2
The two top-level categories of French collective investment fund: OPCVM (UCITS-coordinated, with a free European marketing passport) and FIA (alternative investment funds under the AIFM Directive). All French funds fall into one of these two categories.
0%
The French withholding rate applicable to the foreign-source fraction of a Sicav's distribution to a non-resident shareholder, where the Sicav exercises the administration's accepted right to ventilate its distributions by source and nature. The foreign-source share escapes French withholding entirely — unless the payment is made to a recipient in an ETNC.
25%
The threshold triggering French taxation of capital gains distributions from an OPC to a non-resident beneficiary under Art. 244 bis B CGI: if the beneficiary held more than 25% of the rights in the distributing entity (directly or indirectly with their family group) at any point in the five preceding years, the distribution is taxed at 12.8% (subject to treaty relief).

The French Fund Framework: OPCVM and FIA

French collective investment schemes — grouped under the acronym OPC (organismes de placement collectif) — divide into two principal categories (C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-1, II):

  • OPCVMorganismes de placement collectif en valeurs mobilières: collective investment schemes in transferable securities governed by EU Directive 2009/65/CE (the UCITS Directive), implemented in France by C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-2 et seq.
  • FIAfonds d'investissement alternatifs: alternative investment funds governed by EU Directive 2011/61/UE (the AIFM Directive), implemented in France by C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-24 et seq.

OPCVM: the coordinated funds with a free EU passport

The label OPCVM applies exclusively to general-purpose collective investment vehicles that are coordinated — meaning they have obtained a European marketing passport allowing them to be freely marketed across all EU member states. A French OPCVM authorised by the AMF can be offered to investors in Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, or any other EU member state without seeking separate local authorisation — notification procedures to the host state authority suffice.

FIA: the non-coordinated alternative funds

All French collective investment funds that are not coordinated UCITS funds are FIAs. The inter-member-state marketing process for FIAs involves notification procedures that vary depending on whether the manager is seeking to market to professional or retail investors. FIAs intended for non-professional investors include, most relevantly for non-resident investors:

  • Fonds d'investissement à vocation générale — general-purpose investment funds (equity, bond, and mixed-allocation FIA equivalents)
  • Fonds de capital-investissement: FCPR, FCPI, and FIP — French private equity fund structures
  • SCPIsociétés civiles de placement immobilier: real estate investment funds structured as civil law companies
  • OPCIorganismes de placement collectif immobilier: open-ended real estate collective investment vehicles

Capital-investissement funds, OPCI, and SCPI may in certain conditions also be authorised as fonds européens d'investissement à long terme (ELTIF), which must invest at least 70% of capital in long-term assets. Neither OPCVM nor FIA intended for non-professional investors impose any minimum subscription amount.

Sicav and FCP: Two Legal Structures for the Same Economic Exposure

Within both OPCVM and the general-purpose FIA category, French funds take one of two legal forms (C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-4 and L 214-24-25):

The Sicav (société d'investissement à capital variable)

A Sicav is a variable-capital company — structured as a société anonyme or société par actions simplifiée — that continuously issues new shares as subscriptions arrive and reduces its capital to buy back shares when investors redeem. Every investor who buys into a Sicav becomes a shareholder with all the legal rights attached to that status: the right to attend and vote at general meetings, the right to receive information, and the right to the distribution of profits. The Sicav has full legal personality and is a distinct legal entity from its management company. Sicavs tend to be large, broadly distributed retail products marketed through major banking networks.

The FCP (fonds commun de placement)

An FCP is a co-ownership of financial instruments with no legal personality of its own. Investors in an FCP are unit-holders, not shareholders. They hold parts rather than actions, and they have no right of control, decision-making, or intervention in the fund's management. The FCP is managed by an AMF-authorised management company on behalf of the unit-holders, but the fund itself cannot contract, sue, or be sued in its own name. This legal distinction between Sicav and FCP has significant consequences for how distributions to non-resident investors are treated for French tax purposes.

