€152,500
Per-beneficiary abatement under CGI Art. 990 I (pre-70 premiums) — personal to each beneficiary, applied once across all contracts with the same insured. Each additional beneficiary generates an entirely separate €152,500.
20 / 70
The two key ages and rates at the heart of the system: the Art. 990 I flat levy at 20% (then 31.25%) applies to pre-70 premiums; Art. 757 B succession duty applies to post-70 premiums on post-1991 contracts.
TEPA
The 2007 Act that exempts the surviving spouse and PACS partner from both Art. 757 B succession duty and the Art. 990 I levy entirely — regardless of amount, premium date, or contract type.

The Two-Track System

French taxation of life insurance at death is built around two key dates: 20 November 1991 (contracts subscribed from that date are subject to the special regimes) and the insured's 70th birthday (premiums paid before 70 are subject to Art. 990 I; premiums paid after 70 are subject to Art. 757 B succession duty). For contracts subscribed before 20 November 1991, only premiums paid after 13 October 1998 are subject to Art. 990 I regardless of the insured's age.

Art. 757 B CGI Track 1 — Succession Duty
Trigger: Premiums paid after the insured's 70th birthday, on contracts subscribed after 20 November 1991.
Tax base: Total premiums paid after age 70 (not the death benefit capital). Products (interest, returns) attached to post-70 premiums are excluded from the succession base.
Shared abatement: €30,500 per insured, shared among all beneficiaries pro-rata to their share of the taxable premiums. Exempt beneficiaries (spouse/PACS) are excluded from the pro-rata, increasing the share available to taxable beneficiaries.
Tax rate: Ordinary succession duty tariff based on kinship between the insured and each beneficiary. TEPA exemption applies to surviving spouse/PACS.
Unused succession abatements: The beneficiary's personal succession abatement (€100,000 for children) not otherwise used by estate assets may be applied to reduce the Art. 757 B base.
Procedure: Insurer notifies tax authority within 45 days (form 2739). Beneficiary files partial succession declaration (form 2705-A-SD) and obtains acquittement certificate before capital is released.
Art. 990 I CGI Track 2 — Flat-Rate Levy
Trigger: Premiums paid after 13 October 1998, before the insured's 70th birthday (post-1991 contracts); or any premiums paid after 13 Oct 1998 regardless of age (pre-1991 contracts).
Tax base: The death benefit capital corresponding to those premiums (surrender value at death), net of social charges (prélèvements sociaux) not already deducted, minus the €152,500 abatement.
Abatement: €152,500 per beneficiary per insured. Applies once across all contracts with the same insured. Beneficiary chooses the order of imputation across multiple contracts.
Rates: 20% on the taxable fraction up to €700,000 per beneficiary; 31.25% on the fraction above €700,000.
Nature: Sui generis — not a succession duty. Death benefit does not enter the estate. Rate is independent of kinship. Most succession duty exemptions do not apply except those expressly extended by Art. 990 I (surviving spouse/PACS; qualifying siblings; exempt bodies under CGI Art. 795).
Payment: Withheld and remitted by the insurer by the 15th of the following month. Net capital paid to beneficiary after deduction.

Article 757 B in Detail: Post-70 Premiums

The €30,500 shared abatement

The €30,500 abatement is shared among all beneficiaries of all contracts written on the same insured, in proportion to each beneficiary's share of the taxable premiums. It is not per beneficiary. Beneficiaries who are exempt from succession duty (surviving spouse/PACS) are excluded from the pro-rata calculation, which increases the abatement available to taxable beneficiaries. After the €30,500 abatement, the balance is taxed at the succession duty tariff applicable to the relationship between the insured and the beneficiary. Any unused portion of the beneficiary's personal succession abatement may be applied to reduce the Art. 757 B taxable base.

Representation does not apply under Art. 757 B

The tax authority takes the position that representation never applies for Art. 757 B purposes: a grandchild designated as beneficiary "mes enfants vivants ou représentés" is taxed on their own kinship with the insured (typically the in-line rate), not their deceased parent's. This creates a double liquidation where the grandchild may be taxed in the ordinary succession (where representation applies) and separately as life insurance beneficiary. The double liquidation can be advantageous or disadvantageous depending on whether the succession abatement is fully used.

Co-insured contracts

For jointly-subscribed contracts with co-insureds, only the premiums paid after the last surviving insured's 70th birthday are relevant for Art. 757 B. Practically, premiums should stop once the oldest co-insured reaches 70 — unless the beneficiary would in any case be exempt — to minimise the risk of bringing additional premiums into the succession base.

