Background: The 2019 Reform
Before October 2019, French retirement savings were fragmented across specialist vehicles — the Perp for private individuals, the Madelin and Madelin agricole contracts for the self-employed, the Perco for employees through company savings schemes, and Article 83 contracts for mandatory enterprise supplementary pensions. The loi Pacte replaced all of them with a unified framework under the PER brand, available from 1 October 2019. Existing products may no longer be opened for new subscribers (since 1 October 2020 for the Perp) but may be continued indefinitely. Transfers from old products to a PER are freely permitted. The PER comes in three forms: the PER individuel (open to anyone without a professional condition), the PER d'entreprise collectif (voluntarily offered by employers), and the PER d'entreprise obligatoire (mandatory for certain employee categories). This article addresses the PER individuel only.
Eligibility and Structure
The PER individuel is open to any individual, with no minimum age and no professional activity requirement (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-1). Minors may hold a PER. Multiple PER plans may be held simultaneously — unlike the PEA, there is no one-plan rule.
Two legal forms
A PER individuel takes one of two legal forms. The PER compte-titres is a securities account held with a bank or investment firm, with a single holder and optional linked cash account (which may not be overdrawn), managed by a portfolio management company. The PER assurance is a group insurance contract, legally close to a contrat d'assurance-vie, and may include a guaranteed euro fund, provision for designated beneficiaries on death, and supplementary guarantees such as disability income, reversionary annuity, or loss-of-autonomy benefits. The insurer is subject to a statutory obligation to ring-fence PER assets separately. Transfer between institutions is freely permitted; transfer fees are capped at 1% of transferred assets, and become nil once five years have elapsed from the first contribution or once the holder has reached retirement eligibility age.
The three-compartment structure
Every PER is divided into three compartments (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-6): compartment 1 receives voluntary individual deposits; compartment 2 receives employer contributions and employee savings scheme amounts; compartment 3 receives mandatory enterprise scheme contributions. Rights from compartments 1 and 2 (voluntary and employee savings) are freely transferable to any other PER at any time; compartment 3 rights may only transfer on leaving the enterprise. This structure ensures that on transfer, each type of contribution retains the specific redemption conditions, tax treatment, and social regime applicable to it.
Contributions and the Deduction Ceiling
The global deduction ceiling for salaried employees
Contributions to a PER individuel (excluding supplementary risk guarantees) are deductible from the global taxable income of each household member, up to an annual ceiling (CGI Art. 163 quatervicies). The ceiling is the higher of: (a) 10% of the prior year's professional income net of social charges and professional expenses, capped at 8× the annual Pass (for 2023: maximum €32,909); or (b) 10% of the prior year's Pass (for 2023: €4,114, applicable to those with no or low professional income). Married and PACS couples under joint taxation may pool individual ceilings. Unused ceiling carries forward and may be applied in any of the three following years. Excess contributions above the ceiling are not deductible and do not carry forward.
Deduction from professional income: self-employed and corporate officers
For holders with BIC, BNC, agricultural income, or article 62 corporate officer remuneration, PER contributions are deductible from their professional income category within specific limits (CGI Art. 154 bis and 154 bis-0A). Professional income deduction takes priority; any remainder may be deducted from global income. For 2023, the maximum professional income deduction for retirement savings (including death, disability, and loss-of-autonomy supplementary guarantees) is €81,385.
Waiving the deduction
The holder may elect, on a contribution-by-contribution basis, to waive the deduction (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-20). The waiver must be exercised at the time each contribution is made through the plan manager, and is irrevocable per contribution. Where waived-contribution principal is fully exempt from income tax at exit — with only the investment returns facing taxation — waiving the deduction can be advantageous where the holder has no current income tax liability, a very low marginal rate at entry, or expects a high marginal rate at exit.
Investment Management
Unless the holder makes an express contrary decision, all contributions are automatically managed under a lifecycle allocation (gestion pilotée évolutive) that gradually reduces risk as the target retirement date approaches (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-3 al. 3 and 4). Three profiles are available: prudent, balanced (the default), and dynamic. Self-directed management is available on express written request. The lifecycle allocation does not guarantee capital. From five years before the projected retirement date, the holder may review their accumulated rights with the manager.
| Investment profile | > 10 years to target | 10 to 5 years | 5 to 2 years | < 2 years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prudent | 30% min. low-risk | 60% | 80% | 90% |
| Balanced (default) | No minimum | 20% | 50% | 70% |
| Dynamic | No minimum | No minimum | 30% | 50% |
These are regulatory minimums for low-risk assets (risk indicator ≤ 3) as a share of total plan assets. The manager must proactively inform the holder of the option to review six months before the five-year review window opens.
