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France Finance Act 2026, Practical Tax Guide for Investment Funds, Asset Managers and Holding Companies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: 13 May 2026

The Finance Act France enacted for 2026 (Loi de finances pour 2026) introduces a suite of measures that materially alter the tax landscape for investment funds, asset managers and holding companies operating in or through France. From higher social charges on investment income effective 1 January 2026, to the extension of the exceptional contribution on high earners, expanded corporate surtax provisions, a new levy on non-operational assets held by holding structures, and the domestic transposition of both Pillar Two (GloBE) and DAC9 reporting obligations, the cumulative compliance burden is substantial.

This guide translates those headline measures into the practical steps that CFOs, tax directors, fund managers and in-house counsel need to take now, with worked examples, entity-by-entity impact analysis, and a 30/60/90-day compliance playbook.

Executive Summary, What Funds, Managers and Holding Companies Must Know

Before examining each measure in detail, the following six priority actions capture the immediate compliance response required by the Finance Act 2026 and its companion legislation. Every entity with French tax exposure should address these items as a matter of urgency.

  1. Re-model distribution waterfall economics. Social charges on investment income (including capital gains and dividends) increased from 1 January 2026. Update investor distribution models and net-return projections immediately to reflect the higher aggregate rate.
  2. Re-assess corporate surtax exposure. The extension and broadening of the corporate surtax (contribution exceptionnelle) means that management companies and holding entities above the revenue threshold must recalculate provisional tax instalments for fiscal year 2026.
  3. Classify holding-company assets. The new tax on non-operational assets requires a line-by-line classification of every asset held by a French parent or intermediate holding company. Operational assets must be distinguished from passive assets under the tests set out in the Finance Act.
  4. Implement DAC9 data-collection processes. Fund managers, depositaries and intermediaries that fall within DAC9 scope must build or update reporting workflows, data-mapping templates and KYC procedures ahead of the first reporting deadline.
  5. Run Pillar Two / GloBE safe-harbour tests. Any management group or holding structure that forms part of a multinational enterprise (MNE) group with consolidated revenue at or above the €750 million threshold must map constituent entities and run transitional safe-harbour calculations for the first in-scope fiscal year.
  6. Brief investors and boards. Communicate the financial impact of the French tax changes 2026 to investors, audit committees and boards within 30 days, including revised return projections and any changes to fund terms or side-letter commitments.

What the Finance Act 2026 Changed, Headline Measures

What has changed for the 2026 tax year? The Finance Act 2026 contains several dozen articles affecting direct and indirect taxation. For investment funds, asset managers and holding companies, five clusters of provisions demand the closest attention. Each is summarised below with its effective date and the population it affects, referencing the official text published on Legifrance.

  • Higher social charges on investment income. The aggregate social levy rate (prélèvements sociaux) applied to investment income, dividends, interest, capital gains, rental income and certain fund distributions, increased effective 1 January 2026. This measure affects all French-resident individual taxpayers and, by extension, the net returns delivered by funds distributing to such investors. The rise in the CSG/CRDS/solidarity contribution components lifts the combined social charge rate, increasing the all-in flat-tax (prélèvement forfaitaire unique, PFU) burden on investment income above the previous 30 % level.
  • Extension of the exceptional contribution on high incomes. The 3 % / 4 % contribution exceptionnelle sur les hauts revenus (CEHR), originally introduced as a temporary measure, has been extended through the Finance Act 2026. The thresholds (€250,000 for single filers; €500,000 for joint filers) remain unchanged, but the extension means that high-earning fund managers, carried-interest recipients and partners receiving management fees or performance allocations must continue to provision for this additional charge.
  • Corporate surtax extensions and broadening. The exceptional corporate surtax (contribution exceptionnelle sur l’impôt sur les sociétés) has been extended and, for certain large enterprises, broadened in scope. Management companies structured as SA or SAS, and holding entities with turnover above the statutory threshold, face an additional layer of corporate income tax. Industry observers expect this measure to weigh most heavily on management companies whose fee income pushes them above the applicable revenue ceiling.
  • Tax on non-operational assets of holding companies. A new provision introduces a specific levy on the fair-market value of non-operational assets held by French holding companies. The law defines “non-operational” broadly to include financial assets, cash reserves beyond operational needs, and real-estate holdings not directly used in the enterprise’s trade. This measure is designed to discourage the parking of passive wealth inside holding structures and directly affects holding company taxation in France.
  • DAC9 transposition and Pillar Two domestic implementation. The Finance Act 2026, together with companion implementing legislation, transposes the EU DAC9 directive into French law and codifies the domestic application of the OECD Pillar Two / GloBE minimum-tax rules. Both measures create new reporting and computational obligations for qualifying fund managers and MNE groups.