How Subscriptions, Redemptions, and Distributions Work

Subscription and redemption at NAV

Shares of a Sicav and units of an FCP are issued and redeemed on request at the valeur liquidative (net asset value, NAV), adjusted where applicable for entry or exit commissions (Régl. gén. AMF Art. 411-20 and 422-21). The NAV is published at least twice a month for general-purpose funds and daily for listed funds. The AMF recommends applying the "unknown price" rule: the NAV used for a subscription or redemption is the first one calculated after the order cut-off time. Redemptions are settled within a maximum of five days following the reference NAV calculation date. If a fund's net assets fall below €300,000 for thirty consecutive days, it must be liquidated or merged.

Capitalisation vs distribution: the two fund modes

A fund may operate as a pure capitalisation fund (no distributions; all income and capital gains are reinvested, increasing NAV); as a pure distribution fund (periodic distributions of income and net realised capital gains); or with annual discretion. Funds may also issue two classes of units — capitalisation units and distribution units — allowing each investor to choose. Distributions must be paid within five months of the end of the accounting year.

The DIC: mandatory pre-subscription disclosure

Before any subscription, the distributing entity must deliver to non-professional investors a document d'informations clés (DIC — the French implementation of the EU PRIIPs KID). Since 1 January 2023 all OPCs open to the public must provide a DIC. The DIC must be at most three pages long and must present: the main product characteristics; a risk indicator on a 1–7 scale; a maximum capital loss figure; four performance scenarios (stress, adverse, intermediate, favourable); any liquidity risk; the recommended holding period; and a complete fee breakdown. It must be updated at least annually or when material information changes.

The Fund Transparency Principle: Distributions Retain Their Nature

A French OPC is not itself subject to income tax on the income it collects or the capital gains it realises on portfolio disposals. Those amounts are taxed only in the hands of investors when they are distributed. Crucially, distributions from the fund retain their original nature: a distribution funded by French dividends is treated as a dividend in the hands of the investor; one funded by bond interest is treated as fixed-income product; one funded by realised capital gains follows the capital gains regime. The fund must provide each unit-holder with an annual breakdown of distributions by nature and tax treatment to allow them to complete their own declarations correctly.

Non-Resident Shareholders of a Sicav: The Source and Nature Ventilation

When a Sicav distributes income to non-resident shareholders, the French tax administration has accepted that the Sicav may ventilate its distributions by source and by nature — separating out the fraction that derives from French-source income from the fraction that derives from foreign-source income, and distinguishing dividend income from fixed-income product (BOI-RPPM-RCM-10-40 n° 110).

  • The fraction of the distribution corresponding to income from foreign-source securities — dividends paid by non-French companies, interest on foreign bonds — is not subject to French withholding. France has no basis to withhold on income that did not originate in France and that is paid to a non-resident.
  • The fraction corresponding to French-source income — dividends from French companies, interest on French bonds — is subject to French withholding at the standard non-resident rates: 12.8% on dividends (or a reduced treaty rate), subject to the 75% exceptional rate if the payment is made to a recipient in a non-cooperative state or territory (ETNC).

For non-resident investors in internationally-diversified Sicavs, this mechanism is practically significant: a Sicav investing in global equities will typically hold a large fraction of non-French stocks; to the extent those generate the distributed income, the non-resident shareholder receives that income free of French withholding.

Why the Sicav Structure Matters for Non-Residents

The source/nature ventilation mechanism is available because the Sicav has legal personality — it is a distinct company that can identify the source and character of each element of income it collects and can make that breakdown available to its shareholders and to the paying institution for withholding purposes. This is the direct practical consequence of the Sicav's corporate status, and it is one of the structural reasons why internationally-diversified Sicavs have historically been attractive vehicles for non-resident investors seeking French fund exposure without full French withholding on their global income stream.

Non-Resident Unit-Holders of an FCP: Transparency Cuts Both Ways

The position for non-resident investors in an FCP is materially different. Because an FCP is a co-ownership of financial instruments with no legal personality, its fiscal transparency applies equally to non-resident and resident unit-holders alike. There is no separate Sicav-style entity that can absorb income at the fund level and then re-characterise it at distribution. Instead, the income flows through the fund directly to the unit-holders as if they had received it themselves.

