover above €100 million (again subject to the two‑thirds rule).
Worked example. A French‑headquartered industrial group (worldwide turnover: €6 billion; EU turnover: €3 billion) acquires a German manufacturer (worldwide turnover: €1.2 billion; EU turnover: €900 million). Combined worldwide turnover is €7.2 billion (exceeds €5 billion), and both parties individually exceed €250 million in the EU. Neither achieves two‑thirds of its EU turnover in a single Member State. Result: EUMR thresholds are met, file with the European Commission.
If the deal does not meet EUMR thresholds, French merger control requirements apply under Article L.430‑2 of the French Commercial Code, as amended by the Loi de simplification de la vie économique. The threshold increase that took effect on 1 September 2026 raised the bar for mandatory notification as follows:
| Threshold | Before 1 September 2026 | From 1 September 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Combined worldwide turnover (all parties) | €150 million | €250 million |
| Individual turnover in France (at least two parties) | €50 million | €80 million |
Separate, lower thresholds remain for the retail sector and for overseas‑territory transactions; deal teams must confirm whether sector‑specific rules apply. The practical consequence of the increase is that many mid‑market acquisitions in France that previously triggered a mandatory filing now fall below the new thresholds. Teams should nevertheless document their threshold analysis in a diligence memo, the Autorité has stressed that it may use its residual power under Article 22 EUMR to request a referral from the Commission for transactions that escape mandatory notification but raise competition concerns.
FDI and FSR overlay. Even where no merger control filing is required, a transaction involving a non‑EU acquiror may trigger a separate FDI screening obligation under French décret provisions (administered by the Ministry of the Economy) or an FSR notification to the European Commission. These parallel regimes are not a substitute for merger control but can affect deal timetables and SPA drafting.
The following numbered procedure covers the entire sequence from initial jurisdiction screening to post‑clearance closing. The mandatory timeline table below summarises each step, the responsible party and the typical duration.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 0, Internal jurisdiction screening & SPA check | Deal counsel + antitrust counsel | 1–5 business days |
| 1, Decide filing strategy and SPA timing | Deal counsel + corporate M&A lead | 1–3 business days |
| 2, Prepare notification (EC Form CO or French form + annexes) | Antitrust counsel + client (data) | 1–2 weeks per filing |
| 3, Submit notification(s) | Antitrust counsel | Same day (electronic filing) |
| 4, EC Phase I review | European Commission | 25 working days (extendable) |
| 5, French Phase I review | Autorité de la concurrence | 25 working days (extendable) |
| 6, EC Phase II (if opened) | European Commission | Up to 90 working days (extendable) |
| 7, Remedies negotiation, commitments & approval | Deal counsel + competition counsel | 4–12+ weeks |
| 8, Clearance & closing | Deal counsel / corporate secretary | Per SPA; typically within days of clearance |
Within the first days of deal consideration, lead counsel and antitrust counsel should compile a jurisdiction matrix. This involves gathering audited turnover figures (worldwide, EU‑wide and France‑specific) for both the acquiror group and the target, testing those figures against both EUMR and French thresholds, and flagging any FDI or FSR triggers. Key actions include:
Once the jurisdiction matrix is complete, the deal team selects its filing strategy. When to file with the European Commission rather than the Autorité de la concurrence depends entirely on the threshold analysis:
SPA timelines for merger control should be set during this step. Industry observers expect robust SPA drafting to include a merger‑control condition precedent along the following lines: “Closing shall occur within [five] business days after receipt of unconditional clearance (or expiry of the applicable review period without a decision) from all Relevant Authorities, provided that if Phase II proceedings are opened, either party may terminate this Agreement if clearance has not been obtained by the Long‑Stop Date.” Such language should also address interim operating covenants and reverse‑break fees if clearance is denied.
For an EC filing, antitrust counsel completes Form CO (or the Short Form CO where applicable), which is submitted electronically to the Commission’s Directorate‑General for Competition. For a French filing, counsel prepares the notification form prescribed by the Autorité de la concurrence, attaching a corporate group tree, turnover schedules, market‑share data and a redacted copy of the SPA. Wall‑crossing protocols and confidentiality handling are critical: the target’s sensitive commercial information must be managed under clean‑team arrangements to avoid gun‑jumping risks.
Once a filing is declared complete, the Phase I clock begins. At the EC level, Article 10(1) EUMR provides for a Phase I review period of 25 working days. The Autorité de la concurrence conducts its own Phase I review within 25 working days under French law (the period may be extended where commitments are offered). During Phase I, the reviewing authority will issue requests for information (“RFIs”), and the clock may stop if the parties fail to respond within prescribed deadlines.
If both an EC filing and a parallel FDI or FSR notification are running, the deal team must coordinate remedy discussions across authorities. Early identification of potential overlapping remedies (e.g., divestiture of a French subsidiary demanded by both the Autorité under FDI rules and the Commission under the EUMR) avoids contradictory commitments.
If the reviewing authority has “serious doubts” (EC) or identifies competition concerns that cannot be resolved in Phase I (Autorité), it opens Phase II proceedings. At the Commission, Article 10(3) EUMR provides for a Phase II period of 90 working days, extendable by up to 20 working days at the parties’ request or the Commission’s initiative. The Autorité’s Phase II period runs for an additional period following referral to its Collège.
Remedies negotiation, whether structural (divestitures), behavioural (access commitments) or a combination, typically runs in parallel with the Phase II investigation. Deal teams should prepare divestiture packages and identify potential purchasers early. The SPA should include holdback or escrow mechanisms to cover merger remedies in France and bridge any gap between clearance and closing.
