18
Age at which a minor becomes fully capable in France — until then, all significant legal and financial acts require parental or guardian representation.
16
Age at which the parents' droit de jouissance légale — their right to collect and spend the child's asset income — ends automatically.
5 yrs
Prescription period for annulment or rescission of a prejudicial act committed by a legal administrator — running from the date of majority or emancipation (C. civ. Art. 2224).

How a Minor Builds and Owns a Patrimony in France

From birth, a child in France may own property. Their patrimony accumulates from gifts, inheritances, donations made by grandparents or other relatives, compensation for personal injury, and eventually their own work earnings. That patrimony carries both assets and the liabilities that arise from managing them — mortgage charges on an inherited apartment, repair obligations on a rented property, debts incurred when a business interest enters the child's estate through succession.

Because a minor lacks full legal capacity, a representative must act in their place for all significant legal transactions. French law provides two frameworks for this representation: the administration légale, exercised by the parents in the ordinary case; and the tutelle, a more heavily supervised system that applies when both parents are dead, stripped of parental authority, or otherwise unable to act.

What a Minor Can Do Alone

A minor may make the routine transactions of daily life without parental involvement (C. civ. Art. 388-1-1 and 1148). What qualifies as "routine" is assessed by reference to the child's age and maturity, the financial stakes involved, and what children of similar age typically do: buying clothing, books, or electronic equipment for reasonable sums. Purchasing a vehicle, signing an apartment lease, endorsing a bill of exchange — none of these are routine (Cass. 1ère civ. 9-5-1972 n° 71-10.361). Even routine acts carried out by a minor may be annulled for lésion — economic prejudice — if the transaction proves disadvantageous (C. civ. Art. 1152 and 2224).

Emancipation

A minor who has reached 16 may be emancipated by judicial decision at the parents' or family council's request (C. civ. Art. 413-2). An emancipated minor has full legal capacity for civil acts — they can sign contracts, sell assets, and operate as a sole trader (with additional court authorisation). They cannot: marry without parental consent; sign a marriage contract; enter a PACS; endorse a bill of exchange; or act as a commercial trader without the court's explicit authorisation at the time of emancipation (C. civ. Art. 413-6 and 413-8).

The Administration Légale: Parents as Asset Managers

Where parental authority is exercised jointly — the standard case for two-parent families, including separated or divorced parents — both parents are legal administrators of the child's assets. Each may act alone on administration acts; both must agree on disposition acts. Where only one parent exercises parental authority, that parent alone is the legal administrator (C. civ. Art. 382). The administration légale ceases automatically at the child's majority or emancipation.

Acts of Administration: Each Parent Acts Alone

For acts of administration — ordinary management and exploitation of the child's assets, without abnormal risk — each parent is presumed by third parties to have received the other parent's authority to act alone (C. civ. Art. 382-1). A parent who acts alone on an administration act binds the minor without needing to show the other parent's explicit consent.

Acts of Disposition: Parents Act Together

Both parents may carry out acts of disposition on the child's assets without judicial authorisation, unless the specific act falls on the mandatory authorisation list described below. The general rule is thus more permissive than is sometimes assumed: parents jointly can sell most assets, make most investments, and manage most dealings without going to court — provided both agree.

Acts That Always Require Court Authorisation

Certain acts are so significant that they require the prior authorisation of the juge des tutelles, even where both parents are in complete agreement (C. civ. Art. 387-1). This list is exhaustive and cannot be contracted around:

  • Sale by private agreement or contribution to a company of real estate or a business (fonds de commerce) belonging to the minor
  • Taking out a loan in the minor's name
  • Waiving any right of the minor, entering a transaction (transaction), or agreeing an arbitration clause in the minor's name — including insurance compensation settlements following an accident (Cass. 1ère civ. 20-1-2010 n° 08-19.627) and acquiescence to a judgment that only partially satisfies the minor's claims
  • Accepting a succession on the minor's behalf without reservation (only beneficiary acceptance is allowed without authorisation)
  • Purchasing or leasing an asset of the minor by the legal administrator themselves — an automatic conflict of interest requiring an administrateur ad hoc
  • Gratuitously providing a security (sûreté) in the minor's name to guarantee a third party's debt
  • Any act involving securities or financial instruments that commits the minor's patrimony for present or future purposes
Insurance Settlements Require Court Authorisation

Where a minor is the victim of an accident — road traffic or otherwise — any settlement between the insurer and the minor's legal representatives constitutes a transaction under French law and requires prior judicial authorisation. An agreement signed by the parents alone, without the juge des tutelles' approval, is voidable. This is one of the most commonly overlooked constraints: the minor who reaches majority may challenge the settlement within five years.

