The Dual Nature of the Regime
The régime de participation aux acquêts is a hybrid: during married life, it functions as a régime de séparation de biens; at dissolution, it liquidates as a communauté d'acquêts — but only in value, never in kind (C. civ. Art. 1569). This duality is its defining characteristic and its core appeal: the couple enjoys full independence and maximum creditor protection throughout the marriage, while the spouse who enriched themselves less — often because they stepped back professionally for family reasons — is financially compensated at the end.
It is most commonly recommended for couples where at least one spouse operates a liberal profession, an independent trade, or a business with professional risk. The professional spouse benefits from the separation phase — their business assets are outside any community pool and their creditors cannot reach the other spouse's assets. The non-professional or less financially active spouse benefits from the liquidation phase — they receive a share of the wealth created during the marriage that they helped make possible. For income tax purposes, spouses under the participation aux acquêts who do not live under the same roof are taxed separately rather than jointly.
During the Marriage: Separation in All But Name
While the regime is in force, the rules applicable to the séparation de biens govern ownership, proof of title, and administration (C. civ. Art. 1407). Each spouse administers, enjoys, and freely disposes of their personal assets. Each spouse's debts remain personal. The family home is protected under the mandatory baseline provision — one spouse cannot dispose of it without the other's consent, regardless of who owns it (C. civ. Art. 215). The practical implications are identical to the séparation de biens: a creditor of one spouse is confined to that spouse's personal assets.
The Anti-Fraud Safeguard
Assets given away by one spouse without the other's consent, or alienated fraudulently, are fictitiously added back to the patrimoine final for the purpose of calculating the participation credit (C. civ. Art. 1573). Alienations made subject to a life annuity or at a loss are presumed fraudulent unless the other spouse consented. This rule protects the non-enriched spouse from being deprived of their participation right by strategic gifts or disposals made in anticipation of dissolution.
At Dissolution: How the Créance de Participation Is Calculated
When the regime dissolves — by death, divorce, judicial separation, or change of regime — a financial settlement takes place. For each spouse, the enrichment achieved during the marriage is calculated by comparing their patrimoine final with their patrimoine originaire. The spouse who enriched themselves more owes the other a monetary equalisation payment equal to half the difference in enrichments.
The Patrimoine Originaire
The patrimoine originaire comprises the assets belonging to the spouse on the wedding day, plus assets received during the marriage by inheritance or donation, plus the assets that would constitute personal assets by nature in a community regime (C. civ. Art. 1570). Original assets are valued at their état (physical condition) at the date of marriage or acquisition, but at their valeur (monetary value) at the date of liquidation. Debts burdening them at the time of marriage are deducted, revalued according to the profit subsistant rules where applicable (C. civ. Art. 1571). Where an asset was partly inherited and partly purchased, only the inherited fraction enters the patrimoine originaire; the full current value enters the patrimoine final (Cass. 1ère civ. 31-3-2016 n° 14-24.556 FS-PBI).
The Patrimoine Final
The patrimoine final comprises all assets belonging to the spouse at the date of dissolution of the regime, including assets they disposed of by testamentary bequest, but minus all outstanding debts (C. civ. Art. 1572). Assets fictitiously added back under the anti-fraud rule are also included. Assets in the patrimoine final are valued at their état at dissolution and their valeur at liquidation — meaning any appreciation between dissolution and liquidation is captured. Case law has included the credit balance of a pharmacy's business account (Cass. 1ère civ. 7-11-2018 n° 17-26.222 F-PB) and pension scheme rights under a supplementary mutual plan (Cass. 1ère civ. 15-11-2017 n° 16-25.023 F-PB).
