Finance Law of 19 February 2026 (2026 Budget Act)
AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.
France's 2026 Budget Act, enacted on 19 February 2026, is a sweeping fiscal consolidation law aimed at reducing the public deficit from approximately 6% of GDP in 2025 to 5% of GDP in 2026. To achieve this target, the government has combined significant spending cuts across state ministries with new and extended revenue measures targeting high-net-worth individuals and certain corporate structures. On the revenue side, the law introduces a new tax on patrimonial holding companies — structures commonly used by wealthy families to hold and transmit assets — and extends exceptional income and wealth levies on the highest earners and largest fortunes that were originally introduced as temporary measures. These provisions are designed to ensure that fiscal consolidation is not borne solely by public services. On the expenditure side, the law mandates across-the-board reductions in state spending, with ministries required to operate with tighter budgets. The cuts affect public investment, operating budgets, and certain social transfers, though essential services such as defence and education are partially shielded. Overall, the law represents one of the most significant fiscal tightening efforts in recent French budgetary history, reflecting pressure from European Union deficit rules and bond market expectations following several years of elevated post-pandemic spending.
AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.
Key Changes
- Public deficit target set at 5% of GDP for 2026, down from approximately 6% in 2025
- New tax introduced on patrimonial holding companies (sociétés holdings patrimoniales) used for family wealth management and transmission
- Exceptional income and wealth levies on the highest earners and largest fortunes extended beyond their original sunset date
+ 3 more changes with Pro
Obligations
What this law requires
State ministries must implement across-the-board spending reductions to operate within tighter budgets as mandated by the 2026 Budget Act
Patrimonial holding companies must comply with new tax obligations on assets held and transmitted through these structures
High-net-worth individuals must pay extended exceptional income levies that were originally introduced as temporary measures but are now continued under this law
Individuals and entities subject to wealth levies must comply with extended exceptional wealth tax obligations on their largest fortunes
Ministries must reduce public investment budgets in accordance with the fiscal consolidation targets established by the 2026 Budget Act