Finance

The Cost of Opening Your French Subsidiary

Understanding the real numbers behind entity creation in France — so you can decide when it makes financial sense, rather than doing it by default.

AL
Amaury Leconte ·6 min read·Finance

Key takeaway

The all-in year-1 cost of a French subsidiary is €8,000–20,000 in setup and recurring fees — before you've made a single hire. Understand the full picture before you commit.

One-Time Setup Costs

Creating a French legal entity (most commonly a SAS — Société par Actions Simplifiée) involves several upfront costs that are often underestimated:

Legal costs

€1,500 – €3,500

Lawyer or online legal platform (Legalstart, Captain Contrat) for SAS statutes drafting and registration

Registration fees

€200 – €400

Greffe du tribunal de commerce (RCS registration) + publication in BODACC/JAL

Share capital

€1 minimum

SAS minimum capital is €1, but €1,000–10,000 is typical for credibility with clients and banks

Bank account opening

2 – 6 weeks

French banks require extensive KYB documentation. Neo-banks (Qonto, Shine) are faster but have limits

Annual Recurring Costs

Once the entity exists, the ongoing compliance burden is significant — even with zero employees and minimal activity:

  • Accounting (expert-comptable): €2,500–6,000/year for basic bookkeeping, annual accounts, and tax filings
  • Payroll administration (if hiring): €50–150/month per employee for fiches de paie and declarations
  • TVA declarations: Monthly or quarterly filing required if you exceed the VAT threshold
  • Corporate tax (IS): 25% on profits; minimum filing requirements even at a loss
  • Cotisation foncière des entreprises (CFE): Local business tax, variable by commune — typically €200–1,500/year
  • Annual accounts publication: Required at the greffe — €100–200/year

A French SAS with zero employees and modest activity still costs €4,000–8,000/year in compliance and accounting alone.

The Hidden Administrative Burden

Beyond the direct financial costs, creating a French entity introduces an ongoing administrative overhead that shouldn't be underestimated:

  • Président (legal director) responsibility: Someone must be formally named and legally responsible. If that person is abroad, coordination adds friction.
  • URSSAF obligations: Even without employees, there are social declaration requirements for the company's dirigeant.
  • Time to operational: From decision to first commercial invoice — typically 4–8 weeks minimum.
  • Annual shareholders' meetings: SAS requires formal decision-making processes, even for a single-shareholder entity.

Total Year-1 Cost Estimate

Legal setup + registration €2,000 – €4,000
Annual accounting €3,000 – €6,000
Bank account + domiciliation €500 – €1,500
CFE + misc. taxes €300 – €1,500
Total year-1 (excl. employees) €5,800 – €13,000

When It Actually Makes Sense

The French entity cost is not prohibitive — it's a reasonable operating cost for a growing market. The question is timing.

Create the entity when:

  • You have at least €150,000–200,000 in annual French revenue or contracted pipeline
  • You need to hire French employees directly (not possible without entity)
  • A key client or partner requires a local entity in contractual terms
  • You're bidding on public sector or EU-funded contracts

Don't create the entity yet when:

  • You're still validating product-market fit in France
  • Your French ARR is under €100,000
  • You can operate via portage salarial or cross-border invoicing
  • You haven't yet identified your ideal French client profile

Spend €3,000 on a GTM Sprint first. If it works, the entity creation cost pays for itself in the first month of revenue. If it doesn't, you've saved €50,000+ in sunk infrastructure costs.

Ready to launch in France?

Let's talk about your market entry strategy.