Calculating and Settling the Créance
For each spouse: net acquêts = patrimoine final − patrimoine originaire. If a spouse's final patrimony is less than their original one, they bear that deficit alone — it is not shared with the other. Each spouse participates for half in the net acquêts of the other. The two participation credits are then offset against each other; only the balance is payable. The claim is payable in cash, at liquidation (C. civ. Art. 1576). If the debtor spouse has difficulty paying, the court may grant a maximum five-year deferral, subject to interest and provision of security. The action in liquidation prescribes three years from the date of dissolution (C. civ. Art. 1578).
Spouse A — patrimoine originaire: €150,000 / patrimoine final: €800,000 → net acquêts: €650,000
Spouse B — patrimoine originaire: €80,000 / patrimoine final: €180,000 → net acquêts: €100,000
Difference in enrichments: €650,000 − €100,000 = €550,000
Spouse A's créance de participation (owed to B): €550,000 / 2 = €275,000, payable in cash at liquidation.
Note: if the patrimoine originaire values include assets that have appreciated, those values are recalculated at the date-of-liquidation valuation, not frozen at the values prevailing at the date of marriage.
The Professional Asset Exclusion Clause — and Its Current Status
The most commonly requested contractual modification of the participation aux acquêts is the clause d'exclusion des biens professionnels: a provision excluding one or both spouses' professional assets (business, professional clientele, company shares used in the professional activity) from the calculation of the créance de participation. The purpose is to prevent the professional spouse from having to liquidate or partially sell their business to fund the participation credit on divorce.
Recent case law has fundamentally changed the assessment of this clause. The Cour de cassation held that the financial benefit a spouse derives from such a clause constitutes a matrimonial advantage taking effect on dissolution of the regime — and is therefore automatically revoked by divorce, unless the consenting spouse expressly maintained it at the time of divorce (Cass. 1ère civ. 18-12-2019 n° 18-26.337 FS-PBI). A subsequent decision confirmed this applies to clauses excluding professional debts as well as professional assets, regardless of how the clause was described in the contract (Cass. 1ère civ. 31-3-2021 n° 19-25.903 F-D).
A professional asset exclusion clause in a participation aux acquêts contract is automatically revoked when the marriage ends in divorce — it survives only if the spouse who granted it expressly confirms their intention to maintain it at the time of divorce proceedings. This means the clause is still effective on death (where it protects the professional heir and their family), but provides essentially no protection in divorce unless specifically preserved. Couples relying on this clause for divorce protection should urgently review their position with a notary in light of the 2019 and 2021 decisions.
Other Contractual Modifications
The marriage contract can incorporate several modifications to the standard participation rules (C. civ. Art. 1581):
- Unequal partition of the net acquêts differential — for instance, attributing 60% rather than 50% to the less-enriched spouse. In practice, such clauses are usually drafted to apply only on death rather than on divorce.
- Total attribution of one spouse's net acquêts to the other — effectively giving the surviving spouse the full benefit of the other's wealth creation during the marriage, a powerful form of spousal protection on death.
- Modification of the patrimoine originaire or final — altering which assets are included in or excluded from each patrimony, thereby adjusting the starting or ending point of the enrichment calculation.
- Attribution or acquisition clause for specific assets of the predeceased, at liquidation value, in favour of the surviving spouse (C. civ. Art. 1390) — typically covering the family home, household contents, and professional business.
All modifications that operate in favour of one spouse constitute matrimonial advantages assessed against the standard participation aux acquêts as reference regime (Cass. 1ère civ. 18-12-2019 n° 18-26.337 FS-PBI).
The Franco-German Optional Regime
A bilateral agreement between France and Germany created an optional participation aux acquêts regime available to couples with links to both countries, ratified following Law 2013-98 of 28 January 2013. It functions as a séparation de biens during the marriage — with primary baseline protections for the family home and household debt solidarity — and liquidates by comparing the patrimoine originaire and final of each spouse at dissolution.