Timeline of Key Provisions and Implementation Dates

Date Provision Who It Affects
1 January 2026 Higher social charges on investment income take effect All French-resident individual investors; funds distributing to French residents
Early 2026 (promulgation) Finance Act 2026 officially published in the Journal officiel (JORF) All taxpayers, establishes the definitive legal text
Fiscal year 2026 (opening) Extended corporate surtax and CEHR apply to income earned from 1 January 2026 Management companies (SA/SAS) and high-income individuals
Fiscal year 2026 (opening) Non-operational asset tax on holding companies applies French holding companies and intermediate SPVs
First DAC9 reporting period (as transposed) DAC9 data collection and first exchange of information obligations Fund managers, depositaries, intermediaries within DAC9 scope
First in-scope fiscal year ending 2026 Pillar Two / GloBE minimum tax applies; safe-harbour tests run MNE groups (≥ €750 m consolidated revenue) including investment management groups

Practical Impact on Investment Funds and Fund Managers

The investment funds tax France framework under the Finance Act 2026 creates differentiated impacts depending on the legal form of the fund, the residency of its investors and the activities of its management company. The following analysis addresses each major vehicle type.

French AIFs, FCP, SICAV and SLP

A fonds commun de placement (FCP) is tax-transparent: income and gains are taxed at the investor level. The increase in social charges on investment income therefore hits French-resident unitholders directly at the point of distribution or deemed distribution. SICAVs, by contrast, are corporate vehicles subject to corporate income tax on a limited basis (primarily on French-source real-estate income); their investors face the higher social charges upon dividend receipt. The société de libre partenariat (SLP), used widely in French private equity, is tax-transparent for qualifying investors, meaning the social charge uplift again flows through to individuals. For all three vehicles, managers must update distribution notices and tax information certificates (IFU) to reflect the revised rates.

UCITS Funds

French-domiciled UCITS distribute primarily to retail investors for whom the PFU is the default withholding mechanism. The increased social charge component raises the PFU rate, reducing net distributions. Management companies should update prospectus disclosures and KIID documents where projected returns are shown net of tax.

Management Companies

Asset management companies structured as SA or SAS face a double impact: (i) the extended corporate surtax on fee income above the threshold, and (ii) higher employer social charges on management-carried-interest allocations and bonuses treated as employment income. Payroll and compensation modelling must be refreshed to account for both layers. Where a management company is part of a larger MNE group, it must also assess whether Pillar Two top-up tax may apply, a point addressed in detail below.

Example, Modelling Social Charges Impact on Distributions

The following worked example illustrates the additional cost borne by a French-resident individual investor receiving a distribution from a tax-transparent AIF.

Assumptions: An investor receives a €100,000 capital-gain distribution from an FCP. Under the PFU regime, the distribution is subject to a flat income tax component of 12.8 % plus social charges.

Component Pre-Finance Act 2026 Post-Finance Act 2026
Gross distribution €100,000 €100,000
Income tax (12.8 %) €12,800 €12,800
Social charges (prior rate: 17.2 %) €17,200 ,
Social charges (new higher rate) , Higher than €17,200 (per Finance Act 2026 rate increase)
Total PFU deduction (prior) €30,000 (30.0 %) ,
Total PFU deduction (new) , Above €30,000 (reflecting increased social levy)
Net to investor €70,000 Below €70,000

Accounting entry (management company books): On the distribution date, the fund administrator should accrue the withholding liability at the new aggregate PFU rate. The journal entry debits the distribution payable account and credits the tax-withholding liability account for the revised amount, with the differential posted to a “Finance Act 2026 social charge uplift” sub-account for tracking purposes.

Tax directors should run this model across all fund vehicles and investor segments to quantify the aggregate cash-flow impact and update investor reporting packs accordingly.

