68%
SAS share of all new French company registrations in 2024 — 194,432 new SAS versus 73,013 new SARLs (26%); SA registrations a small fraction of total
26%
SARL share of new registrations in 2024 — down from 63% in 2013; the structural shift toward the SAS continues to accelerate
€37,000
Minimum share capital required for a SA (Art. L 224-2) — compared to no statutory minimum for a SAS or SARL (€1 is sufficient for either)

Share Capital: What Each Structure Requires

The SA requires a minimum capital of €37,000 — a statutory floor that cannot be waived. The SAS and the SARL have no statutory minimum. The SAS has a capital option unavailable to the SA: variable capital (Arts. L 231-1 to L 231-8) — under a variable capital clause, the SAS can increase or decrease capital without the formal procedure for ordinary capital changes, provided movements stay within the maximum and minimum thresholds fixed in the articles (floor: at least one-tenth of stated capital). The SAS also uniquely accepts apports en industrie (Art. L 227-1 al. 4) — contributions of services, expertise, or know-how; shares issued in exchange are inalienable and do not contribute to stated capital but carry full economic and voting rights.

Governance: The Central Difference

In a SARL, critical governance rules are set by statute: managers must be individuals; ordinary decisions require a majority of shares; extraordinary ones require two-thirds. There is no mechanism for differential voting rights. The SA operates under France's most elaborate statutory governance framework — designed for widely-held public companies, it sits awkwardly on most closely-held businesses. Its sole irreplaceable advantage: it is the only form that can be listed on a regulated French market. In a SAS, governance is almost entirely statutory-free. The law requires only a president and that the articles specify how the company is managed. The full menu of investor-grade instruments is available: multiple voting rights, preference shares with priority returns, redemption rights, veto rights on strategic decisions, drag-along and tag-along protections — all enforceable within the articles themselves.

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Why Investors Prefer the SAS

Venture capital and private equity investors overwhelmingly structure their French investments through the SAS. The reason is contractual precision: the SAS allows investors to negotiate preference shares with priority returns, anti-dilution ratchets, enhanced information rights, veto rights on strategic decisions, and bespoke exit mechanisms — all enforceable within the articles themselves. Any company expecting external investment within the first few years of its life should form as a SAS from day one.

Management Social Status

In a SARL, the manager's social insurance regime depends on their shareholding: a majority manager is classified as an independent worker (travailleur non-salarié); a minority or equal manager is subject to the general employees' social security regime. In both the SA and the SAS, all remunerated directors — the president and directeur général — are subject to the general employees' regime regardless of their shareholding level. A president of a SAS who holds 90% of the shares receives the same social coverage as a 1% shareholder, provided they receive remuneration. Only the SAS allows a legal entity to serve as its management officer — a holding company or parent entity can be president of a SAS subsidiary, exercising the function through its own legal representative. This is impossible in the SARL and SA.

Share Transfer Rules, Tax, and Key Governance Differences

SARL parts sociales are not freely transferable — transfers to third parties require statutory approval by shareholders representing at least 50% of share capital. SAS shares are in principle freely negotiable as securities, but articles can impose a comprehensive menu of restrictions: inalienability up to ten years; pre-emption rights; approval clauses; change-of-control triggers. Any transfer made in breach of SAS articles is null and void by operation of law. SA shares are also in principle freely negotiable, with articles able to restrict.

All three structures default to corporate income tax (IS) at 25% (standard) or 15% (reduced rate on first €42,500 for qualifying companies). The SAS has a unique tax option not available in the SA: the five-year partnership election under Art. 239 bis AB CGI, allowing the SAS to be taxed as a transparent partnership for up to five fiscal years — profits and losses attributed directly to shareholders. The election requires all conditions simultaneously: SAS in existence less than five years; genuine operational activity; capital and voting rights at least 50% held by individuals and at least 34% by a president or DG with their household; fewer than 50 employees; turnover or balance sheet below €10 million; unanimous shareholder consent; notification to tax authorities within first three months of the fiscal year. Its main benefit: individual shareholders can offset early operating losses against other personal income.

The SAS regulated transactions framework (Art. L 227-10) is meaningfully narrower than the SARL or SA equivalent: no pre-authorisation; only direct interest caught (indirect interest excluded); director not stripped of vote; post-facto shareholder approval only. For groups with regular intra-group commercial flows, this avoids the procedural burden of mandatory prior authorisation for every intra-group transaction. Statutory auditor requirements have been harmonised across all three forms since the Pacte 2019 reform: mandatory appointment when the company exceeds two of three thresholds (€5M balance sheet / €10M turnover / 50 employees), with subsidiary-level rules for group structures. Converting any company to a SAS always requires unanimous shareholder approval — no exception (Art. L 227-3). Personal guarantees given before transformation survive the change of form and are not discharged by it.