The Franco-German regime introduces a distinctive valuation methodology: moveable assets and debts are valued at their date of entry into the patrimony, then indexed to the average consumer price index of the two contracting states; immoveable assets are valued at the date of dissolution. The créance de participation is capped at half the value of the debtor spouse's final patrimony. The German domestic participation aux acquêts goes further: it provides for a partition of Zugewinn (gains) in kind rather than merely in value, offering the creditor spouse actual assets rather than a monetary claim.
| Feature | Participation aux acquêts (French) | Séparation de biens | Communauté réduite aux acquêts |
|---|---|---|---|
| During marriage | Full separation — each spouse manages their own assets independently | Full separation | Community pool — acquests jointly owned |
| Creditor protection | Strong — same as séparation de biens | Strong | Limited — community exposed to either spouse's debts |
| At dissolution | Financial equalisation of enrichments — créance de participation paid in cash | Each keeps their own; inter-spousal claims for documented contributions only | Equal partition of community net assets after récompenses settlement |
| Protection for non-working spouse | Good — automatic participation in the other's enrichment without needing to prove individual contributions | Weak — only documented monetary claims recoverable | Good — direct co-ownership of acquests throughout the marriage |
| Complexity of dissolution | High — patrimoine originaire and final must be reconstructed for each spouse; all assets valued | Moderate — inter-spousal claims and indivis partition | High — récompenses, three-mass liquidation, attribution of community |
Whether you are choosing a regime, reviewing an existing contract after the 2019 case law, or navigating a dissolution, our guides and resources cover every dimension of this uniquely sophisticated regime.
Book a ConsultationThis article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The participation aux acquêts is technically complex, and its consequences — particularly following the 2019 and 2021 decisions on the professional asset exclusion clause — depend heavily on the specific wording of the marriage contract and the circumstances of dissolution. Always seek advice from a qualified French notary or lawyer.
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Get Legal AdviceKey Legal References
Participation aux acquêts: dual nature — functions as séparation de biens during marriage; liquidates as communauté d’acquêts in value (not in kind) at dissolution. During marriage: séparation de biens rules govern ownership, proof of title, and administration
Anti-fraud safeguard: assets given away without other spouse’s consent, or alienated fraudulently, fictitiously added back to patrimoine final for participation calculation. Alienations made subject to life annuity or at a loss presumed fraudulent unless other spouse consented
Patrimoine originaire: assets belonging to spouse on wedding day + assets received by inheritance or donation during marriage + assets that would constitute personal assets by nature in community regime. Valued at dissolution-date value but assessed at acquisition-date condition. Debts at time of marriage deducted
Where an asset was partly inherited and partly purchased, only the inherited fraction enters the patrimoine originaire; the full current value enters the patrimoine final
Patrimoine final: all assets at date of dissolution (incl. bequeathed assets) minus all outstanding debts; fictitiously added-back assets included. Valued at dissolution-date condition, liquidation-date value
Credit balance of pharmacy business account included in patrimoine final
Pension scheme rights under supplementary mutual plan included in patrimoine final
Créance de participation: payable in cash at liquidation; court may grant maximum 5-year deferral with interest and security; dation en paiement possible by agreement. Action in liquidation prescribes 3 years from date of dissolution
Professional asset exclusion clause constitutes a matrimonial advantage taking effect on dissolution; automatically revoked by divorce unless the consenting spouse expressly maintains it at time of divorce proceedings. Applies to clauses excluding professional debts as well as professional assets, regardless of how clause described in contract. Clause remains effective on death
Contractual modifications permitted: unequal partition of enrichment differential; total attribution of one spouse’s net acquêts to other; modification of patrimoine originaire or final composition; attribution/acquisition clause for specific assets at liquidation value in favour of surviving spouse. All modifications that operate in favour of one spouse constitute matrimonial advantages assessed against standard participation regime as reference
Franco-German optional participation aux acquêts regime: bilateral agreement; couples with links to France and Germany; séparation de biens during marriage; liquidation by patrimoine originaire/final comparison. Valuation: moveables at date of entry indexed to average CPI of two states; immoveables at dissolution date. Créance de participation capped at half debtor’s final patrimony
