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France’s merger‑control landscape shifted on 14–15 April 2026, when the National Assembly and Senate adopted the Loi de simplification de la vie économique, significantly raising the turnover thresholds that trigger a mandatory notification to the Autorité de la concurrence. For M&A lawyers in France, and the GCs, PE sponsors and deal teams they advise, the reform means that a material number of transactions will fall outside the French filing obligation for the first time in over a decade. The change arrives alongside the European Commission’s concurrent review of its own Merger Guidelines, creating a dual layer of regulatory recalibration that affects notification risk, deal structuring and closing timetables for every cross‑border transaction touching French revenues.
This guide sets out the exact new thresholds, the expected effective dates and transitional rules, a practical structuring playbook, and a step‑by‑step Autorité filing checklist designed to help practitioners make the notify‑or‑not decision with confidence.
The Loi de simplification de la vie économique is a broad legislative package designed to reduce administrative burdens on French businesses. Article 8 of the law targets merger control directly, doubling the turnover thresholds that have remained unchanged since the last major recalibration. The law was adopted by the Assemblée nationale and the Sénat on 14–15 April 2026, as recorded in the legislative dossier published on Légifrance. The Autorité de la concurrence issued a press release on 16 April 2026 welcoming the threshold increases and signalling that operational guidance would follow once implementing decrees are published.
The scope of the reform covers standard merger‑control thresholds applicable to transactions in metropolitan France. Specific thresholds applicable to certain overseas territories (outre‑mer) and to the retail sector are addressed separately and are not doubled by Article 8. Deal teams should verify which threshold set applies to their transaction before concluding that no filing is required.
The previous thresholds, €75 million combined worldwide and €25 million individual French turnover, were set at a time when the Autorité reviewed approximately 200–250 notified transactions per year. The French government’s stated rationale, as set out in the Ministry of Economy’s press release, was that inflation, GDP growth and rising corporate revenues had rendered the old thresholds disproportionately low, capturing transactions with limited competitive impact. The reform aligns France more closely with other major EU member states and frees the Autorité’s resources to focus on transactions that present genuine competitive concerns, including so‑called “killer acquisitions” in digital and pharmaceutical markets. For M&A lawyers in France advising on mid‑market transactions, the practical effect is a substantially narrower filing obligation.
Under Article 8 of the Loi de simplification de la vie économique, as adopted on 14–15 April 2026, a concentration must be notified to the Autorité de la concurrence when the following cumulative conditions are met:
Both conditions must be satisfied simultaneously. If a transaction meets only one limb, no French filing obligation arises under the general regime. Separate, lower thresholds continue to apply in the retail sector and for certain overseas territories, deal teams must check these independently.
Turnover for merger‑control purposes is calculated on the basis of the parties’ most recent audited annual accounts, applying the rules set out in Articles L. 430‑2 and R. 430‑2 of the Code de commerce. The treatment varies by transaction type:
| Transaction type | Turnover basis | Key consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Share acquisition (100 %) | Consolidated worldwide and French turnover of the target group | Include all subsidiaries controlled by the target; exclude intra‑group sales |
| Asset purchase | Turnover directly attributable to the transferred assets / business | Carve‑out accounting required; auditor confirmation recommended |
| Partial interest / joint control | Turnover of the entity over which joint control is acquired | Assess whether the transaction confers decisive influence, if not, no notification |
Turnover figures must be net of VAT and intra‑group transactions. For financial institutions and insurance companies, specific revenue‑based calculations replace standard turnover. The Autorité’s published guidelines on turnover calculation remain authoritative and are expected to be updated once the implementing decrees are finalised.
Example 1, Share sale of a French target by a foreign seller. A US industrial group (worldwide turnover: €2 billion; French turnover: €80 million) sells its French subsidiary (French turnover: €55 million) to a German acquirer (worldwide turnover: €500 million; French turnover: €60 million). Combined worldwide turnover of the acquirer and target exceeds €150 million. The acquirer’s French turnover (€60 million) and the target’s French turnover (€55 million) each exceed €50 million. Result: notification required.
Example 2, Asset purchase of a small French business line. A French PE‑backed platform (worldwide turnover: €300 million; French turnover: €120 million) acquires a product line from a competitor. The product line generated €35 million in French revenue in the last audited year. Combined worldwide turnover exceeds €150 million, but the target’s French turnover (€35 million) falls below the new €50 million individual threshold. Result: no French notification required under the new thresholds. Under the old thresholds, this transaction would have been notifiable (€35 million exceeded the former €25 million individual threshold).
Example 3, PE platform add‑on. A mid‑market PE fund’s French portfolio company (worldwide turnover: €90 million; French turnover: €70 million) acquires a bolt‑on target (worldwide turnover: €40 million; French turnover: €30 million). Combined worldwide turnover is €130 million, below the new €150 million threshold. Result: no notification required, regardless of individual French turnover figures, because the first cumulative condition is not met.