Both regimes require substantial documentation. The table below lists the core documents needed for a French merger filing and an EC filing, along with practical notes on format and responsibility.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| EC Form CO (completed) | Submitted electronically to the European Commission. Buyer/parties provide; includes contact details and signature page. Short Form CO available for straightforward cases. |
| French notification form (formulaire de notification de concentration) | Filed electronically with the Autorité de la concurrence. Include corporate group tree, turnover table and market‑share analysis. Target/buyer legal representative prepares. |
| Group turnover schedules (worldwide / EU / France) | Excel format with signed cover note. Source: audited accounts or management accounts for latest financial year plus trailing 12 months. |
| Market shares and product/service definition note | Short analytical memo setting out methodology and data sources (internal sales data, third‑party market reports). |
| Competitor and customer lists and key contracts | Redacted copies of major distribution, licensing and supply agreements as annexes. |
| Executive summary and transaction timeline | One‑page summary for regulators explaining rationale, structure and anticipated closing steps. |
| SPA (redacted) and structure diagrams | Redacted SPA highlighting change‑of‑control clauses and conditionality. Include pre‑ and post‑transaction ownership diagrams. |
| Remedies precedent / divestiture plan | If known at filing, outline proposed remedies, timetable and potential purchasers. |
| FDI / FSR declaration materials | If applicable: data on foreign subsidies and investment details for parallel EC FSR or national FDI filings. |
| Power of attorney and counsel contact details | Scanned POA in English and/or French, as required by the receiving authority. |
All supporting documents should be prepared in parallel with the notification form to avoid delays in the authority declaring the filing “complete.” Where the transaction involves a non‑EU acquiror, additional corporate documentation (certificates of incorporation, beneficial ownership declarations) may be required. Teams working on deals with a French employment dimension may also wish to review France’s works council consultation requirements, as employee‑representative notification can run alongside the merger filing.
Understanding the statutory review periods is essential for setting realistic SPA long‑stop dates and coordinating closing across workstreams.
| Phase | European Commission | Autorité de la concurrence |
|---|---|---|
| Phase I review | 25 working days from notification declared complete (Article 10(1) EUMR) | 25 working days from notification declared complete (French Commercial Code) |
| Extension, commitments offered in Phase I | Clock extended to 35 working days (Article 10(1) EUMR) | Period may be extended where commitments offered |
| Phase II (if opened) | 90 working days (Article 10(3) EUMR); extendable by up to 20 working days | Additional review period following referral to the Collège |
| Clock stops (incomplete response to RFI) | Clock suspended until information provided (Article 10(4) EUMR) | Clock suspended until information provided |
SPA alignment tips. The deal team should build the following milestones into the SPA timetable:
Filing fees and advisory costs vary significantly depending on whether the filing is made at the EC or national level, and on whether the case progresses to Phase II. The table below provides indicative ranges.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| European Commission filing fee | No standard filing fee | The EC does not charge a fixed fee for merger notifications under the EUMR. Costs are limited to legal and economic advisory fees. |
| French filing administrative fee | Confirm with Autorité fee schedule | Fee may depend on parties’ turnover. Check the Autorité de la concurrence’s current published schedule for exact amounts. |
| External legal fees (antitrust counsel) | €50,000 – €300,000+ | Driven by complexity, Phase II risk, number of jurisdictions and cross‑border coordination requirements. |
| Economic / market study reports | €20,000 – €150,000 | Required for market‑share calculations, remedies modelling or innovation‑effects analysis. |
| Remedies implementation costs | Varies widely | Includes divestiture process management, monitoring trustee fees and purchaser‑approval proceedings. |
All figures above are indicative. Deal teams should obtain firm fee estimates from antitrust counsel and economic consultants at the jurisdiction‑screening stage to integrate these costs into the deal model.
Three concurrent regulatory developments in 2026 directly affect how to coordinate EU and French merger filings:
1. French threshold increase (1 September 2026). The Loi de simplification de la vie économique raised the combined worldwide turnover threshold from €150 million to €250 million and the individual France turnover threshold from €50 million to €80 million. The likely practical effect is that a significant number of mid‑market transactions that previously required Autorité notification now fall below the new thresholds. Deal teams must re‑run threshold analyses for any transaction signed before but closing after 1 September 2026.
2. EC draft Merger Guidelines (30 April 2026). The European Commission published draft revised Merger Guidelines for public consultation, signalling potential interpretive shifts on market definition, innovation theories of harm and remedies assessment. While the draft Guidelines are not yet binding, early indications suggest that deal teams should anticipate more granular data requests during Phase I and adjust preparation timelines accordingly.
3. Foreign Subsidies Regulation (FSR) and FDI screening. The FSR, which requires prior notification to the Commission of concentrations involving financial contributions from non‑EU governments above specified thresholds, continues to add a parallel filing layer. In France, the national FDI screening regime (administered by the Direction générale du Trésor) applies to acquisitions of control in entities operating in sensitive sectors. The interaction between FSR, FDI and merger control means that some deals now require three separate notifications, each with its own timeline and potential conditions.
The combined effect of these changes is that deal teams can no longer rely on a single threshold test. Every transaction with a French nexus should be assessed against EUMR thresholds, the new French thresholds, FDI screening criteria and FSR notification thresholds. Documenting this four‑way analysis in a written memo is now considered best practice by industry observers.
Coordinating EU and French merger filings in 2026 requires deal teams to navigate a shifting landscape: higher French thresholds, evolving EC Guidelines and the overlay of FSR and FDI screening. The procedural core, however, remains sequential and manageable. Run both threshold tests early. Document the analysis. Choose the correct filing authority. Prepare the notification in parallel with SPA negotiations and build closing conditions that accommodate realistic review timelines. By following the step‑by‑step procedure outlined above and engaging antitrust counsel before signing, deal teams can minimise delay, avoid gun‑jumping risk and keep their transaction on track to close.
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.
posted 24 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message