Key Points: Recovery of French Social Assistance on Estates
Social assistance is a collective advance, not a definitive grant. It is recoverable when the beneficiary returns to better fortune during their lifetime, and on their estate after death (CASF Art. L 132-8; CSS Art. L 815-13). Recovery is never automatic — the recovering authority decides whether and how much to claim.
The RSA, PCH and ACTP are never recoverable in any form. The ASI (supplementary disability allowance) is also never recoverable.
Residential care fees for the elderly (frais d’hébergement des personnes âgées) are the most significant source of recovery claims: recoverable on return to better fortune, from donees (10-year look-back), from particular legatees, on succession, and subsidiarily from life insurance beneficiaries on premiums paid after age 70.
Recovery of home-based assistance (ASD, forfait journalier) on succession requires that (i) the net estate exceeds €46,000 and (ii) the assistance received exceeded €760. Residential care fees for the disabled are not recoverable against children, the spouse, parents, or the person who actually cared for the beneficiary.
The Aspa is recoverable on succession only above a net estate threshold of €39,000 (€100,000 in overseas communities until 31 December 2026), within a capped annual amount. Recovery may be deferred to the surviving spouse’s own death.
The APA is recoverable only on retour à meilleure fortune — not on succession, not from donees, and not from life insurance beneficiaries. This is a critical distinction from residential care fees.
Prescription: five years from the triggering event (C. civ. Art. 2224). Disputes over département-paid benefits must be preceded by an administrative appeal; Aspa disputes go to the pension fund’s commission de recours amiable.

The Principle: A Collective Advance

Social assistance (aide sociale) is a set of benefits paid to persons in need. It is managed and paid by the State, territorial authorities (principally the départements), and social security bodies (notably pension funds). The right to social assistance is subsidiary: it only arises as a last resort, when the person cannot meet their needs through their own resources or through other forms of solidarity, particularly family maintenance obligations.

Because social assistance is an advance by the collectivity to meet a specific need, it is recoverable when the beneficiary returns to better fortune and on their estate after death. This justifies recovery on successions, donations, legacies and, in certain cases, on life insurance. The scope of recovery and its conditions vary considerably by benefit type.

Several important benefits are never recoverable in any circumstances: the RSA (revenu de solidarité active), the PCH (prestation de compensation du handicap), and the ACTP (allocation compensatrice pour tierce personne). Separately, benefits outside the social assistance framework altogether — the AAH (allocation adulte handicapé), the AEEH, invalidity pensions and industrial accident annuities — are likewise not recoverable.

Recovery on Return to Better Fortune

Social assistance may be recovered from the beneficiary while they are still alive if they experience a retour à meilleure fortune (CASF Art. L 132-8). The Cour de cassation defines this as any event — other than an increase in income taken into account for periodic revision of rights — occurring after the date on which resources were assessed for admission to assistance, that has the effect of substantially increasing the overall value of the patrimony so as to put the beneficiary in a position to reimburse the benefits received (Cass. 2e civ. 12-11-2020 n° 19-20.478 FS-PBRI).

Examples recognised as constituting a retour à meilleure fortune: receipt of an inheritance; sale of immovable property producing a substantial capital gain; receipt of a life insurance capital. Conversely, the following have been held not to constitute such a return: a sale of immovable property that does not substantially increase the patrimony’s value; receipt of an insurance indemnity compensating a handicap; savings made by the beneficiary after their residential care fees were taken over; progressive accumulation of capital from interest on placed assistance payments.

Recovery in case of retour à meilleure fortune can only be directed against the beneficiary personally — not against the estate after death. It cannot place the beneficiary in a situation where they cannot reimburse the amounts received. Where the beneficiary dies before recovery is completed, the action can no longer proceed; the only remaining route is recovery on succession.

Recovery from Donees

A beneficiary of social assistance could seek to impoverish themselves voluntarily to prevent their heirs from facing a recovery claim on the estate. To counter this, CASF Art. L 132-8 allows certain social assistance to be recovered from donations made after the date of the assistance application and from those made in the ten years preceding that application. The recovery action can be brought while the donor is still alive and after their death.

Recovery is limited to the value of the donated assets as assessed on the date the action is brought, net of any improvements or work carried out by the donee (CASF Art. R 132-11). The recovering authority and the court have discretionary power: where the donation was not intended to impoverish the donor but rather to relieve them of major repairs and non-tenant charges, recovery may be refused (CE 17-5-1999 n° 188870). The financial situation of the donee is also taken into account; they may ask for a moderation of recovery.

All forms of donation are covered: donation-partage, donation of bare ownership or usufruct, don manuel, donation in advance of inheritance. The presence of an inalienability clause does not prevent recovery. Recovery also applies to disguised or indirect donations. Examples: a sale of immovable property at very favourable conditions (CE 18-5-1998 n° 179831); a life insurance contract taken out with a liberality intent. Only donations by the beneficiary themselves — not by their spouse — are subject to recovery (CE 9-12-1998 n° 183418). In the case of multiple donees, the action is exercised against each in proportion to their respective shares (CCAS 31-10-2002 n° 001889).