Acts That Are Always Forbidden — Even with Court Authorisation

Certain acts are absolutely prohibited to legal administrators, whether or not the juge des tutelles consents (C. civ. Art. 387-2):

  • Making gratuitous disposals (donations) of the minor's assets or rights — a parent cannot give away the child's property
  • Acquiring from a third party a right or claim against the minor
  • Conducting trade or a liberal profession in the minor's name
  • Transferring the minor's assets or rights into a trust (patrimoine fiduciaire)

The Conflict of Interest Rule and the Ad Hoc Administrator

Where the legal administrator's interests conflict with the minor's — for example, where a parent and child both have an interest in the same transaction — the court must appoint a separate administrateur ad hoc to represent the minor in that specific act (C. civ. Art. 383). The conflict need not be actual — a real risk of opposition suffices. Buying or leasing the child's property by a parent automatically triggers this requirement.

Assets Outside the Administration Légale

A donor or testator may specify that assets they give or leave to a minor should be administered by a named third party rather than the parents (C. civ. Art. 384). That third party has the powers defined in the deed or will — potentially broader than those of a legal administrator. An exclusion clause can validly deprive parents of the right to administer even the minor's reserved share of an inheritance (Cass. 1ère civ. 6-3-2013 n° 11-26.728 FS-PBI).

The Right of Legal Enjoyment: Parents Collect the Child's Income

Until the child reaches 16, the parents holding the administration légale also hold a droit de jouissance légale: they collect the fruits and revenues of the child's assets and retain them after paying the charges of that enjoyment (C. civ. Art. 386-1 and 386-3). This right resembles a usufruct — parents collect rents, dividends, and investment income — but differs in that it is personal to the parents, cannot be alienated or pledged, and exists to compensate them for the financial burden of raising the child. The charges of legal enjoyment must be met first; maintenance costs must never be paid from the child's capital — only from income.

Assets Excluded from Legal Enjoyment

Four categories of assets are shielded from the parents' legal enjoyment, regardless of the child's age below 16:

  • The child's own work earnings — salary, professional income, and substitute revenues belong entirely to the child
  • Assets given or bequeathed with an express exclusion clause — a grandparent or other donor may validly exclude the parents' enjoyment right
  • Compensation for the child's personal, non-patrimonial harm — damages for personal injury or moral prejudice belong to the child
  • Assets received through a succession from which a parent has been declared unworthy

The Tutelle: When Parental Administration Has Failed

Tutelle opens automatically where both parents are deceased or stripped of parental authority, or where the child has no legally established filiation (C. civ. Art. 390). A court can also open a tutelle to replace an ongoing administration légale where serious circumstances — parental incapacity, persistent negligence, misconduct, or fraud — make it necessary (C. civ. Art. 391).

The Three Organs of Tutelle

The tuteur is the primary manager of the child's affairs and person. The surviving parent may designate a tuteur by will or notarial declaration for the event of their death while the child is still a minor (C. civ. Art. 403) — naming a substitute tuteur in case the first refuses or becomes incapable, and potentially splitting the role between two tuteurs with different competencies, is recommended. In the absence of a testamentary designation, the conseil de famille appoints the tuteur.

The conseil de famille — composed of relatives and close associates of the child, convened and presided over by the juge des tutelles — sets the general conditions of the child's upbringing, authorises major transactions, and supervises the tuteur's management. It decides the amount above which uninvested liquid assets must be put to work, and the eligible investment categories.

The subrogé tuteur monitors the tuteur's management in the interests of the minor, receives the annual accounts for review, and acts as the minor's representative where the tuteur's interests conflict with the child's.

Acts of the Tuteur: Administration vs Disposition

The tuteur acts alone on administration acts — collecting income, paying charges, maintaining assets (C. civ. Art. 504). Disposition acts require authorisation from the conseil de famille or the juge des tutelles (C. civ. Art. 505). The inventory of the child's assets must be drawn up at the tutelle's opening, in the child's presence where age permits (C. civ. Art. 503). All liquid capital received by the tuteur must be deposited within one month into an account in the minor's name at an authorised depositary, clearly flagged as subject to tutelle (C. civ. Art. 498).

Annual Accounts and End-of-Mission Obligations

The tuteur must prepare an annual management account with supporting documents and submit it to the subrogé tuteur or conseil de famille for verification (C. civ. Art. 510–511). Children over 16 must receive a copy of the annual account. At the end of the mission, the tuteur must prepare a final account and deliver copies of the last five annual accounts and the final account to the child on majority, the new tuteur, or the minor's heirs (C. civ. Art. 514).