The Loi de simplification de la vie économique was adopted by parliament on 14–15 April 2026. However, adoption alone does not bring the new notification thresholds 2026 into operational effect. Promulgation by the President of the Republic and publication in the Journal officiel, followed by any required implementing decrees, must occur first. The French Ministry of Economy’s press release described the law as “a major step forward for economic activity in France” but did not specify a fixed application date for the merger‑control provisions.
Industry observers expect the new thresholds to become operational in the second half of 2026, with a widely reported window between 1 August and 1 October 2026. Deal teams should treat this window as indicative, not confirmed, and monitor Légifrance and the Autorité de la concurrence’s website for the official promulgation date.
| Event | Date | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| Parliamentary adoption of the Loi de simplification | 14–15 April 2026 | Threshold increases adopted; triggers industry analysis and early deal‑planning adjustments |
| Autorité de la concurrence press release | 16 April 2026 | Authority welcomes reform and signals forthcoming operational guidance |
| Expected entry into force | H2 2026 (likely 1 Aug–1 Oct 2026) | New thresholds apply to concentrations completed on or after the effective date; monitor Légifrance for decrees |
Transitional considerations. The Autorité has historically applied the thresholds in force at the date a concentration is completed (i.e., closing), not the date of signing. For deals signed before the effective date but closing after it, the new, higher thresholds should apply, meaning some transactions that would have been notifiable at signing may no longer require a filing by the time they close. However, this position has not yet been formally confirmed for the 2026 reform. The prudent approach is to prepare a filing in parallel and withdraw it if the higher thresholds come into force before closing.
The doubling of French merger‑control thresholds means that a significant class of mid‑market transactions will fall outside the Autorité’s mandatory review. Based on the Authority’s published decision statistics, early indications suggest that the reform could remove roughly 15–20 % of annual notifications, primarily smaller bolt‑on acquisitions, carve‑outs and add‑on deals by PE platforms.
The following transaction categories are most likely to benefit:
For M&A lawyers in France advising on deal structuring to avoid notification, several structuring levers deserve attention, each with its own risk profile:
When structuring a transaction to fall below the notification thresholds 2026, deal teams should ensure the following items are addressed in transaction documentation:
For transactions that do meet the new thresholds, the Autorité de la concurrence filing process follows a well‑established two‑phase structure. The Authority’s 16 April 2026 press release confirmed that the procedural framework will remain unchanged, only the jurisdictional trigger has been adjusted.
Step‑by‑step filing checklist:
Industry observers expect the higher thresholds to reduce the Autorité’s annual caseload, potentially shortening informal pre‑notification timelines and improving responsiveness during Phase I. However, the Authority has signalled that it will focus its freed resources on complex cases, meaning transactions that are notified under the new regime may face more intensive scrutiny.
Where competitive concerns are identified, the Autorité may accept structural or behavioural remedies. Structural remedies, typically divestiture of overlapping business units, remain the Authority’s preferred tool. Behavioural commitments (access undertakings, licensing obligations) are accepted less frequently and usually in combination with structural measures.
Deal teams should draft closing conditions that expressly reference the possibility of Autorité‑imposed remedies, including a clear “hell or high water” allocation (specifying which party bears the obligation to divest if required) and a materiality threshold that defines when remedies become grounds for termination. Interim measures, including hold‑separate obligations, may be imposed during review, and gun‑jumping before clearance carries significant fines.
The French threshold increase does not operate in isolation. For cross‑border M&A France transactions, the notification map now looks materially different: fewer French filings, but unchanged (or potentially expanded) EU filings. Multi‑jurisdictional deal teams must recalibrate their filing matrices accordingly.
Simultaneously, the European Commission launched its review of the EU Merger Guidelines in 2026, as detailed on the DG Competition review page. The draft guidelines, analysed in detail by leading firms, signal several substantive shifts that will affect how mergers are assessed at both the EU and national level:
The likely practical effect for M&A lawyers in France is a two‑track world: fewer deals captured at the French national level, but those that reach the EU threshold will face more exacting substantive scrutiny. The practical rule of thumb is straightforward, map French and EU thresholds simultaneously at the outset of every transaction. Where only the French thresholds are met, expect a lighter procedural burden post‑reform. Where EU thresholds are triggered, prepare for a more demanding substantive review under the updated guidelines. Coordination between French and EU counsel should begin at the letter‑of‑intent stage, not after signing. Our international commercial law guide provides further background on multi‑jurisdictional regulatory coordination.
The compliance question for every France‑touching transaction in 2026 reduces to a simple decision tree: calculate combined worldwide turnover and individual French turnover against the new thresholds (€150 million / €50 million), verify the effective date on Légifrance, and plan your Autorité filing, or document why no filing is required. For transactions near the thresholds, structuring options exist but must be documented rigorously and stress‑tested against the Authority’s enforcement practice. Those seeking tailored pre‑signing notification risk assessment from experienced French M&A lawyers should engage local counsel early in the deal timetable to avoid costly surprises at closing.
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.
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