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Warning: The 10-Year Look-Back on Donations

Recovery from donees covers not only gifts made after the social assistance application but also gifts made in the ten years preceding the application. A parent who made gifts to their children a decade before entering a care home may find those gifts exposed to a recovery claim from the département after their death — if the gifts fall within the ten-year window and the assistance received is of a recoverable type. All forms of donation are covered, including disguised gifts and indirect liberalities. Only donations made by the beneficiary themselves (not by their spouse) are concerned.

Recovery on Succession

Social assistance is recoverable on the beneficiary’s succession (CASF Art. L 132-8; CSS Art. L 815-13). The action is exercised on the net estate — that is, after settlement of the succession’s debts (CE 15-10-1999 n° 184553; CE 15-5-2002 n° 216992). Specific limits apply depending on the type of assistance.

Home-Based Assistance and Forfait Journalier (Elderly)

Recovery of home-based social assistance (aide sociale à domicile), home medical care, and the forfait journalier hospitalier on succession requires two cumulative conditions: the net estate must exceed €46,000, and the assistance received must have exceeded €760 (CASF Art. R 132-12). Recovery is limited to the net estate above €46,000, capped at the total assistance actually received.

Residential Care Fees for the Disabled

Benefits paid for the residential care and accommodation of disabled persons are not recoverable on succession when the heirs are the children, the spouse, or the person who had actually and continuously cared for the disabled person, nor against parents for accommodation or maintenance costs (CASF Art. L 241-4 and L 344-5). The concept of “effective and continuous care” has been interpreted by the courts (Cass. 2e civ. 26-1-2023 n° 21-18.653 FB). Where recovery is exercised against others, the same €46,000 and €760 thresholds apply.

The Aspa

The allocation de solidarité aux personnes âgées (Aspa) is recoverable on succession only on the part of the net estate exceeding €39,000 (or €100,000 in overseas territorial communities, until 31 December 2026), and within an annual capped amount revalued each year (CSS Art. L 815-13, D 815-4 and D 815-6; Circ. Cnav 2021-1 of 11-1-2021). Recovery against the surviving spouse (or surviving concubin or PACS partner) may be deferred until their own death. Similar deferral is available, under specific conditions, for heirs who were dependants of the beneficiary at the date of death (CSS Art. D 815-7).

A specific rule applies to Aspa: recovery bodies may reintegrate into the net estate excessive gifts or life insurance premiums made by the Aspa recipient after the application for benefit, where those gifts or premiums are manifestly incompatible with the resources declared by the insured and were intended to prevent recovery on succession (CSS Art. D 815-6).

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APA vs Residential Care Fees: A Critical Distinction

The APA (allocation personnalisée d’autonomie) is recoverable only on retour à meilleure fortune during the beneficiary’s lifetime — it is not recoverable on succession, from donees, from legatees, or from life insurance beneficiaries. By contrast, residential care fees paid as social assistance (frais d’hébergement des personnes âgées) are recoverable through all five channels. Families funding a parent’s care should be aware that choosing the ASH route when APA is available and sufficient can expose the estate to a claim that would not otherwise arise.

Recovery from Particular Legatees

Recovery actions may also be directed against particular legatees (légataires à titre particulier) — CASF Art. L 132-8. Universal or quasi-universal legatees are assimilated to heirs (CE 5-5-2000 n° 208264). The action is exercised up to the value of the bequeathed assets at the date of opening of the succession (CASF Art. R 132-11).

Recovery from Life Insurance Beneficiaries

Social assistance can, under certain conditions, be recovered from beneficiaries of life insurance contracts taken out by the assisted person. The principal application is subsidiarily, up to the amount of premiums paid after age 70. For the Aspa specifically, the reintegration of excessive premiums into the net estate can neutralise attempts to shield assets through life insurance where those premiums were manifestly incompatible with the resources declared by the insured and intended to prevent recovery on succession (CSS Art. D 815-6).

Benefit-by-Benefit Recovery Table

The following table summarises the recoverable nature of each main benefit across the five possible recovery channels. Thresholds and conditions are those applicable as at March 2026 and are subject to periodic revision.

