Our Expert in France
No results available
Any acquisition of a French company with employee representation triggers a mandatory works council consultation France, a procedural obligation that, if mishandled, can delay closing, void post‑deal restructurings or expose buyer and seller to civil liability. The process of CSE consultation in France requires the employer to deliver a structured information pack to the Comité Social et Économique (CSE), hold formal meetings, allow the CSE to appoint independent experts if it chooses, receive a written opinion and document every step before the transaction can close. In current M&A practice, deal teams typically allocate a 4‑to‑6‑week consultation window running in parallel with buyer due diligence and pre‑closing conditions.
This guide sets out exactly who must be consulted, when the clock starts, which documents to prepare, how to draft SPA protections around the consultation period France imposes, and what happens when the procedure goes wrong.
The CSE is the single employee‑representative body established under the Code du travail. It replaced the former comité d’entreprise, délégués du personnel and CHSCT. Every French employer with at least 11 employees must set up a CSE. Once the headcount reaches 50 employees, the CSE acquires an expanded set of consultation rights, including the right to be informed and consulted on any proposed change to the economic or legal organisation of the company, which encompasses mergers, acquisitions, disposals, restructurings and significant asset transfers.
In the M&A context, this means the employer (ordinarily the target company) must consult the CSE before any decision that would modify employment conditions, the organisation of work, or the strategic direction of the business. The obligation applies whether the deal is structured as a share purchase, an asset deal, a merger or a partial contribution of assets. It is triggered before the employer’s decision is finalised, meaning consultation must be completed, or at least properly initiated, before signing becomes unconditional or closing occurs.
The CSE of the target entity is the primary body. Where the target has multiple establishments with their own CSEs (CSE d’établissement), each must be consulted if the proposed transaction has distinct effects at each site. If the target is part of a group, the central CSE (CSE central) may also need to be consulted, particularly when the decision is taken at group level. For background on how these bodies are structured, see our overview of France works council requirements (CSE).
Consultation is a legal obligation for companies with 50 or more employees whenever the proposed transaction affects the matters listed in the Code du travail, economic organisation, employment volume, working conditions and strategic orientation. Even in deals where no redundancies are planned, the change of control itself ordinarily qualifies as a consultable event. For smaller employers (11–49 employees), the CSE’s powers are narrower, but best practice still favours early engagement to reduce post‑closing risk.
Before the consultation can begin, the deal team must confirm several threshold questions. The answers determine the scope, complexity and timeline of the procedure.
A CSE must be established in any company or establishment that has employed at least 11 employees for 12 consecutive months. The expanded information‑and‑consultation rights, including the right to appoint an expert and to issue a formal opinion, apply when the company reaches 50 employees, again measured over 12 consecutive months. If the target has never set up a CSE despite meeting the threshold, the employer must first produce a procès‑verbal de carence (formal record of no candidates) before it can argue that no consultation is required.
The employer, which in practice means the target company’s management, is responsible for preparing and delivering the information pack. The buyer cannot formally substitute itself as the consulting party before closing because it is not yet the employer. However, deal practice routinely involves the buyer supplying certain data (integration plans, headcount projections, strategic rationale) that the target then incorporates into the pack. Where information is commercially sensitive, confidentiality can be managed through redacted annexes or a secure data room accessible only to CSE members under non‑disclosure obligations.
The following numbered procedure maps the process of CSE consultation in France onto a standard M&A deal timetable, from pre‑deal scoping through to post‑closing follow‑up. The consolidated timeline table below summarises each step, the responsible party and the typical duration.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration (M&A Model) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Internal scoping & decision on pack preparation | Seller (HR) + buyer counsel + target counsel | 2–5 business days |
| 2. Draft information pack | Employer (seller) with buyer input on commercial data / redactions | 3–7 calendar days |
| 3. Deliver pack & open consultation | Employer (formal delivery to CSE) | Day 0 (delivery date establishes start) |
| 4. First consultation meeting | Employer + CSE | Within 7–14 days of delivery |
| 5. CSE hears expert(s) / requests further documents | CSE (may appoint expert), employer to provide data | Expert report: 2–3 weeks |
| 6. CSE opinion drafted & employer responds | CSE issues opinion; employer replies in writing | Total from Day 0: 4–6 weeks |
| 7. Employer records closure & follows actions | Employer (HR/legal) + buyer for SPA implementation | Within 15 days after end of consultation |
Because the CSE consultation timeline can shift, particularly when an expert is appointed or the CSE requests supplementary information, the share or asset purchase agreement should address consultation risk explicitly. Industry observers expect the following clauses to appear in well‑drafted French M&A SPAs:
The employer should maintain a signed handover log recording the date, time and method of delivery, together with a full list of documents transmitted. Where the information pack contains commercially sensitive buyer data, use a redacted main annex for general CSE distribution alongside a confidential data room accessible only to CSE members who sign a specific non‑disclosure undertaking. GDPR rules apply to any personal data included: anonymise individual salary data and ensure that health‑and‑safety reports do not identify individuals without consent.
