Exceptional-Size Devices: What the Term Means
The Code de l'environnement does not provide an explicit definition of a dispositif publicitaire de dimensions exceptionnelles. The definition is implied by the structure of Article R 581-56 and elaborated in the ministerial guidance: these are advertising devices whose surface area, height, or width exceeds what is authorised by the national regulations or by the applicable Local Advertising Plan for the type of support used — whether luminous or non-luminous, ground-mounted or wall-mounted, bâche or panel.
The threshold is therefore relative, not absolute. A device that would be standard-sized under the national rules but exceeds a stricter RLP limit qualifies as exceptional-size in that agglomération. Conversely, a device that exceeds the national limits in an agglomération without an RLP is exceptional-size by national standard. In every case, the device's dimensions must be compared against the applicable rule for its specific support type before the exceptional-size classification can be applied.
The Essential Condition: A Temporary Event
Exceptional-size devices are not a general derogation from the size rules. Article L 581-9, al. 2 and Article R 581-56 allow the mayor to authorise them, but only where the device is linked to a temporary event (manifestations temporaires). A permanent oversized billboard linked to a retailer's brand identity cannot be authorised as an exceptional-size device. The event link is substantive, not formal: the device must announce or promote an event that has a defined start and end, and the authorisation period must be calibrated accordingly.
Exceptional-size devices are subject to a regime that partially derogates from the general advertising rules. Notably, the density rules that limit the number of panels per plot frontage do not apply to them. However, the location prohibitions (absolute bans on listed monuments, trees, utility poles, and the other locations in Arts. R 581-22 and R 581-23) continue to apply in full. The derogation expands what is permitted dimensionally; it does not lift the geographic prohibitions.
Where Exceptional-Size Devices Are Banned
Even with mayoral authorisation, exceptional-size devices cannot be installed in certain locations. These prohibitions are absolute and cannot be overridden by the individual authorisation procedure.
Absolute Location Prohibitions
Exceptional-size devices are prohibited in all the locations enumerated in Articles R 581-22 and R 581-23 (Art. R 581-56, al. 5). These are the same absolute prohibitions that apply to all advertising: listed monuments, buildings designated for protection, natural monuments, classified natural sites, national park core zones, nature reserves, trees, utility poles, public transport infrastructure, non-blind walls, non-opaque fences, cemetery walls, and public garden walls.
Agglomerations Under 10,000 Inhabitants
Exceptional-size devices are prohibited inside agglomérations of fewer than 10,000 inhabitants (Art. R 581-56, al. 1), whether the device is luminous or not. As with bâches, this prohibition is broader than the illuminated advertising ban: the cross-reference to Article R 581-34, I-al. 2 (which would only restrict luminous devices in small agglomérations not forming part of a large urban unit) is overridden by the more restrictive explicit ban in Article R 581-56, al. 1.
Visibility from Motorways and Express Roads
Exceptional-size devices are also prohibited where the advertising would be visible from a motorway, motorway slip road, express road, bypass, or an out-of-agglomération public road (Art. R 581-56, al. 2, cross-referencing Art. R 418-7 of the Code de la route):
- In agglomérations: if the device is visible from a motorway or express road and is installed within 40 metres of the outer edge of the carriageway — unless the road police authority has granted specific authorisation
- Outside agglomérations: if visible from a motorway or express road and within 200 metres of the outer edge of the carriageway
Additional Prohibitions for Ground-Mounted Devices
A non-luminous exceptional-size device that is ground-mounted cannot be installed in the prohibited locations for ground-mounted devices (Art. R 581-56, al. 5, cross-referencing Arts. R 581-30 and R 581-33): no classified woodland, no PLU-designated protected zones, no agglomérations under 10,000 inhabitants (already covered above), no sole visibility from a motorway or express road; and a minimum 10-metre setback from residential windows on adjacent plots and a half-height setback from separating property boundaries.
A non-luminous wall-mounted exceptional-size device may not be installed within 0.50 metres of ground level, and may not be installed on a wall where existing advertising has not been removed (unless it consists of painted advertisements of artistic, historical, or picturesque interest) (Art. R 581-56, al. 5, cross-referencing Arts. R 581-27 and R 581-29).
Technical Rules for Exceptional-Size Devices
Luminous Exceptional-Size Devices
Where the exceptional-size device is illuminated, it must comply with the full illuminated advertising technical rules (Art. R 581-56, al. 5, cross-referencing Art. R 581-34, I-al. 4, Art. R 581-35, Arts. R 581-36 and R 581-37):
- The positioning rules for illuminated advertising: no window coverage, no overflow beyond the wall, no balcony railings, no fences; parallel-to-wall plane requirement
- The luminance and energy efficiency norms set by ministerial order
- The night-time extinction obligation between 1am and 6am
The Digital Surface Cap: 50 m²
Where the exceptional-size device carries digital advertising, its surface area may not exceed 50 m² (Art. R 581-56, al. 4). This is a specific dimensional cap that applies to the digital content component of an exceptional-size device, sitting alongside whatever overall dimensional excess the mayor has authorised. A device can be exceptional in its total dimensions but its digital display surface cannot exceed 50 m².
The Ambient-Light Gradation Requirement for Digital Exceptional-Size Devices
Where a digital exceptional-size device is installed inside an agglomération, or outside an agglomération on the grounds of airports, railway stations, or sports venues with at least 15,000 seats, it must be equipped with a system that automatically adapts the screen's luminance to ambient light levels (Art. R 581-56, al. 5, cross-referencing Art. R 581-41, III). The gradation must be automatic and responsive to real-time ambient conditions, not a pre-programmed schedule.