Early Release: The Six Authorised Events
PER savings are ordinarily locked until retirement. The law provides six exhaustive events permitting early release (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-4 I), each triggering a single capital payment covering all or part of the eligible rights at the holder's choice:
- Death of the spouse or PACS partner
- Severe disability (2nd or 3rd category under French social security) of the holder, their children, their spouse, or their PACS partner
- Over-indebtedness (surendettement) of the holder
- Expiry of unemployment insurance entitlements, or — for former corporate officers without an employment contract — the absence of any employment contract or board mandate for at least two years from the non-renewal or revocation of the mandate
- Judicial liquidation of a non-salaried activity, or any situation certified by the president of the commercial court handling a conciliation procedure as justifying early release
- Acquisition of the primary residence — a PER-specific provision absent from the Perp and Madelin
For the first five events (force-majeure situations), the capital paid is fully exempt from income tax and social charges, except that investment returns are subject to social charges at 17.2%. For the sixth event (primary residence acquisition), the exit is taxed as an ordinary retirement capital exit following the deducted/non-deducted rules — a chosen event receives no preferential tax treatment.
Exit at Retirement
At retirement — defined as the date of liquidation of the holder's pension under any mandatory scheme, or the minimum legal retirement age (62 for those born on or after 1 January 1955) — the holder may freely choose between a capital lump sum (in one instalment or in stages), a lifetime annuity, or a combination of the two (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-5). Where the annuity option produces less than €100 per month (since 1 July 2021), the insurer may substitute a capital payment. Irrevocably electing the annuity option at the plan's opening is rarely advisable given its irreversibility.
Exit Tax Treatment: The Core Trade-Off
The tax treatment at exit depends on two variables: whether the underlying contributions were deducted or not, and whether the exit is in capital or annuity form. All four combinations produce materially different outcomes.
Principal (cumulative contributions): taxed as pension income under the progressive income tax scale, without the standard 10% abatement that normally applies to pensions. No CSG or CRDS due on this pension-replacement component.
Investment returns accumulated during the plan: taxed as investment income (RCM) — PFU at 12.8% plus social charges 17.2%, or progressive scale on global election. The 7.5% liberatory levy available for some other retirement capital payments is expressly excluded. A non-liberatory withholding at 12.8% applies in the year of payment on fixed-income returns.
Principal (cumulative non-deducted contributions): fully exempt from income tax and social charges. The holder has already paid tax on these amounts at entry.
Investment returns on those contributions: taxed as RCM — PFU 12.8% plus social charges 17.2%, or progressive scale. Same non-liberatory withholding rules apply.
The strategic logic: waiving the entry deduction eliminates income tax on the principal at exit; only the growth component faces taxation, at the investment income rate rather than the pension income rate.
Each annuity payment: taxed as pension income under the progressive income tax scale, with the standard 10% abatement applying. Social charges at 17.2% apply, but only on the portion of each payment corresponding to investment returns — determined by the age-based fraction for rentes viagères à titre onéreux. The 6.8% CSG component is deductible from the following year's taxable income.
Each annuity payment: taxed as a rente viagère à titre onéreux rather than as pension income. Only a fraction of each payment is taxable — determined by the holder's age at the time of the first payment: 70% taxable for first payment before age 50; 50% between 50 and 59; 40% between 60 and 69; 30% from age 70. Social charges at 17.2% apply on the same taxable fraction.
The deduction at entry provides an immediate tax saving equal to the contribution amount multiplied by the current marginal rate. At exit, the principal becomes taxable income at the rate applicable in retirement — typically lower for most working-age savers. The system benefits holders who are in a high marginal bracket during accumulation and expect a lower effective rate in retirement.
Waiving the deduction is advantageous where the holder has no current income tax liability, a very low marginal rate at entry, or expects a high exit rate. Where the deduction is waived, the exit tax on the principal is eliminated entirely; only investment returns face taxation. The waiver is irrevocable on a per-contribution basis — this decision must be made at each contribution, not retrospectively.
A holder retires with €200,000 in PER capital: €120,000 in cumulative contributions and €80,000 in accumulated investment returns. They choose a lump-sum capital exit.