Planning Ahead — Designating a Guardian by Will

Any parent who retains parental authority can — and should — designate a tuteur by will or notarial declaration for the event of their death while the child is still a minor (C. civ. Art. 403). The designation is binding on the conseil de famille unless the chosen person refuses, is incapable, or the appointment clearly conflicts with the child's interests. Naming a substitute tuteur in case the primary designee declines, and splitting the role where the child's estate spans different asset classes, is strongly recommended. A mandat de protection future made by parents in favour of a disabled child will only take effect at the child's majority — a separate tuteur designation remains essential for the period of minority.

Judicial Oversight During Administration Légale

The administration légale is subject to a graduated system of oversight. The juge des tutelles no longer exercises general surveillance over all administrations légales; oversight is triggered by specific circumstances. Where the court authorises a major act under Art. 387-1, it may simultaneously order that other disposition acts be submitted to prior authorisation (C. civ. Art. 387-3). The court may order an annual inventory and management accounts where the child's estate size and composition justify it (C. civ. Art. 387-4 and 387-5). Legal administrators who fail to respond to the court's summons or provide required information may be fined up to €10,000 (C. civ. Art. 387-6).

CategoryAdministration légale (parents)Tutelle
Applies whenOne or both parents exercise parental authorityBoth parents dead / stripped of authority, or court-ordered replacement
Acts of administrationEither parent acts alone; presumed consent of otherTuteur acts alone
Acts of dispositionBoth parents act; no court authorisation unless on mandatory listRequires conseil de famille or juge des tutelles authorisation
Judicial oversightTargeted — triggered by specific acts or concernsSystematic — annual accounts, conseil de famille, subrogé tuteur
Income from child's assets (under 16)Parents collect and retain (after charges) under droit de jouissanceNo jouissance for tuteur — all income belongs to minor
Inventory obligationOnly where court orders itMandatory at opening of tutelle
Key Points: What Parents and Guardians Managing a Minor's Assets in France Must Know
Minors own their assets from birth — gifts, inheritances, injury compensation, and their own earnings all form part of the child's patrimony, managed by parents or a guardian on their behalf.
Under the administration légale, either parent can act alone on routine management (C. civ. Art. 382-1); both must agree on disposition acts unless the act is on the court-authorisation list. Where only one parent exercises parental authority, that parent alone is the legal administrator (C. civ. Art. 382).
Seven categories of act always require prior authorisation from the juge des tutelles — even with both parents in full agreement (C. civ. Art. 387-1): real estate sales, loans in the minor's name, waivers of rights, transactions with insurers, unconditional acceptance of an inheritance, buying the child's own assets, and providing security in the child's name.
Four acts are absolutely forbidden to legal administrators, even with court approval (C. civ. Art. 387-2): giving away the child's assets, acquiring claims against the child, running a trade in the child's name, and transferring the child's assets into a trust.
Insurance settlements following an accident are treated as transactions requiring judicial authorisation. Parents who settle without the juge des tutelles' approval expose the agreement to annulment for up to five years after the child reaches majority (Cass. 1ère civ. 20-1-2010 n° 08-19.627).
Until the child reaches 16, parents collect and retain the fruits and revenues of the child's assets under the droit de jouissance légale (C. civ. Art. 386-1 and 386-3) — but cannot touch the capital, and must meet the child's maintenance costs from that income first. The droit de jouissance does not cover the child's own work earnings, assets given with an exclusion clause, or compensation for the child's personal injury.
Where a parent's interests conflict with the child's, an administrateur ad hoc must be appointed for that specific transaction (C. civ. Art. 383). Buying or leasing the child's property automatically triggers this. A donor or testator may also exclude parental administration entirely for assets they give to a child (C. civ. Art. 384).
Tutelle opens automatically on the death of both parents or loss of parental authority (C. civ. Art. 390). Any parent who retains authority should designate a tuteur by will or notarial declaration to control who manages the child's estate after their death (C. civ. Art. 403). Under tutelle, the tuteur must deposit all liquid capital in a dedicated account in the minor's name within one month, prepare annual accounts, and submit a final account on ending the mission.
Questions About Managing Assets for Children in France?

Whether you are planning a gift to grandchildren, managing an inheritance received by a minor, or structuring a donation-partage for your family, our guides cover every dimension of French family patrimonial law.

Book a Consultation

This article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The rules governing the administration of a minor's assets are technically complex and highly fact-specific. Always seek advice from a qualified French notary or lawyer.