Holding Companies, New Rules and Restructuring Checklist

What are the main holding company provisions in the Finance Act 2026? The introduction of a tax on non-operational assets represents the most significant change to holding company taxation France has seen in recent years. Combined with the extended corporate surtax, these rules compel a thorough structural review of every French holding entity.

Non-Operational Asset Tax, How It Works

The new levy targets the fair-market value of assets that fail an “operational use” test. Financial investments, excess treasury positions, intra-group receivables without a genuine commercial purpose, and real-estate assets not directly used in the company’s trade all fall within scope. The law requires an annual declaration and applies the tax at a rate set out in the Finance Act. The effect is to impose a recurring cost on structures that hold passive wealth, incentivising either redeployment of those assets into operational activity or a restructuring of the holding chain.

Restructuring Checklist

  1. Asset classification. Perform a line-by-line review of the holding company’s balance sheet. Tag each asset as “operational” or “non-operational” under the statutory definitions.
  2. Operational-use test documentation. For borderline assets, such as intra-group loans that also serve a treasury management function, prepare contemporaneous documentation demonstrating their operational purpose.
  3. Evaluate restructuring options. Consider upstream or downstream mergers, asset contributions to operating subsidiaries, or conversion of passive holdings into active participations. Each option triggers distinct tax consequences (registration duties, capital-gains tax, participation-exemption eligibility) that must be modelled before execution.
  4. Corporate surtax impact. Overlay the extended corporate surtax on projected holding-company income to determine the combined tax cost under the new regime.
  5. Anti-avoidance review. French tax authorities have broad anti-abuse powers under Article L. 64 of the Livre des procédures fiscales. Any restructuring motivated primarily by the new holding-company tax must also satisfy a genuine commercial purpose test. Document the business rationale thoroughly.

Comparison, Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Key Obligations Under Finance Act 2026 / DAC9 / Pillar Two Immediate Actions (0–90 Days)
French AIF (FCP / SICAV) DAC9 data collection (where manager or service provider falls within scope); social charge adjustments on distributions; possible withholding changes Confirm reporting role; update distribution workflows; model social charge cost
Management company (SAS / SA) Payroll and social contributions recalculation; potential corporate surtax exposure; Pillar Two top-up risk if part of an in-scope consolidated group Map entities in group; run GloBE safe-harbour tests; update payroll systems
Holding company (French parent) Tax on non-operational assets; corporate surtax extensions; BEPS anti-abuse compliance Asset classification review; consider asset transfers and tax reliefs; adjust financial forecasts

Reporting Obligations, DAC9, Domestic Reporting and International Exchange

DAC9 reporting France obligations represent a step change in the volume and granularity of data that fund managers and intermediaries must collect and transmit. The directive extends the EU’s automatic exchange of information (AEOI) framework to cover additional categories of income and asset types, and France’s transposition through the Finance Act 2026 makes compliance mandatory for a wide range of financial-sector participants.

Who Must Report?

Under the French transposition, the following entities are likely to fall within the reporting obligation:

  • Fund managers (sociétés de gestion) authorised by the AMF that manage AIFs or UCITS with reportable investors.
  • Depositaries and custodians holding assets on behalf of funds or managed accounts.
  • Intermediaries involved in the arrangement or facilitation of reportable transactions, including placement agents and transfer agents.

Data Elements and Exchange Timeline

Reporting entities must collect and transmit investor identification data (name, TIN, jurisdiction of tax residence), account balances, income amounts by category, and, under DAC9’s expanded scope, additional information on crypto-assets and certain digital-platform transactions where applicable. The first reporting exchange is expected to follow the EU-mandated timeline, with data relating to the first reportable period transmitted to the French tax administration (impots.gouv.fr / DGFIP) by the prescribed deadline. Practitioners should monitor the Bulletin officiel des finances publiques (BOFiP) for the definitive French administrative instructions, which were awaiting publication as of the date of this guide.