€120,000 principal: taxable as pension income (progressive scale, no 10% abatement)
Assumed marginal rate at exit = 30%: income tax on principal ≈ €36,000
€80,000 returns: PFU 30% = €24,000
Total tax ≈ €60,000 → Net receipt ≈ €140,000
Scenario B — all contributions were waived (no deduction):
€120,000 principal: fully exempt — €0 income tax
€80,000 returns: PFU 30% = €24,000
Total tax ≈ €24,000 → Net receipt ≈ €176,000
But in Scenario A, during the accumulation years the holder received deduction savings of €120,000 × (marginal rate at entry). At 41% entry rate: €49,200 saved at entry vs €36,000 additional tax at exit = net advantage of €13,200 on the contributions, before any compounding on the reinvested deduction savings.
Death During the Savings Phase
The PER closes automatically on the holder's death before retirement (C. mon. fin. Art. L 224-4 II). For a PER compte-titres, assets enter the taxable estate under ordinary succession rules. For a PER assurance, assets are paid to designated beneficiaries following the life insurance succession regime:
- Death before age 70: each beneficiary receives up to €152,500 free of the death benefits levy. Above the threshold: 20% up to €700,000 then 31.25%. Reversionary annuities are exempt.
- Death after age 70: contributions paid after age 70 are subject to inheritance tax under ordinary rules, after a global €30,500 exemption shared with all other life insurance contracts written on the same life (CGI Art. 757 B). Investment gains on post-70 contributions are exempt.
If the PER was already paying an annuity at the time of death, payments stop unless a reversionary annuity option was subscribed at the time of activating the annuity.
The Annuity: Practical Considerations
The annuity does not begin automatically at retirement — the holder must make a written request with proof of pension liquidation. The older the holder at activation, the higher the annuity amount. A rente à annuités garanties — under which payments continue to a named beneficiary for a fixed guaranteed period if the holder dies early — is generally preferable to a full reversionary annuity: it is less expensive, allows the holder to receive the full amount if they outlive the guarantee period, and achieves broadly similar protection. Once a PER assurance is converted into an annuity, the holder loses access to the capital permanently — there is no switching back. This irreversibility reinforces why irrevocably electing the annuity option at the plan's opening is rarely advisable.
The Old Perp: Still in Force for Existing Holders
The Perp was closed to new subscribers from 1 October 2020. Existing holders may continue contributing indefinitely. The principal differences from the PER are: the Perp locks funds entirely until retirement (no primary residence early release provision); at retirement, a full capital exit is not available — the Perp delivers primarily a lifetime annuity, with a maximum 20% capital exit in contracts that provide for it. Transfer from a Perp to a PER individuel is permitted; transfer cost is capped at 5% of transfer value if the Perp is less than ten years old, nil after ten years (C. ass. Art. R 132-5-3). Amounts transferred from a Perp are treated as voluntary contributions but do not generate a new deduction right.
Whether you are deciding between a PER compte-titres and a PER assurance, weighing the deduction waiver against your current marginal rate, or planning withdrawals in retirement, our guides cover the full French retirement savings and investment income framework.
Book a ConsultationThis article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. The deduction ceilings and Pass-related figures cited apply to contributions made in 2023; the Pass changes annually. The death benefits treatment for PER assurance depends on age, contract structure, and beneficiary designation.