The consequence for French-source income held through an FCP is direct and unavoidable: dividends paid by French companies held in the FCP portfolio are treated — when distributed to non-resident unit-holders — as if the non-resident had themselves received French dividends directly. French withholding therefore applies to that French-source dividend fraction, subject to any applicable bilateral tax treaty providing a reduced rate. There is no equivalent of the Sicav's source/nature ventilation mechanism in an FCP context. Non-resident investors in FCPs holding significant French equity exposure should factor in the full non-resident withholding rate on the French-source dividend component of any distributions.

Capital Gains Distributions to Non-Residents: Art. 244 bis B CGI

When an OPC — whether Sicav or FCP — distributes to non-resident investors amounts drawn from net realised capital gains, the French tax treatment is governed by Art. 244 bis B of the CGI. The regime produces three possible outcomes:

Outcome 1 — Taxed at 12.8%: the >25% holding threshold

Capital gains distributions are taxable in France at 12.8% if the non-resident beneficiary held, at any point during the five years preceding the distribution, directly or indirectly with their family group, more than 25% of the rights in the distributing OPC. The question is whether the investor ever held more than 25% of the OPC's units or shares, not their share in any underlying company. The 12.8% rate is subject to reduction or elimination by applicable bilateral tax conventions.

Outcome 2 — Taxed at 75%: payment to an ETNC recipient

If the non-resident beneficiary is established or domiciled in a non-cooperative state or territory (ETNC), the distribution is subject to a flat 75% withholding. The 75% rate does not apply if the beneficiary can demonstrate that the relevant transactions have a genuine economic purpose and are not structured principally for fiscal avoidance.

Outcome 3 — Exempt: all other cases

In all other cases — where the non-resident beneficiary held 25% or less of the OPC's rights at all times during the preceding five years, and is not domiciled in an ETNC — capital gains distributions from the OPC are exempt from French taxation. This exemption is the default for most non-resident minority investors in French OPCs.

Distribution typeFund vehicleFrench withholding on non-resident
Foreign-source income (dividends / fixed income)Sicav (ventilation exercised)0% — not subject to French withholding (except ETNC: 75%)
French-source dividendsSicav (ventilation exercised)12.8% standard (or reduced treaty rate; 75% for ETNC)
French-source dividendsFCP (full transparency)12.8% standard (or reduced treaty rate; 75% for ETNC) — no ventilation mechanism
Capital gains distributions — beneficiary held >25% in past 5 yrsAny OPC (Sicav or FCP)12.8% (or reduced treaty rate) — CGI Art. 244 bis B
Capital gains distributions — beneficiary in ETNCAny OPC (Sicav or FCP)75% — CGI Art. 244 bis B
Capital gains distributions — all other non-residentsAny OPC (Sicav or FCP)0% (exempt) — CGI Art. 244 bis B

Non-Residents Exiting a Capitalisation Fund: The Exit Gain

A fund operating in capitalisation mode — reinvesting all income rather than distributing it — does not generate periodic taxable events for its unit-holders. The taxable event arises only when the investor exits the fund by redeeming their units or shares. The gain equals the difference between the redemption price (NAV minus any exit commission) and the acquisition price (NAV plus any entry commission).

For non-resident investors, the taxation of this exit gain at the French level depends on the same Art. 244 bis B framework: if the investor held more than 25% at any point in the five preceding years, 12.8% applies; if they are ETNC-domiciled, 75% applies; otherwise, the gain is generally exempt from French tax (though the investor's home jurisdiction will typically tax it). This is another reason why many non-resident investors in French funds prefer broad, diversified vehicles where their individual holding will remain comfortably below the 25% threshold.