Checklist for Implementing DAC9 Reporting Inside Fund Operations

  1. Data-mapping exercise. Map every data element required by DAC9 to its source within existing fund-administration and KYC systems. Identify gaps where new fields must be created.
  2. KYC and onboarding enhancements. Update investor onboarding forms and self-certification templates to capture the additional data points required by DAC9 (particularly expanded TIN requirements and crypto-asset disclosures where relevant).
  3. IT system configuration. Work with fund-administration platform vendors to ensure extraction, validation and XML-schema generation capabilities are in place before the first reporting deadline.
  4. Vendor due diligence. If reporting is delegated to a third-party administrator or technology provider, confirm contractually that the vendor can meet the DAC9 specifications and French administrative requirements.
  5. Internal testing and dry run. Conduct at least one end-to-end test submission (using sample data) before the first live filing to identify formatting errors, missing fields and workflow bottlenecks.
  6. Staff training. Ensure compliance, operations and investor-relations teams understand the new obligations, data-handling protocols and escalation procedures for incomplete or inconsistent investor data.

Pillar Two / GloBE, How It Affects Funds and Holding Structures in France

Pillar Two France implementation, enacted through the Finance Act 2026 and its companion legislation, brings the OECD’s Global Anti-Base Erosion (GloBE) rules into French domestic law. For investment management groups and holding structures, the implications are significant but nuanced, owing to the specific exclusions and safe harbours that the OECD framework provides for certain fund and investment entities.

Who Is In Scope?

Any MNE group, including an investment management group, with consolidated revenue of €750 million or more in at least two of the four preceding fiscal years falls within scope. The GloBE rules impose a minimum effective tax rate of 15 % on income earned in each jurisdiction where the group has constituent entities. Where the effective tax rate in a given jurisdiction falls below 15 %, a top-up tax is levied, typically through the Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) applied by the parent jurisdiction or, failing that, through the Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR).

Fund-Specific Exclusions and Safe Harbours

The OECD GloBE rules, as reflected in the OECD Pillar Two model rules and administrative guidance, provide an exclusion for qualifying investment funds and certain real-estate investment vehicles that meet specific ownership, regulation and diversification conditions. Where a fund itself is excluded, its income does not enter the GloBE computation. However, the management company and any holding entities in the group are not excluded and must be tested independently.

Transitional safe harbours, the CbCR-based safe harbour and the simplified jurisdictional safe harbour, allow groups to avoid detailed GloBE computations in jurisdictions where the effective tax rate, calculated using simplified inputs, clearly exceeds 15 %. Early indications suggest that many French management companies will satisfy these safe harbours given France’s standard corporate tax rate, but the calculation must be documented and filed.

Practical Steps

  • Entity mapping. Identify every constituent entity in the group and determine which are excluded (qualifying funds) and which must be tested (management companies, holding companies, service entities).
  • Data collection. Assemble the financial accounting data (GloBE income, covered taxes, substance-based carve-outs) required for the top-up tax computation or safe-harbour test.
  • Provisional top-up tax calculation. Run a preliminary GloBE computation for each non-excluded entity to determine whether a top-up tax liability arises. Where safe harbours are met, document the basis.
  • Tax provisioning. Book a provision for any estimated Pillar Two top-up tax in the group’s consolidated financial statements, applying IAS 12 or local GAAP as appropriate.
  • Monitor French administrative guidance. The DGFIP is expected to issue detailed implementation instructions (BOFiP updates and ministerial decrees) clarifying the domestic application of GloBE rules. These should be monitored and incorporated into compliance processes as they are published.

Practical Compliance Playbook, 30/60/90-Day Action Plan

The breadth of the French tax changes 2026 demands a structured implementation approach. The following phased plan provides a framework for CFOs and tax directors to mobilise internal and external resources.

Days 1–30: Assess and Quantify

  • Complete the asset classification exercise for all holding companies (operational vs. non-operational).
  • Run updated social charge and PFU models across all fund vehicles and investor segments.
  • Map all entities in the group for Pillar Two / GloBE purposes and run preliminary safe-harbour tests.
  • Engage external counsel and tax advisers to confirm the interpretation of new provisions as applied to your specific structures.

Days 31–60: Design and Build

  • Update distribution calculation engines and investor reporting templates to reflect the new social charge rates.
  • Begin DAC9 data-mapping and IT system configuration; issue RFPs to vendors if needed.
  • Prepare board and investor communications summarising the financial impact and any proposed structural changes.
  • Evaluate restructuring options for holding companies where non-operational asset tax exposure is material.

