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Country Setup Guide
Country Guide

How to Set Up a Company in France as a Foreigner (2026)

The SAS (Société par Actions Simplifiée) is France's most flexible company structure with €1 minimum capital. Registration via the Guichet Unique takes 3–7 days. The 25% CT rate (15% on first €42,5...

March 2026 3 min read
How to Set Up a Company in France as a Foreigner (2026)

France's business landscape for foreigners

France has the EU's second-largest economy. The Paris tech startup ecosystem is one of Europe's strongest. But France is also one of Europe's more bureaucratic environments for company setup, with:

  • High employer social charges (~42–45% on top of gross salary)
  • Complex tax system (IRC, CFE, CVAE, IFI for individuals)
  • French-language requirements for most administrative processes
  • Historically slow administration (though digital Guichet Unique has improved this)
  • Who should incorporate in France:
  • Founders building a business for the French market
  • Companies wanting access to the CIR (Crédit Impôt Recherche) — 30% R&D credit
  • Companies hiring French employees (requires local entity)
  • Founders who have or plan to obtain French residency

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Step 1: Choose your structure

SAS (Société par Actions Simplifiée): The most popular choice for startups and SMEs. Maximum governance flexibility — almost any governance arrangement can be written into the statuts (articles). Can have any number of shareholders. Preferred for investor-backed companies.

SASU (Société par Actions Simplifiée Unipersonnelle): Single-shareholder SAS. Used by solo founders.

SARL (Société à Responsabilité Limitée): France's traditional SME structure. More rigid governance than SAS; less favoured for startups. Still widely used.

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Step 2: Register via Guichet Unique

Since January 2023, all company registrations, modifications, and cessations in France go through the Guichet Unique (guichet-entreprises.fr) — a single administrative window.

Process: 1. Create an account at guichet-entreprises.fr 2. Complete the online registration form (company details, shareholder information, director information, business activity) 3. Upload required documents (statuts, identity documents, etc.) 4. Pay the registration fee (varies; typically €40–70 for an SAS) 5. Receive SIRET number (unique business identifier) and SIREN (company number) upon approval

Timeline: 3–7 business days

Note for non-residents: Non-French-resident directors may be asked to provide additional documentation. If you do not have French residency, you may still form an SAS with a non-resident director — no residency requirement for directors. However, some formalities may require an in-person visit to a French consulate or notary.

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The CIR — France's R&D incentive

  • The Crédit Impôt Recherche is one of the world's most generous R&D tax incentives:
  • 30% tax credit on qualifying R&D expenditure up to €100 million
  • 5% credit on qualifying R&D above €100 million
  • For young innovative companies (JEI): Enhanced rates and social charge exemptions available
  • Refundable: Companies in loss can claim the CIR as a cash refund from the state — valuable for early-stage companies

Qualifying R&D must be conducted in France or an EEA country. Salaries of researchers, equipment costs, patent filing costs, and subcontracted R&D (up to certain limits) qualify.

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Social charges — the critical cost

  • If you hire employees in France (including yourself as a director-employee), the employer social charges are:
  • Approximately 42–45% on top of gross salary for most salary bands
  • Example: An employee earning €4,000 gross/month costs the employer €5,680–5,800/month in total (gross salary + employer charges)

This is among the highest in the world and must be factored into your cost projections before hiring in France.

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Real cost (Year 1)

ItemCost (EUR)
Guichet Unique registration€40–70
Chartered accountant (expert-comptable)€2,000–5,000
Banking€0–600
**Total****€2,040–5,670**

Note: French law requires company accounts to be prepared by or reviewed by a chartered accountant (expert-comptable) — this is standard practice and not legally mandated in every case, but practically necessary.

Related Guide

Read the complete formation guide for this country — structures, costs, taxes, banking, and visas.

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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.