Benefit Return to better fortune Donation recovery Particular legacy Succession & universal legacy Life insurance
ACTP No No No No No
PCH No No No No No
RSA No No No No No
ASI No No No No No
Residential care — disabled (CASF Art. L 344-5) No No No Cond.Yes, except where heirs are children, spouse, parents, or person having exercised effective care No
Residential care — elderly (ASH) Yes Yes Yes Yes Cond.Subsidiarily, up to premiums paid after age 70
APA Yes No No No No
Aspa No Cond.No — except reintegration of excessive gifts into net estate Cond.No — except reintegration of excessive legacies into net estate Cond.Yes, above €39,000 net estate (€100,000 overseas until 31/12/2026); within annual capped amount Cond.No — except reintegration of excessive premiums into net estate
Home-based care — disabled Yes Yes Yes Cond.Yes, except against children, spouse, or person with effective care; €46,000 and €760 thresholds apply Cond.Subsidiarily, up to premiums paid after age 70
Home-based assistance — elderly (ASD) & forfait journalier Yes Yes Yes Cond.Yes, if assistance >€760 and net estate >€46,000 Cond.Subsidiarily, up to premiums paid after age 70

Legal Hypothec (CASF Art. L 132-9)

To secure future recovery claims, immovable property belonging to social assistance beneficiaries may be subject to a legal hypothec, on condition that the total value of the beneficiary’s assets is at least €1,500 (CASF Art. L 132-9 and R 132-14). The hypothec ranks from its registration date. It is available for all recoverable assistance, except home-based assistance (aide sociale à domicile) and the forfait journalier hospitalier.

Release of the hypothec is granted either automatically or on the debtor’s request, by decision of the préfet or président du conseil départemental, on proof of repayment or remission. The sale of the mortgaged property is not in itself a cause for repayment: the département cannot make release conditional on repayment where no recovery right is available (CE 28-5-2010 n° 330567). For the Aspa, a hypothec may similarly be registered where the beneficiary’s assets equal at least €39,000 (CSS Art. L 815-13, al. 5 and R 815-46 et seq.).

Procedure, Discretion and Prescription

Recovery actions are exercised by the State, the département or the body that awarded the benefit. In all cases, recovery is capped at the total amount of assistance actually allocated. Recovery is not automatic: the recovering authority has discretionary power as to whether to bring the action, fix the amount, and grant a deferral (CASF Art. R 132-11; CE 25-4-2001 n° 214252). Courts also have the power to adjust the modalities of recovery or reduce the amount (CE 21-12-2007 n° 293887).

A département that paid all residential care fees directly to the care facility without deducting the beneficiary’s personal contribution is entitled to recover the full amounts paid from the beneficiary’s succession (Cass. 2e civ. 7-7-2022 n° 21-13.527 F-B).

The limitation period for recovery actions is five years (C. civ. Art. 2224; CSS Art. L 815-13). Disputes over département-paid benefits must be preceded by an administrative appeal before the decision-maker (CASF Art. L 134-2), then heard by specially designated judicial courts (tribunaux judiciaires spécialement désignés; CASF Art. L 134-3). Disputes over Aspa recovery must first go before the commission de recours amiable of the pension fund (CSS Art. R 142-1-A).

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Recovery Is Discretionary: Negotiation Is Possible

The recovering authority — département, State, or social security body — has broad discretionary power over whether to pursue recovery, the amount to claim, and the timing. Recovery is never automatic. Factors taken into account include the financial situation of the heirs, the nature of the assets, and equity considerations. In practice, départements frequently grant partial remissions or payment facilities. Heirs who receive a recovery notice should engage with the authority promptly and consider requesting a reduction or deferral before the case reaches the tribunal. Legal advice before responding to a recovery notice is strongly recommended.

Summary: Practical Checklist for Heirs Facing a Recovery Claim
Identify the benefit type: RSA, PCH, ACTP and ASI are never recoverable. APA is only recoverable on retour à meilleure fortune (not on succession). Residential care fees (elderly) are recoverable through all five channels.
Check the net estate threshold: for ASD and forfait journalier, recovery requires net estate >€46,000 and assistance >€760. For Aspa, recovery requires net estate >€39,000. Calculate the net estate correctly (after debts).
Identify protected heirs: for residential care fees for disabled persons and home-based care for the disabled, children, the spouse, parents, and persons who exercised effective and continuous care are protected against recovery on succession.
Check prior donations: the 10-year look-back on donations means gifts made up to 10 years before the assistance application may be exposed. All forms of donation are covered, including disguised and indirect gifts made by the beneficiary themselves.
Aspa surviving spouse: recovery against the surviving spouse (or concubin/PACS partner) may be deferred until their own death. Request the deferral expressly — it is not automatic.
Respond promptly: prescription is five years from the triggering event. A mandatory administrative appeal or commission de recours amiable must precede any court proceedings. Engaging early with the authority often results in a partial remission or favourable payment terms.
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Legal Notice. This article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. The Aspa thresholds (€39,000 / €100,000) and the ASD/forfait journalier thresholds (€46,000 / €760) are subject to periodic revision and should be verified at the time of the relevant death. Recovery practices vary between départements. Always consult a qualified French lawyer before responding to a recovery notice or making estate planning decisions in anticipation of long-term care needs.