Days 61–90: Implement and Test

  • Conduct a dry run of the first DAC9 filing using sample data.
  • File revised corporate tax provisional instalments reflecting the extended surtax.
  • Finalise Pillar Two documentation (safe-harbour calculations or full GloBE computations) and book provisions.
  • Issue updated investor communications, prospectus supplements and KIIDs where required.
  • Schedule a 6-month review to incorporate any pending French administrative guidance from DGFIP / BOFiP.

Conclusion

The Finance Act France 2026 is not a single event but a cascade of interconnected obligations, higher social charges, extended surtaxes, a new holding-company levy, DAC9 reporting and Pillar Two minimum-tax compliance, that collectively reshape the cost structure and operational requirements for investment funds, asset managers and holding companies. The practical compliance imperative is clear: provision, restructure where necessary, and build the reporting infrastructure now. Entities that delay risk not only financial penalties but also investor dissatisfaction as net returns shift downward. For French-focused legal expertise, engaging specialist international tax counsel early in the compliance process will ensure that the Finance Act 2026 measures are navigated with precision and that structuring opportunities are not overlooked.

This article will be updated as the French tax administration (DGFIP) publishes additional administrative instructions (BOFiP updates) and ministerial decrees implementing the Finance Act 2026 provisions. Monitor this page for revisions.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nicolas Duboille at Sumerson, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Legifrance, Finance Act / Loi de finances 2026 (official text)
  2. French tax administration (impots.gouv.fr / DGFIP)
  3. OECD, Pillar Two / GloBE rules and implementation guidance
  4. European Union / DAC9 documentation (Council / Commission guidance)
  5. Agence France Trésor (AFT), State budget documents
  6. PwC, France corporate tax summaries
  7. KPMG, Finance Act 2026 practitioner alerts
  8. Deloitte, practice alerts
  9. IBFD, Tax journal articles on fund taxation in France

FAQs

Q1: What are the major tax changes in France for 2026?
The Finance Act 2026 introduces higher social charges on investment income (effective 1 January 2026), extends the exceptional contribution on high incomes (CEHR), broadens the corporate surtax, creates a new tax on non-operational assets held by holding companies, and transposes DAC9 reporting and Pillar Two / GloBE minimum-tax rules into French law. The full text is published on Legifrance.
Yes. Fund managers, depositaries and qualifying intermediaries must collect and report expanded investor data under DAC9 as transposed by the Finance Act 2026. This includes additional TIN requirements and, where applicable, crypto-asset transaction data. Implementation should begin immediately, with a data-mapping exercise, KYC form updates and IT system configuration ahead of the first reporting deadline.
MNE groups with consolidated revenue of €750 million or more must apply the GloBE minimum effective tax rate of 15 %. While qualifying investment funds may be excluded, management companies and holding entities are not and must be tested. Groups should run safe-harbour calculations and, where the safe harbour is not met, compute any top-up tax liability and book an appropriate provision.
Yes. The Finance Act 2026 raised the aggregate social levy rate applied to investment income (dividends, interest, capital gains, fund distributions) effective 1 January 2026. This increases the total PFU burden above the previous 30 % level for French-resident individual investors.
Potentially. The new non-operational asset tax creates a recurring cost for holding companies with significant passive-asset holdings. A restructuring assessment should include: (i) asset classification, (ii) modelling of the annual tax cost versus restructuring expenses, (iii) evaluation of merger, contribution or disposal options, and (iv) anti-avoidance review to ensure any restructuring satisfies the genuine-commercial-purpose test.
Groups should first determine whether the transitional CbCR-based safe harbour applies by using data from their existing Country-by-Country Report. If the safe harbour is not met, a full GloBE computation is required: calculate GloBE income, determine covered taxes, apply substance-based carve-outs, and compute the effective tax rate for each jurisdiction. Any shortfall below 15 % generates a top-up tax liability to be provisioned in the consolidated accounts.
French domestic law imposes penalties on reporting entities that fail to file, file late, or submit inaccurate DAC9 reports. The precise penalty regime follows the general framework for automatic exchange of information failures under the Code général des impôts and the Livre des procédures fiscales, supplemented by the specific provisions introduced by the Finance Act 2026 transposition. Practitioners should consult the forthcoming BOFiP guidance from DGFIP for definitive penalty amounts and procedures.

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France Finance Act 2026, Practical Tax Guide for Investment Funds, Asset Managers and Holding Companies

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