The Loi de finances pour 2026, adopted by the French Parliament in early 2026, marks the most consequential shift in finance act France international tax policy in over a decade for cross-border wealth holders. The legislation simultaneously extends the exceptional contribution on high incomes, introduces a new tax targeting non-operational assets held through holding companies, transposes DAC9 reporting obligations for trustees and intermediaries, and completes France’s domestic implementation of the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax framework. For single-family offices, expatriates considering a change in tax residency, and corporate groups with French holding structures, the compliance calendar has tightened sharply, and the audit risk attached to inaction has grown in parallel.
This guide is designed as a decision-oriented playbook. It distils the headline measures into practical checklists, worked examples and prioritised timelines for three core audiences:
The 2026 finance law France package contains six headline measures that directly touch international tax planning and compliance. Industry observers expect each of them to generate immediate advisory demand from private-client practitioners and corporate tax directors alike.
For a summary of the corporate income tax rate adjustments that were also included in this legislation, see the France Finance Act 2026 corporate tax alert published separately.
The 2026 changes to high net worth taxation France rules operate on three interconnected levels: income tax, social charges and the exceptional contribution. For expatriates who are French tax residents, or who risk being treated as such, the combined marginal effective rate on investment income now exceeds 60% at the top bracket once the CEHR, social charges and standard income tax are layered together.
The CEHR was originally introduced in 2012 as a temporary measure. Its inclusion in the 2026 finance law France package on a permanent footing removes any remaining planning assumption that it would lapse. More significantly, the new income-smoothing anti-avoidance rule averages reference income over two or (in some cases) four years when applying the CEHR thresholds. The practical effect will be to limit the traditional strategy of deferring income realisation into a single low-income year.
Worked example, dual-status individual. Consider a French-resident individual who also maintains a UK domicile and receives EUR 400,000 in French-source dividends plus GBP 200,000 (approximately EUR 230,000) in UK rental income. Under the France–UK double tax treaty, the UK rental income is taxable in the UK, but it must still be included in French reference income for purposes of computing the CEHR. The individual’s reference income of EUR 630,000 exceeds the single-taxpayer threshold of EUR 250,000, triggering a 3% surcharge on the band between EUR 250,000 and EUR 500,000 (EUR 7,500) and a 4% surcharge on the EUR 130,000 above EUR 500,000 (EUR 5,200), a total CEHR liability of EUR 12,700.
If France applies the income-smoothing rule and the taxpayer’s prior-year reference income was materially lower, the smoothed figure may reduce or increase the liability depending on direction.
The narrowing of social-charge exemptions principally affects EU/EEA nationals who live in France but remain affiliated with a foreign social-security system. Under prior rules, reinforced by CJEU case law, such individuals could claim exemption from certain components of the prélèvements sociaux. The 2026 Act confines this exemption to individuals who can produce a current A1 certificate or equivalent, reducing the population eligible for relief. For non-EU nationals, the full 17.2% rate continues to apply without exception.
France’s departure tax, the exit tax, applies to individuals who transfer their tax residence outside France and hold significant participations or unrealised capital gains. The 2026 Act does not fundamentally redesign the exit tax, but it strengthens enforcement and narrows certain deferral conditions, making careful pre-move planning more important than ever for those considering relocation.
The exit tax France regime catches individuals who have been French tax residents for at least six of the ten years preceding the transfer of residence, and who hold direct or indirect participations representing at least 50% of a company’s profits, or whose portfolio of securities, rights and shares exceeds EUR 800,000 in aggregate value. On departure, unrealised gains are deemed realised and subject to income tax at the applicable rate (generally 12.8% flat tax, or progressive scale if elected) plus social charges of 17.2%.
| Trigger | Tax consequence | Practical step |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer of tax residence after 6 of last 10 years in France; participation ≥ 50% or portfolio ≥ EUR 800,000 | Deemed disposal of securities, immediate tax charge on unrealised gains (12.8% or progressive scale + 17.2% social charges) | Obtain a portfolio valuation report from an independent firm at least 60 days before departure; file Form 2074-ETD with the departure-year return |
| Deferral election (sursis de paiement), relocating within the EU/EEA | Payment deferred automatically; tax extinguished if securities still held after specified holding period (currently two or five years depending on gain amount) | Confirm new residence state qualifies for automatic deferral; appoint a French fiscal representative if required; file annual tracking declaration |
| Deferral election, relocating outside EU/EEA (e.g., to Switzerland, UAE, UK) | Deferral available only on request, with provision of guarantees (bank guarantee or pledge of assets equivalent to the tax charge) | Apply for deferral on Form 2074-ETD before departure; negotiate guarantee with French Treasury; ensure treaty benefits are claimed to avoid double taxation |
| Actual disposal of securities while in deferral | Tax becomes immediately payable; credit given for any foreign tax paid on the same gain under applicable double tax treaty | Coordinate disposal timing with French counsel; file amended Form 2074-ETD within 30 days of disposal; claim foreign tax credit on Form 2778 |
The 2026 Act introduces a specific reporting obligation for intermediaries (banks, custodians, wealth managers) who are aware of a client’s change of residence and hold securities in custody. This creates a cross-check mechanism that increases the likelihood of detection if the exit-tax return is not filed.
The most structurally significant change in the 2026 Finance Act for corporate groups and family offices is the introduction of a dedicated holding company tax France measure aimed at entities that function primarily as patrimonial vehicles rather than active businesses.
