Any means
The court can order publication "by all appropriate means" — press, hoarding, website, social media — with no restriction on channel or medium.
2 months
Maximum duration of a hoarding order under Art. 131-35 of the Code pénal — but there is no equivalent cap on press or digital publication duration.
Uncapped
The association can spend more on publication than the cost ceiling the court sets — it simply cannot recover more than the court-fixed amount from the losing party.

The Publication Power: "By All Appropriate Means"

Article L 621-11, al. 1 of the Code de la consommation gives any civil or criminal court the power to order the dissemination "by all appropriate means" of information about a judgment rendered following an action by a consumer association. The Cour de cassation confirmed that this encompasses press, advertising hoardings, and website portals (Cass. 1re civ., 9 March 2004, n° 438).

The publication order is not a secondary or marginal tool. It is a distinct remedy that the court may add to — or grant instead of — damages and cessation orders. Its purpose is not compensatory but informational and deterrent: it brings the judicial finding to the attention of the market and of consumers who may have been affected by the conduct.

The Available Channels

📰 Print and Broadcast Press National or regional newspapers, trade press, and audiovisual media. The court specifies which publications or channels must carry the publication. Costs are at the defendant's expense.
Advertising Hoardings (Affichage) Physical posting of the whole or part of the decision, or of a communiqué describing its motives and operative part. Governed by Art. 131-35 of the Code pénal. Duration capped at two months.
Websites and Digital Media Website portals, including the professional's own website and the association's website. Email and SMS notices to affected consumers, social media publication, and digital advertising can also be ordered.

The Six Key Rules of the Publication Order

What Businesses Need to Know About How the Power Works
1
Available in civil and criminal proceedings

The publication power applies to any court — civil or criminal — ruling on a consumer association action. It is available in the civil party (Art. L 621-1) action, the cessation action (Arts. L 621-7/8), the joint action (Art. L 621-9), and by analogy in the action de groupe (Art. L 621-11).

2
In criminal cases: no express statutory authority needed

Where the judgment is a criminal conviction, publication can be ordered even if the specific criminal law does not expressly provide for it. Art. L 621-11 provides a general authority that complements and supplements the criminal law's own publication powers.

3
Available to the juge des référés

Publication can be ordered not only by the merits judge (juge de fond) but also by the summary injunction judge (juge des référés) (Cass. 1re civ., 9 March 2004, n° 438). This means a publication order can be obtained on an emergency, fast-track basis even before full merits proceedings have concluded.

4
Hoarding: two-month maximum under Art. 131-35 C. pén.

Where the court orders physical hoarding of the decision or a communiqué, this is governed by Art. 131-35 of the Code pénal. The posting may consist of all or part of the decision, or of a communiqué informing the public of the motives and operative part. The duration of the posting may not exceed two months.

5
The association is not limited to the court-set cost ceiling in its own spending

The court may set a cost ceiling per press insertion, specifying what it orders the losing party to pay. But this ceiling governs reimbursement, not the association's own commercial decisions. The association may commission larger or more numerous insertions than the court ordered, provided it does not claim reimbursement above the judicially fixed amount from the losing party (CA Paris, 18 February 2011, n° 11-15). In practice, the association can run a significantly broader campaign than the losing party's contribution funds.

6
Obsolete clauses: court must check the publication would not mislead

Where the judgment concerns unfair clauses that are no longer offered to consumers at the time of the ruling, the court cannot order a publication measure without first verifying that the measures are not likely to mislead consumers (Cass. 1re civ., 26 April 2017, n° 15-18.970 F-PB). Publishing a judgment about clauses that no longer exist in current contracts could create a false impression that those clauses are still in use — which would harm rather than help consumers.

Who Bears the Costs

Professional Is Condemned The defendant loses
Publication costs fall on the condemned party or the losing party (Art. L 621-11, al. 2). The professional must fund the publication of the judgment at the channels and scale ordered by the court. Where the association also chooses to publish at a scale exceeding the court order, it bears the additional cost itself — but cannot recover more from the professional than the court-fixed amount.
Association Initiated; Defendant Acquitted The association loses on its initiative
Where the association itself constituted as civil party and the proceedings it initiated result in an acquittal, the publication costs fall on the association (Art. L 621-11, al. 2). This ensures that the publication power is not used as a free reputational weapon — an association that initiates criminal proceedings and fails bears the cost of any publication order in those proceedings.
The Reputational Risk Exceeds the Financial Risk for Consumer Brands

For businesses that sell directly to consumers at scale — retail, telecoms, financial services, digital platforms, food and beverage — a court-ordered publication campaign by a major consumer association like UFC-Que Choisir or CLCV can be more damaging than the judgment itself. The association may mount a campaign exceeding the court-ordered scale, using its own media relationships, digital presence, and social media following to amplify the judgment far beyond what the court specifically ordered. The association's own cost exposure is limited to the excess above the court-fixed reimbursable ceiling — a constraint that may be entirely manageable for a well-resourced national association. Businesses facing consumer association proceedings should therefore assess publication risk from the earliest stage, independently of their assessment of the financial liability exposure.