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PER individuel: open to any individual; no minimum age; no professional condition required; multiple plans may be held simultaneously. Available from 1 October 2019 (Perp closed to new subscribers from 1 October 2020). Transfers from old products (Perp, Madelin, Perco, Article 83) freely permitted; transferred amounts treated as voluntary contributions without new deduction right
Eligible assets for PER compte-titres: equities, bonds, short/medium-term negotiable instruments, OPCVM and FIA units (incl. private equity and real estate funds), FCPE units. Lifecycle default (gestion pilotée évolutive): three profiles (prudent/balanced/dynamic). Regulatory minimums for low-risk assets as % of total assets by horizon: Prudent: 30%/60%/80%/90%; Balanced (default): 0/20/50/70%; Dynamic: 0/0/30/50% (for >10y/10-5y/5-2y/<2y). Self-directed management available on express request. From 5 years before projected retirement: holder may review position; manager must proactively inform holder 6 months before window opens
Six early release events (exhaustive): (1) death of spouse or PACS partner; (2) severe disability (2nd or 3rd SS category) of holder/children/spouse/PACS partner; (3) over-indebtedness; (4) expiry of unemployment insurance rights (or 2-year mandate gap for former corporate officers); (5) judicial liquidation of non-salaried activity (or certification by commercial court president in conciliation); (6) acquisition of primary residence. Exit form: single capital payment, whole or partial, holder’s choice. Five forced events: principal exempt from income tax and social charges; investment returns subject to social charges 17.2% only. Primary residence: taxed as ordinary retirement capital exit
Death during savings phase: PER closes automatically. PER compte-titres: assets in taxable estate (ordinary succession rules). PER assurance: paid to designated beneficiaries under life insurance regime. Before age 70: each beneficiary exempt up to €152,500 from death benefits levy; above: 20% up to €700,000, then 31.25%; reversionary annuities exempt. After age 70: contributions paid post-70 subject to inheritance tax with €30,500 global exemption (CGI Art. 757 B); gains on post-70 contributions exempt from this charge. If annuity already paying at death: stops unless reversionary annuity option subscribed
At retirement (liquidation of mandatory pension or minimum legal retirement age): free choice of capital (lump sum or phased), lifetime annuity, or combination. Annuity below €100/month since 1 July 2021 may be commuted to capital. Irrevocable annuity election at plan opening is rarely advisable
Three-compartment structure: compartment 1 = voluntary individual deposits; compartment 2 = employer contributions and employee savings scheme amounts; compartment 3 = mandatory enterprise scheme contributions. Compartments 1 and 2 freely transferable between PERs at any time. Compartment 3 transferable only on leaving the enterprise. Transfer between PERs: fee capped at 1% of transferred assets; nil after 5 years from first contribution or from retirement eligibility age
Waiver of deduction: irrevocable, on a contribution-by-contribution basis; must be elected at time each contribution is made through plan manager; cannot be applied retrospectively. Waived-contribution principal is fully exempt from income tax and social charges at exit; only investment returns are taxed. Beneficial where marginal rate at entry is low or expected exit rate is high
Voluntary contributions to PER individuel: no minimum, no ceiling. Contributions from any other PER transferable freely (compartments 1 and 2 at any time; compartment 3 on leaving enterprise). Old product rights (Perp, Madelin, Perco, Article 83) transferable but without new deduction entitlement
Professional income deduction for BIC/BNC self-employed and article 62 corporate officers: PER contributions deductible from professional income within specific limits. For 2023: maximum €81,385 for retirement savings including death/disability/autonomy guarantees. Professional income deduction takes priority over global income deduction
Global deduction ceiling for salaried employees: higher of (a) 10% of prior year professional income net of social charges and professional expenses, capped at 8× annual Pass (max €32,909 for 2023); or (b) 10% of prior year Pass (€4,114 for 2023). Married/PACS couples under joint taxation may pool individual ceilings. Unused ceiling: 3-year carryforward (imputed against current ceiling first, then oldest carryforward). Excess above ceiling: not deductible, no carryforward. Reduction: employer Perco contributions, exempt employee Perco contributions, exempt PER d’entreprise amounts, and already-deducted professional retirement contributions (except 15% bracket for self-employed)
Five forced early release events: capital paid fully exempt from income tax and social charges (except investment returns subject to social charges 17.2% only)
Exit tax — annuity from deducted contributions: each annuity payment taxed as pension income under progressive income tax scale with standard 10% abatement; social charges 17.2% on RVTO-based fraction (investment returns portion); 6.8% CSG deductible from following year’s taxable income
Exit tax — capital from deducted contributions: principal taxed as pension income under progressive scale, without the standard 10% abatement (no CSG/CRDS on pension component); investment returns taxed as RCM at PFU 12.8% + 17.2% social charges or progressive scale on global election; 7.5% liberatory rate expressly excluded; non-liberatory withholding at 12.8% on fixed-income returns in year of payment (exemption if prior-year RFR ≤€25,000 single or €50,000 couple)
Exit tax — annuity from non-deducted contributions: each annuity payment taxed as rente viagère à titre onéreux; taxable fraction by age at first payment: 70% (under 50); 50% (50–59); 40% (60–69); 30% (from 70); social charges 17.2% on same taxable fraction
PER assurance death after age 70: contributions paid after age 70 subject to inheritance tax with global €30,500 exemption shared with all other life insurance contracts on same life; gains on post-70 contributions exempt from this charge
Perp structure: existing holders may continue indefinitely; no primary residence early release; primarily lifetime annuity product (max 20% capital exit in qualifying contracts; first-home capital exception). Transfer from Perp to PER: transfer cost capped at 5% of transfer value if Perp under 10 years old, nil after 10 years. Transferred amounts: treated as voluntary contributions without new deduction right