The new levy targets companies, whether French-incorporated or foreign entities with a French permanent establishment or French-situs assets, where more than 50% of total assets (by fair-market value) are classified as non-operational. Non-operational assets include residential and commercial real estate not used in the company’s own trade, financial portfolios (listed and unlisted securities, bonds, money-market instruments), art and luxury movable assets, and cash balances exceeding working-capital needs.
The tax is assessed at a rate of 20% on the company’s net income attributable to those non-operational assets. Industry observers expect the French tax administration to adopt a substance-over-form approach when evaluating whether an asset is genuinely operational, closely mirroring the criteria already used in the abus de droit doctrine. A de minimis exclusion applies where the total fair-market value of non-operational assets does not exceed EUR 150,000.
Practitioners are already examining several restructuring pathways in response to the new holding company tax France rules:
Early indications suggest that aggressive restructurings completed solely to avoid the patrimonial-asset tax, without independent commercial justification, will attract scrutiny under France’s general abuse-of-law provision (Article L. 64 of the Livre des procédures fiscales). Taxpayers who implement restructuring steps should ensure that board minutes, independent valuations and contemporaneous documentation clearly evidence the commercial rationale.
| Entity type | DAC9 / Reporting obligations | Pillar Two / GloBE exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Individual (French-resident) | Disclosure of foreign bank accounts (Forms 3916/3916-bis), trust interests and foreign life-insurance policies; trustee-reported information cross-referenced automatically | Personal income not directly subject to Pillar Two; indirect exposure through controlled entities in low-tax jurisdictions |
| Trustee / fiduciary | Required to report cross-border arrangements, beneficial ownership and income flows under DAC9; annual reporting to French tax administration for trusts with French-resident settlors or beneficiaries | Trustees must collect and supply entity-level financial data but Pillar Two applies at the entity, not fiduciary, level |
| Holding company (French or non-French with French nexus) | Entity-level corporate reporting; separate declarations for patrimonial-asset tax; transfer pricing documentation for intra-group transactions | Subject to IIR/UTPR top-up tax and QDMTT if part of a group with consolidated revenue ≥ EUR 750 million; must compute effective tax rate on a jurisdictional basis |
The transposition of DAC9 into French domestic law represents a significant expansion of the information that trustees and fiduciaries must provide to the French tax administration. For trusts and France tax advisers, the new regime layers on top of existing obligations under France’s trust-reporting framework (Articles 792-0 bis and 1649 AB of the Code général des impôts) and international automatic exchange regimes (FATCA/CRS).
Under the DAC9 framework, the following categories of information must be reported by intermediaries and fiduciaries with a French nexus:
The French tax administration has indicated that first DAC9 filings will be required before 31 December 2026 for arrangements in existence at the date of entry into force, and within 30 days of creation for new arrangements established after that date. Penalties for non-compliance include fixed fines per undisclosed arrangement and, in serious cases, referral for fiscal criminal proceedings. Trustees who are not established in France but manage arrangements with French-resident beneficiaries should take particular note: the reporting obligation follows the French-resident beneficiary, and the administration may request information directly from the trustee via mutual-assistance channels.
France’s 2026 Finance Act completes the domestic legislative framework for the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax. The pillar two GloBE France implementation encompasses three interlocking mechanisms that apply to multinational enterprise (MNE) groups and large-scale domestic groups with consolidated revenue of at least EUR 750 million in at least two of the four fiscal years immediately preceding the tested year.
The practical compliance roadmap for affected groups involves several immediate tasks: collecting jurisdictional financial data in the format required by the GloBE information return, computing effective tax rates using the GloBE rules (which differ from domestic tax computations), identifying transitional safe-harbour elections available under OECD guidance, and filing the GloBE information return within 15 months of the end of the relevant fiscal year (18 months for the first year). Groups should also evaluate whether advance pricing arrangements (APAs) or mutual agreement procedures (MAPs) may be needed to resolve disputes arising from top-up tax allocations.
The expanded scope of the finance act France international tax measures creates new audit triggers. The French tax administration (Direction générale des Finances publiques, DGFiP) has publicly signalled that it will prioritise verification of patrimonial-holding tax compliance, DAC9 reporting and exit-tax declarations during the 2026–2027 audit cycle.
Key audit triggers that practitioners should monitor include:
The response protocol for an audit notice linked to 2026 measures follows a structured sequence: (1) acknowledge receipt within the statutory deadline; (2) assemble all supporting documentation (board minutes, independent valuations, A1 certificates, trust deeds); (3) appoint specialist tax counsel with experience in tax audits France proceedings; (4) evaluate whether a voluntary disclosure under the administration’s current regularisation practice may reduce penalties; and (5) prepare a written response within the 30-day (or 60-day, if extended) reply period. Penalties under the new regimes range from 10% for late filing to 80% for deliberate concealment, with fiscal criminal prosecution reserved for cases involving fraudulent schemes.
The following resources and filing portals are essential for compliance with the 2026 finance law France package:
For expatriates evaluating their citizenship and residency options, coordinating tax-filing obligations with immigration steps is critical to avoid triggering unintended dual-residency exposure.
The 2026 Finance Act represents a material tightening of the finance act France international tax landscape for HNWIs, trustees and holding companies. The simultaneous introduction of the patrimonial-asset tax, permanent CEHR, DAC9 transposition and completed Pillar Two framework means that compliance windows are short and the cost of inaction, in both penalties and lost planning opportunities, is significant. Early indications suggest that the DGFiP will pursue verification aggressively during the first audit cycle, making contemporaneous documentation and proactive filings the most effective defence. Readers with French-connected wealth structures, trust interests or corporate holdings should begin the 90-day priority checklist immediately and seek specialist international tax counsel to navigate the interlocking obligations.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Arnaud Tailfer at Axtead, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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