When Publication Can Be Ordered: All Action Types

Article L 621-11 applies across the full range of consumer association actions. Publication has been confirmed available in the following contexts:

  • After a civil party action in criminal proceedings (Art. L 621-1) — the primary context in which Art. L 621-11 originally operated
  • After a cessation and clause-removal action in civil proceedings (Arts. L 621-7/8)
  • After a joint action or intervention (Art. L 621-9)
  • In action de groupe proceedings — publication of the judgment finding the professional liable is specifically provided for, though subject to the rule that it cannot take effect until appeals are exhausted (Art. L 623-7)
The Référé Publication Order: Urgent and Provisional

The availability of the publication order before the juge des référés means that a consumer association can, in principle, obtain an emergency order requiring a business to publish adverse findings before a full merits trial has even concluded. The référé procedure is typically used where the situation is urgent — for example, where the harmful practice is ongoing and consumers need to be informed quickly. For a business, the prospect of a publication order obtained in emergency proceedings, before having the opportunity to contest the substance on the merits, represents a distinctive and acute reputational risk. Early engagement with any consumer association claim is therefore essential to assess whether a référé application may be on the horizon.

Anticipating Publication Risk: A Practical Framework

For businesses that may face consumer association proceedings, building publication risk into the strategic assessment from the outset requires addressing three questions:

1. Is our conduct the type that triggers the action types where publication is most common?

Publication orders are most frequently sought in proceedings involving misleading advertising or commercial communications (high visibility, clear consumer impact), unfair contract terms (systematic harm to a broad consumer base), product safety failures (public health dimension), and pricing irregularities (competition impact). These are also the sectors under most active monitoring by the major consumer associations.

2. What channels are most sensitive for our brand?

A publication order on the professional's own website is especially damaging because it places the adverse findings in front of the very consumer base that the business has spent resources building. A social media publication campaign by a major consumer association can spread far beyond the platforms the court specified. A press order in a national newspaper with a broad consumer readership creates a public record that search engines index permanently.

3. Can the obsolete-clause protection help us?

Where the claim concerns contract terms or practices that have already been withdrawn or corrected, the 2017 Cour de cassation ruling (Cass. 1re civ., 26 April 2017, n° 15-18.970 F-PB) gives businesses a specific argument: the court must verify that the publication would not mislead consumers before ordering it. A business that has proactively remediated its terms before judgment may be able to limit or prevent the publication order on this basis.

Practical Checklist for Businesses Facing Consumer Association Proceedings
Treat the publication order as a separate head of risk from the financial liability exposure — it operates independently and can be more commercially damaging for consumer-facing brands.
The court may order publication on the business's own website, which places the adverse findings in front of the business's own customers. Include this in the reputational risk assessment from day one of any consumer association dispute.
The association is not limited to the court-fixed cost ceiling in its own campaign spending: it can mount a significantly larger campaign than what the court order requires the business to fund, bearing only the excess above the ceiling itself (CA Paris, 18 February 2011).
The juge des référés can order publication urgently and provisionally, even before the merits are fully heard. An ongoing harmful practice creates the conditions for an emergency publication order.
In criminal cases, publication can be ordered even without an express provision in the applicable criminal law. Do not assume that the absence of a specific publication power in the relevant offence statute prevents a publication order.
The two-month cap under Art. 131-35 C. pén. applies only to physical hoarding, not to press, digital, or social media publication — those have no equivalent duration limit in the statute.
Where a claim concerns contract terms or practices that have been withdrawn, argue the 2017 Cour de cassation rule: the court cannot order publication without verifying it would not mislead consumers. Document and evidence the remediation proactively.
Where the association initiated criminal proceedings and the defendant is acquitted, publication costs fall on the association. This provides a degree of protection against frivolous criminal civil party actions.
Assessing Reputational Risk from a Consumer Association Dispute?

Publication risk is one of the most under-assessed dimensions of consumer association litigation in France. Our articles and contacts give businesses the tools to understand every element of their exposure — financial, contractual, and reputational — from the earliest stage of any consumer association dispute.

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This 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 in the source text. Always seek qualified legal advice before making decisions in active consumer association proceedings.