Two Distinct Powers: Referral and Advisory Opinion
The Code de commerce gives approved consumer associations two separate competition-related powers in relation to the Autorité de la concurrence, each serving a different purpose:
The Three Referable Practices
The referral power under Art. L 462-5, II covers the anticompetitive practices prohibited by Arts. L 420-1, L 420-2, and L 420-5 of the Code de commerce:
Who Can Refer: National Associations and the Mandate Rule for Local Associations
The mandate requirement means that a local consumer association operating in a specific region or sector cannot unilaterally trigger competition authority proceedings against a local operator without the backing of one of the seventeen nationally approved associations. This provides a degree of protection against poorly-resourced or politically motivated local referrals. However, nationally approved associations — particularly UFC-Que Choisir and CLCV, which have extensive local networks — may choose to mandate their local affiliates to act in relation to specific regional market concerns, effectively delegating the referral power in targeted situations.
The Strategic Link: From Referral to Class Action
The competition authority referral power and the antitrust class action are legally distinct but strategically connected. The two-step mechanism works as follows:
Under Art. L 462-5, II C. com., a nationally approved association refers a suspected cartel, abuse of dominance, or predatory pricing practice. The Autorité then investigates independently using its own enforcement powers.
The Autorité concludes its investigation and issues a decision finding that the practice occurred. The professional may appeal. Exhausting appeals can take years.
Once the part of the decision finding the practice can no longer be challenged (even if appeals on the fine or procedure are still pending), the condition for an antitrust class action is met (Art. L 623-24 C. consom.).
The prior decision makes the anticompetitive practice irrebuttably established (réputée établie de manière irréfragable) for the purposes of the class action (Art. L 481-2 C. com.). The class action court cannot re-examine whether the infringement occurred.
The approved association files the class action summons (Art. L 623-24 C. consom.) within 5 years of the decision becoming final on the practice-establishment part (Art. L 623-25). The class action focuses only on consumer harm and compensation — not on whether the practice occurred.
A business that is the subject of a consumer association referral to the Autorité de la concurrence should understand from the outset that the competition enforcement proceedings are not the full exposure picture. A finding of infringement — however long the appeal process takes — will eventually create the irrebuttable prior decision that unlocks a five-year window for a consumer antitrust class action. The administrative fine is one cost; the consumer compensation obligation triggered by the irrebuttable finding may be a significantly larger one. Both should be factored into the risk assessment from the moment a referral is received.
The Advisory Opinion: A Policy Engagement Tool
Separately from the referral power, approved consumer associations may request an advisory opinion from the Autorité on any competition question (Art. L 462-1, al. 2 C. com.). The breadth of this power — "any competition question" — is significantly wider than the referral power, which is limited to the three specific infraction categories. An association can use the advisory opinion request to ask the Autorité to examine sector-wide competitive dynamics, new market developments, or structural concerns that have not yet crystallised into specific infraction conduct.
The advisory opinion is not a binding enforcement decision. It does not create the prior decision required for an antitrust class action. But it serves several purposes in the consumer protection ecosystem:
- It places a sector or practice on the Autorité's radar, which may lead to an own-initiative investigation
- It generates publicly accessible analysis of competition conditions in a market, which associations can use to inform their advocacy and litigation strategy
- It demonstrates to regulators, legislators, and the public that the association is actively monitoring the market
- An opinion that identifies specific competition concerns may precede a formal referral once the conduct becomes more defined
An association that suspects anticompetitive conduct but does not yet have sufficient evidence to support a well-founded referral may choose to request an advisory opinion first. This allows the Autorité to examine the market structure and competitive dynamics without triggering a formal investigation. If the opinion identifies concerns consistent with the association's suspicions, the association can then file a referral grounded in the Autorité's own analysis. For businesses, a sector-level advisory opinion request from a major consumer association should therefore be treated as a potential precursor to a formal referral — not merely as an academic policy exercise.
A referral to the Autorité de la concurrence by a consumer association is the start of a process that may ultimately lead to both a competition fine and a consumer class action for compensation. Understanding the full exposure — and beginning to quantify it — from the outset is essential for any effective response.
Book a ConsultationThis article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The information reflects the state of the law as updated to April 2024. Always seek qualified competition and consumer law advice in relation to specific proceedings.
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Get Legal AdviceKey Legal References
Consumer association referral of anticompetitive practices to the Autorité de la concurrence: nationally approved associations; local associations only with national mandate
Advisory opinion request: nationally approved consumer associations can request opinion on any competition question
Cartels: agreements, concerted practices, and association decisions preventing, restricting, or distorting competition
Abuse of dominant position or economic dependency (dépendance économique)
Predatory pricing (prix abusivement bas): prices abusively low relative to production costs aimed at eliminating competitors
Irrebuttable prior decision: anticompetitive practice irrebuttably established for antitrust class action once infringement-establishment part is final
Antitrust class action: prior final competition authority decision establishing practice is required condition
Five-year limitation for antitrust class action running from date practice-establishment part of decision is final
Local association mandate requirement: local affiliated associations can only refer if specifically mandated by national association