The quality of the works council information pack determines whether the consultation starts cleanly or stalls on information requests. The following table lists the documents needed for a CSE M&A information pack. Not every item is required by statute for every transaction, but M&A best practice favours providing a comprehensive dossier upfront to minimise delays.
| Document | Notes (Who Issues It / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Complete information pack / dossier | Employer prepares, PDF + annexes covering operational, financial and HR data. Log delivery with signature or read receipt. |
| Latest annual accounts (balance sheet, P&L) | Company finance, last 2 fiscal years plus interim year‑to‑date figures. |
| Headcount by category (CDI / CDD, full‑time / part‑time) | HR report, broken down by establishment and aggregated for the entire workforce. |
| Payroll summary and total labour cost | HR / finance, last 12 months and year‑to‑date. |
| Applicable collective agreements and workplace agreements | HR / legal, PDFs with dates, scope and expiry terms. |
| Organisational chart and job classifications | HR, current version, with reporting lines and site locations. |
| Social measures and past PSE documents (if any) | HR / legal, prior redundancy plans, social plans or voluntary departure schemes. |
| Contracts potentially affected by the transaction | Legal team, employment transfers, secondment arrangements, outsourcing contracts. |
| BDESE extracts relevant to the M&A | Employer, economic and employment indicators from the base de données économiques, sociales et environnementales. |
| Draft integration / closing organisation plan (buyer input) | Buyer / target collaboration, intended workforce changes, synergies, relocation plans. |
| Health and safety reports | HSE / HR, to the extent relevant to the transaction’s impact on working conditions. |
| Pre‑existing expert reports | If previously produced for related consultations, include in the pack. |
The BDESE (base de données économiques, sociales et environnementales) is a mandatory employer database containing historical and forward‑looking data on investment, employment, remuneration, working conditions and environmental impact. CSE members have permanent access to the BDESE. In an M&A consultation, the employer should extract the indicators most relevant to the transaction, headcount trends, payroll evolution, training spend, and include them as a stand‑alone annex. This avoids disputes about whether “sufficient” information was provided.
CSE members are bound by a general obligation of discretion regarding information identified as confidential by the employer. In practice, deal teams should clearly mark which documents or data points are confidential, require in‑camera sessions for the most sensitive commercial data and, where possible, provide a redacted summary for non‑CSE employees. Any personal data, individual salary details, health records, disciplinary files, must be anonymised or pseudonymised in compliance with GDPR before inclusion in the pack.
The CSE consultation timeline in most French M&A transactions follows a 4‑to‑6‑week practical model, running in parallel with other pre‑closing workstreams. The table below shows how this maps onto standard deal phases.
| Deal Phase | Typical Date Relative to Signing | CSE Step |
|---|---|---|
| Due diligence | Pre‑signing | Prepare draft information pack; signal consultation plan to HR |
| Signing | T = 0 | Deliver final information pack to CSE (Day 0 of consultation period) |
| Pre‑closing | T + 1 to T + 30 | Consultation meetings; expert appointment; written Q&A |
| Longstop / closing | T + 30 to T + 45 | CSE opinion received; SPA closes if consultation complete or longstop satisfied |
| Post‑closing | T + 45+ | Implementation of social measures; CSE follow‑up on integration |
Day 0 is the date on which the employer delivers the complete information pack to the CSE, not the date of the first meeting. The first plenary meeting should be convened within 7 to 14 days of delivery. If the CSE appoints an expert, the expert typically has 2 to 3 weeks to deliver a report, though this can be expedited by agreement. The CSE must then issue its opinion within the overall consultation period. If no opinion is issued within the applicable time limit, the CSE is deemed to have been consulted, though relying on this “deemed consultation” mechanism is risky and should be treated as a last resort.
Deal teams should build at least 10 to 15 additional days of margin beyond the expected 4‑to‑6‑week window when setting a longstop date, to absorb supplementary information requests or a second expert report.
The direct costs of CSE consultation are modest compared to deal value, but they must be budgeted and allocated in the SPA. The following table summarises typical cost items. All figures are estimates and should be verified with local counsel.
| Item | Typical Payer | Amount / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Independent expert report (CSE‑appointed) | Employer (advances cost; reimbursement rules vary by type of expert) | Estimated range: €3,000–€25,000+, depending on scope and expert specialisation |
| Employer internal legal / HR time | Employer | Internal cost; charged to project budgets |
| External counsel for CSE meetings | Employer / buyer (negotiable) | Hourly rates for French labour counsel |
| SPA social indemnity / escrow | Buyer or seller (negotiable) | Contractual sum to cover remediation if consultation defects cause liability |
| Administrative filings (e.g., DREETS notification) | Employer | Minimal administrative fees; amounts vary by procedure |
Social indemnities and expert fees may have distinct tax treatment under French law, deal teams should consult tax counsel on deductibility, VAT recovery and the classification of escrow releases.
The core statutory framework for CSE consultation has remained stable. What has shifted is practitioner emphasis: mid‑2026 market guidance consistently treats the 4‑to‑6‑week parallel consultation window as the operational standard for M&A timetables, rather than a best‑case scenario. Industry observers expect deal teams to embed the CSE consultation timeline directly into SPA condition‑precedent mechanics, rather than managing it as an informal side process.
Practitioners have also noted renewed scrutiny of information‑pack completeness by CSE‑appointed experts, with experts increasingly requesting granular integration plans and site‑level headcount projections from buyers. Deal teams entering French M&A should check the Ministère du Travail’s published guidance and Service‑public pages for any regulatory updates that may have taken effect since the date of this article.
The legal consequences of defective consultation are significant. Affected employees or the CSE itself may seek injunctive relief to suspend the transaction, challenge subsequent dismissals as procedurally void, or claim damages. Administrative authorities (the DREETS) can also intervene where the employer has failed to comply with mandatory notification or social‑plan requirements. The likely practical effect of a procedural defect is deal delay, increased costs and reputational damage, outcomes that proper planning can prevent. For more on working with an M&A lawyer experienced in French employment law, see our lawyer directory.
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.
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 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 9 hours ago
posted 10 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory 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 Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message