Article 990 I in Detail: The Flat-Rate Levy

Scope and rates

Art. 990 I applies to capital paid at death on: contracts in case of death (assurance décès); mixed contracts (assurance en cas de vie mixte); and capital-deferred contracts with counter-assurance — i.e. virtually all assurance-vie placement. The levy only applies where the contract is discharged by death and to gratuitous beneficiaries (not where the designation is in consideration of a debt or guarantee).

Taxable amount per beneficiary (all contracts combined) Rate
€0 to €152,5000% (abatement)
€152,500 to €852,500 (i.e. up to €700,000 above the abatement)20%
Above €852,500 (i.e. above €700,000 above the abatement)31.25%

Social charges (prélèvements sociaux at 17.2%) on unrealised gains within the contract are deducted from the levy base before the €152,500 abatement. The levy and social charges do not share the same base and cannot simply be added.

The €152,500 per-beneficiary abatement

The €152,500 abatement is personal to each beneficiary, not shared. It applies once across all contracts with the same insured paid to the same beneficiary. Where a beneficiary receives capital from multiple contracts with the same insured, the abatement is applied once to the total, and the beneficiary chooses which contract bears the abatement first (producing a sworn declaration attestation sur l'honneur).

This per-beneficiary structure makes multiple-beneficiary designation highly effective for estate planning: each additional beneficiary brings an additional €152,500 of tax-free transmission.

Vie-génération: the 20% additional abatement

For contrats vie-génération (which must invest at least 33% in qualifying social economy, social housing, venture capital or intermediate-company assets), an additional 20% abatement on the gross taxable capital applies before the €152,500 general abatement, and cumulates with it. On a death benefit of €1,000,000, the net levy under a vie-génération contract is €129,500 (effective rate 12.95%) versus €186,094 under a standard contract (effective rate 18.61%) — a saving of €56,594 per beneficiary.

Exemptions under Art. 990 I

The following beneficiaries are exempt from the Art. 990 I levy:

  • The surviving spouse (TEPA Act 2007).
  • The surviving PACS partner (TEPA Act 2007).
  • Qualifying siblings meeting the conditions for succession duty exemption (living together with the deceased, single/widowed/divorced, over 50 or infirm).
  • Bodies exempt from succession duty under CGI Art. 795 (qualifying foundations, public-interest associations, etc.).

Contracts excluded from the levy

  • Group professional non-redeemable annuity contracts (CGI Art. 885 J).
  • Group employee death benefit contracts (CGI Art. 998, 1°).
  • Madelin contracts (CGI Art. 154 bis).
  • Rente-survie contracts for disabled children.
  • Homme-clé business protection policies where proceeds are paid to and taxable in the company.
  • Contracts that are à titre onéreux (e.g. mortgage protection insurance where the bank is beneficiary for the outstanding loan balance).

Articulation of the Two Regimes

A single contract may be subject to both Art. 757 B (for the post-70 premium portion) and Art. 990 I (for the pre-70 premium portion after 13 October 1998). The two do not overlap: Art. 990 I explicitly does not apply to sums already within Art. 757 B's scope. Where both apply, the capital must be allocated between regimes proportionally. The products generated by post-70 premiums are excluded from the Art. 757 B base and are neither caught by Art. 990 I.

Comprehensive Example: Mixed Contract

Pierre (born 1942) subscribes a contract in 2011, paying €244,000 before age 70. He pays a further €130,500 after age 70 (in 2015 and 2019). At death in March 2023, the surrender value is €580,000. Products attributable to post-70 premiums: €39,000. Three beneficiaries: Anna (daughter, 50%), Jean (grandson, 25%), Isabelle (niece, 25%).

Art. 757 B base:
€130,500 post-70 premiums − €30,500 shared abatement = €100,000
Allocated pro-rata: Anna €50,000 | Jean €25,000 | Isabelle €25,000
Taxed at kinship rate: ligne directe for Anna and Jean; 55% for Isabelle

Art. 990 I base:
€244,000 pre-70 premiums + €166,500 in products = €410,500 total
Anna (50%): €205,250 → levy of 20% on €52,750 (= €205,250 − €152,500) = €10,550
Jean (25%): €102,625 → below €152,500 → nil
Isabelle (25%): €102,625 → below €152,500 → nil

Optimal Planning: Blending Insurance and Estate

The Art. 990 I levy (20% then 31.25%) and the succession duty tariff (5% to 45%) cross at different wealth levels. The optimal split depends on the amount to be transmitted per beneficiary and whether succession abatements are already used. The key planning principles are:

  • Saturate both abatements first: €100,000 parent-child succession abatement + €152,500 Art. 990 I abatement = €252,500 per child transmissible at zero tax.
  • For amounts between €252,500 and ~€388,500 per child: transmit via the succession (5%, 10%, 15% tranches are cheaper than the 20% Art. 990 I levy).
  • For amounts between ~€388,500 and €852,500 per child: Art. 990 I at 20% is generally equal or better than the 20%–30% succession duty tranches. Life insurance wins as the amount increases.
  • Above €852,500 per child: Art. 990 I at 31.25% is systematically more favourable than the 40% and 45% succession duty tranches.
  • Multiple beneficiaries: each additional life insurance beneficiary generates an additional €152,500 abatement, while succession abatements are fixed per heir. Multiplying beneficiaries via life insurance is the most efficient way to scale tax-free transmission.
Post-70 Premiums — Stop Before 70 If Possible

Once the insured turns 70, all new premiums on post-1991 contracts are subject to Art. 757 B. The €30,500 shared abatement is modest compared to the €152,500 per-beneficiary abatement under Art. 990 I. As a result, it is generally better to stop making premiums after age 70 unless the beneficiary will be exempt (surviving spouse/PACS) or the applicable succession tariff is very low. Products generated by pre-70 premiums continue to grow tax-efficiently even after the insured turns 70 — gains on pre-70 premiums remain subject to Art. 990 I at the lower rate.

Summary Table: Which Regime Applies?

Contract subscription date Premium payment date Insured's age at payment Tax regime
Before 20 Nov 1991Before 13 Oct 1998AnyNo tax
Before 20 Nov 1991After 13 Oct 1998Any (regardless of age)Art. 990 I: €152,500 abatement/beneficiary; 20%/31.25%
After 20 Nov 1991Before 13 Oct 1998AnyNo tax
After 20 Nov 1991After 13 Oct 1998Under 70Art. 990 I: €152,500 abatement/beneficiary; 20%/31.25%
After 20 Nov 1991After 13 Oct 1998Over 70Art. 757 B: €30,500 shared abatement; succession duty tariff by kinship
Surviving Spouse and PACS Partner: Full Exemption

Since the TEPA Act of 21 August 2007, the surviving spouse and surviving PACS partner are fully exempt from both Art. 757 B succession duty and the Art. 990 I levy, regardless of the amount received, the premium dates, or the contract type. The spouse/partner does not need to obtain a certificat de non-exigibilité before the insurer releases funds (simplified procedure since 1 January 2018). Unmarried concubins are not covered — they remain subject to the 20%/31.25% Art. 990 I levy on capital above €152,500.

Key Points: Life Insurance Taxation at Death in France
Two entirely separate regimes apply: (1) CGI Art. 757 B — ordinary succession duty on premiums paid after the insured's 70th birthday on post-1991 contracts, after a shared €30,500 abatement; (2) CGI Art. 990 I — a sui generis flat-rate levy (20% then 31.25%) on pre-70 premiums paid after 13 October 1998, after a per-beneficiary abatement of €152,500.
The Art. 990 I levy is not a succession duty — it is a sui generis tax. The death benefit subject to it does not enter the taxable estate. Ordinary succession duty exemptions do not apply, except those expressly extended by Art. 990 I: surviving spouse/PACS, qualifying siblings, and exempt bodies under CGI Art. 795.
The surviving spouse and PACS partner are fully exempt from both Art. 757 B succession duty and the Art. 990 I levy (TEPA Act 2007) — regardless of amount, premium dates, or contract type. Unmarried concubins are not covered.
The €152,500 Art. 990 I abatement is per beneficiary, not shared — and applies once across all contracts with the same insured for the same beneficiary. Each additional designated beneficiary brings an entirely separate €152,500 of tax-free transmission.
The €30,500 Art. 757 B abatement is shared among all beneficiaries of all contracts on the same insured, pro-rata to their share of the taxable premiums. Exempt beneficiaries (spouse/PACS) are excluded from the pro-rata, increasing the share available to taxable beneficiaries.
For contrats vie-génération: an additional 20% abatement on the gross taxable capital applies before the €152,500 general abatement, cumulating with it. On a €1,000,000 death benefit, this saves €56,594 per beneficiary compared to a standard contract.
Representation does not apply for Art. 757 B purposes: a grandchild designated as beneficiary is taxed on their own kinship with the insured — creating a potential double liquidation (taxed both in the succession and as a life insurance beneficiary).
Optimal planning blends life insurance and estate transmission: saturate the €100,000 parent-child succession abatement + €152,500 Art. 990 I abatement = €252,500 per child at zero tax; then use succession for amounts up to ~€388,500 per child (lower tariff tranches); life insurance wins from ~€388,500 upwards and systematically above €852,500 per child (31.25% vs 40%/45%).
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This article reflects French tax law as of March 2026. Tax thresholds and rates are indexed annually. Readers should verify current figures with the French tax authority (impots.gouv.fr) and consult a qualified adviser before making life insurance or succession planning decisions.