Practical Considerations for Non-Resident Investors

Choosing between Sicav and FCP for global exposure

For a non-resident investor seeking to access globally diversified French-managed funds, the Sicav structure offers a structural advantage through the source/nature ventilation mechanism: a significant part of the income stream from a globally diversified Sicav portfolio will derive from non-French assets and will not attract French withholding on distribution. The FCP's co-ownership transparency, by contrast, makes the French-source component of any distribution fully subject to withholding without the possibility of separating out the foreign-sourced portion.

Monitoring the 25% threshold

Non-resident investors should be aware that the Art. 244 bis B threshold is assessed over a rolling five-year look-back window and includes not only direct holdings but also indirect holdings and those of the family group. For minority investors in large, broadly marketed Sicavs and FCPs, this threshold will almost never be approached. For investors in smaller, less widely distributed vehicles — particularly dedicated FCPs or OPCI structures — the 25% threshold warrants careful monitoring.

Treaty relief

The 12.8% standard withholding rates described above are the domestic French rates. France's extensive network of bilateral tax conventions frequently provides for reduced withholding rates on dividends — commonly 15%, 10%, or even 5% depending on the treaty and the investor's characteristics. Non-resident investors should always review the applicable convention before assuming the domestic rate applies. The convention rate is applied by the paying institution on production of the relevant forms; a residual credit may be recoverable in the investor's home jurisdiction.

Key Points: Investing in French Funds as a Non-Resident
All French collective investment funds divide into two categories: OPCVM (UCITS-coordinated funds with a free EU marketing passport under Directive 2009/65/CE) and FIA (alternative investment funds under the AIFM Directive 2011/61/UE, with a specific inter-member-state marketing process). No minimum subscription for either category when offered to non-professional investors (C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-1, II).
Within each category, funds take one of two legal forms: the Sicav (variable-capital company — SA or SAS — whose investors are shareholders with voting rights and full legal personality) or the FCP (co-ownership with no legal personality, whose investors are unit-holders with no management rights). This distinction drives the key difference in non-resident tax treatment of distributions (C. mon. fin. Art. L 214-4 and L 214-24-25).
The fund itself is not subject to French income tax on income received or capital gains realised. Taxation falls on investors at the point of distribution. Distributions retain the nature of the underlying income — dividend-derived distributions are taxed as dividends; fixed-income-derived distributions follow the bond interest regime; capital-gains distributions follow the capital gains regime.
For non-resident shareholders of a Sicav: the tax administration accepts source/nature ventilation of distributions (BOI-RPPM-RCM-10-40 n° 110). The foreign-source fraction is not subject to French withholding (0%); the French-source fraction attracts standard non-resident withholding (12.8%, or reduced treaty rate; 75% for ETNC). This structural advantage flows directly from the Sicav's legal personality.
For non-resident unit-holders of an FCP: fiscal transparency applies in full — there is no source/nature ventilation mechanism. French-source dividends held in the FCP's portfolio are treated on distribution as if received directly by the non-resident. Full French withholding applies to that fraction, subject to applicable treaty reductions.
Capital gains distributions from any OPC to non-residents are governed by CGI Art. 244 bis B: taxed at 12.8% if the beneficiary held more than 25% of the OPC's rights (directly or indirectly with their family group) at any point during the five years preceding the distribution; taxed at 75% if the beneficiary is domiciled in an ETNC; exempt in all other cases. Exit gains from capitalisation funds at redemption follow the same three-outcome framework.
The 12.8% domestic withholding rates are subject to reduction under France's bilateral tax convention network. Treaty relief is applied by the paying institution on production of the required documentation. Non-resident investors should always verify the applicable treaty before assuming domestic rates apply (CGI Art. 119 bis, 2 and Art. 187).
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This article covers only those aspects of the OPCVM/FIA framework for which source material was available. The detailed mechanics and tax treatment of SCPI, OPCI, and French private equity vehicles (FCPR, FCPI, FIP) — including carried interest rules — are not covered here. This article does not constitute tax or legal advice. Non-resident investors should always verify the applicable bilateral tax treaty and obtain advice from a qualified French tax adviser or lawyer before making investment decisions.