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Why the SAS Regulated Transactions Regime Matters for Groups

The lighter SAS regulated transactions framework is one of the structural advantages the SAS holds over the SARL for owner-managed companies and groups. In a group context where a holding company regularly enters into intercompany agreements with its subsidiaries, the SAS framework avoids the procedural burden of mandatory prior authorisation for every intra-group transaction. Post-facto reporting and approval is both more efficient and more commercially rational for parties dealing continuously with each other.

Which Structure Fits Which Situation?

SAS
Best fit for:
  • Startups expecting external investment (VC, PE, business angels)
  • Holding companies and group structures
  • Founders wanting general social regime regardless of shareholding level
  • Joint ventures between companies needing tailored governance
  • Companies issuing preference shares or complex equity instruments
  • Founders wanting a legal entity as president
  • Early-stage companies that may benefit from the 5-year partnership tax election
SARL
Best fit for:
  • Simple owner-managed businesses with no external investors expected
  • Founders comfortable with the independent worker social regime
  • Family businesses where statutory share transfer restrictions add protection
  • Very small operations where statutory governance simplicity outweighs flexibility
SA
Best fit for:
  • Companies with a medium-term stock market listing strategy
  • Large companies requiring institutional governance architecture
  • Regulated entities (certain finance, insurance) required by sector law to be SAs
  • Cross-border transactions where counterparties require SA form

Full Comparison at a Glance

FeatureSASSARLSA
Minimum share capitalNone (€1 possible)None (€1 possible)€37,000
Minimum shareholders1 (SASU if sole)1 (EURL if sole)2 (7 if listed)
Legal entity as president/manager?YesNo — individual onlyNo — individual only
Social regime — remunerated directorGeneral employees' regime (always)Independent workers (majority manager); general regime (minority/equal)General employees' regime (PDG, DG)
Governance flexibilityVery high — articles governLimited — statute governsVery low — detailed statute
Multiple / differential voting rights?Yes — freely in articlesNo statutory mechanismPossible with conditions
Preference shares / investor equity?Full menu availableNot availableAvailable with formalities
Industry contributions (services for shares)?Yes — unique to SASYes (with conditions)Not in this form
Variable capital option?YesYesProhibited
Stock market listing possible?NoNoYes — only form permitted
Partnership tax election (5 years)?Yes — Art. 239 bis AB CGIYes — different conditionsNo
Share transfer to third partiesFree in principle; articles can restrict (transfer in breach = null)Statutory approval required (50% of capital)Free in principle; articles can restrict
Statutory auditor (CAC) mandatory?When 2 of 3 exceeded: €5M balance sheet / €10M turnover / 50 employees. Group subsidiaries: €2.5M / €5M / 25 if group head has CACSame thresholds as SAS (Pacte 2019)Always for listed SA; same thresholds as SAS for closely-held SA (Pacte 2019)
Regulated transactionsPost-facto shareholder approval; no pre-authorisation; indirect interest not caught; director not stripped of vote (Art. L 227-10)Prior authorisation required; all managers and shareholders covered regardless of %; broad scopePrior board authorisation required; shareholder ratification; broad scope covering all directors and significant shareholders
Conversion to SASRequires unanimity + commissaire à la transformation (if no CAC) (Art. L 224-3)Requires unanimity + 2 years' existence + CAC net assets report (Art. L 225-244)
Five Questions That Determine the Right Choice
  • External investors expected within 3 years? If yes, the SAS is almost certainly the right choice — investor-grade preference share structures require it. Implementing equivalent protections in a SARL or SA is significantly more constrained.
  • Stock market listing part of your medium-term strategy? If yes, only the SA qualifies — the SAS and SARL are legally prohibited from accessing regulated markets.
  • Will the founder-manager hold more than 50% of the capital? In a SARL, that triggers the independent workers' social regime. In a SAS, the general employees' regime applies regardless of shareholding level.
  • Do you need a legal entity rather than an individual as the management officer? Only the SAS allows this — a holding company or parent entity can be president of a SAS subsidiary.
  • Will any founder contribute services rather than assets? The SAS's apports en industrie mechanism (Art. L 227-1 al. 4) is uniquely suited to this — shares in exchange for ongoing expertise, without those shares entering the stated capital.
Not Sure Which Structure Fits Your Project?

The choice of legal form has compounding tax, governance, and social consequences over the life of a business. A wrong choice at inception costs significantly more to correct than getting it right at the start. We advise foreign founders, investors, and groups on French company structure selection and formation strategy.

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This article is for general information only. It does not constitute legal advice. The choice of legal structure depends on facts specific to each situation. Always seek qualified legal advice before making a final decision on company form in France.