The Installation Window: One Month In, Fifteen Days Out
The temporal constraints on exceptional-size devices are among the most precisely defined rules in the French outdoor advertising regime. Article R 581-56, al. 3 establishes a strict and non-extendable installation window:
Earliest installation: one month before the event
The device may not be installed more than one month before the start date of the temporary event it announces or promotes. Any installation before this point is unlawful regardless of the authorisation.
The temporary event takes place
The device is on display during the event period. This is the core justification for its installation — without the event, there is no right to display.
Latest removal: fifteen days after the event ends
The device must be removed no later than fifteen days after the end of the event. Continued display beyond this date is an offence even if the mayoral authorisation has not yet expired.
The practical effect is a maximum installation period of approximately six weeks for events of zero duration, and longer for events of extended duration — but always with the hard outer boundary of the fifteen-day post-event deadline. An operator who leaves an exceptional-size device in place after the fifteen-day grace period has elapsed is in violation of the advertising rules, regardless of whether the authorisation document specifies a later end date.
Authorisation Procedure and Mandatory Mentions
Every exceptional-size device requires prior mayoral authorisation, granted case by case under Article L 581-9, al. 2. This is a substantive individual authorisation, not a deemed-approval procedure. The mayor retains full discretion to refuse, to impose conditions, or to limit the authorised dimensions to something less than what was requested.
Mandatory Mentions
The following information must be displayed on the device itself in a manner visible from the public road throughout the entire period of use (Art. R 581-21, IV):
- The date and number of the municipal order (arrêté municipal) granting the location authorisation
- The indication of the authorised advertising surfaces
These mentions serve a transparency and enforcement function. Any person — a resident, a competitor, or an authority — must be able to verify by inspection of the device that it is authorised and that its dimensions correspond to those in the order.
Reduced-Format Advertising: Microaffichage on Commercial Shopfronts
At the other extreme of the size spectrum, French advertising law provides a specific framework for small-format advertising displays (microaffichage) on commercial shopfronts. The regime is set out in Article L 581-8, III and Article R 581-57, but the wording of Article R 581-57 is ambiguous and gives rise to two interpretive difficulties that have not been conclusively resolved by the courts.
What Microaffichage Is
Articles L 581-8, III and R 581-57 address microaffichage only in the context of devices integrated into a commercial shopfront or the frontage of an establishment that has temporarily or permanently ceased its activity. The devanture (shopfront) encompasses the facade wall, the shop window, and the door.
An important content distinction determines whether a small device on a shopfront is governed by the microaffichage regime at all. According to the ministerial technical notice and practical guide of 2014, the microaffichage regime applies specifically to advertising that does not relate to the activity carried out on the premises where it is displayed. If the small display does relate to the activity of the occupant — for example, promotional displays for magazines in a press distributor's window — it is assimilated to a shop sign (enseigne) rather than advertising and falls outside the microaffichage framework entirely.
The Interpretive Difficulty: Two Incoherences in Article R 581-57
There are two internal incoherences in Article R 581-57 that warrant careful attention:
First incoherence: Article R 581-57, al. 2 cross-references Article R 581-22, which prohibits advertising on building walls unless they are blind or have only small openings. But a commercial shopfront almost never satisfies those wall criteria — it typically has windows and a door. Taking the cross-reference literally would in practice prohibit microaffichage on shopfronts that Article L 581-8, III expressly permits.
Second incoherence: Article R 581-57, al. 2 also cross-references Articles R 581-30 and R 581-33, which govern ground-mounted devices. But microaffichage is by definition affixed to a shopfront, not installed on the ground. Those provisions are structurally inapplicable.
The conclusion — confirmed by the ministerial notice of 25 March 2014, the practical guide of 9 May 2014, and the official declaration form (Cerfa n° 14799) — is that Article R 581-57 creates a specific regime for microaffichage on commercial shopfronts only, and that the incoherent cross-references in al. 2 should be read as not applicable to microaffichage.
The Size Rules for Non-Luminous Microaffichage
Reduced-format devices may be affixed to a commercial shopfront provided they satisfy the following cumulative conditions (Art. R 581-57, al. 1):
- Each individual panel has a surface area of less than 1 m²
- The cumulative surface area of all microaffichage panels on a given shopfront does not exceed one tenth of the shopfront's surface and does not exceed 2 m² in absolute terms
Both the per-panel limit and the cumulative cap apply simultaneously. A shopfront with ten 0.9 m² panels would have panels individually below the 1 m² threshold, but their cumulative 9 m² would far exceed the 2 m² absolute cap. Conversely, a shopfront of only 5 m² total surface area could only accommodate up to 0.50 m² of cumulative microaffichage (one tenth of 5 m²) even if the absolute 2 m² cap would theoretically allow more.
The 0.25-Metre Projection Rule Does Not Apply
One commercially useful feature of the microaffichage regime is that Article R 581-57 does not cross-reference Article R 581-28, which ordinarily limits wall-mounted advertising to a projection of no more than 0.25 metres from the supporting wall. Non-luminous microaffichage may therefore be perpendicular to the supporting wall, even if the projection exceeds 0.25 metres. This flexibility accommodates blade signs, perpendicular window displays, and similar formats that are commercially common on shopfronts.
Luminous Microaffichage
Where microaffichage is illuminated, it must comply with the illuminated advertising rules (Art. R 581-57, al. 2, cross-referencing Arts. R 581-34, R 581-35, R 581-36, and R 581-37) and, if digital, the digital advertising requirements of Article R 581-41. The practical consequences are:
- Luminous microaffichage is banned in agglomérations of fewer than 10,000 inhabitants not forming part of an urban unit over 100,000 (Art. R 581-34, I-al. 2)
- It is subject to luminance and energy efficiency norms set by ministerial order (Art. R 581-34, III)
- It is subject to night-time extinction between 1am and 6am (Art. R 581-35)
- It is prohibited on windows (baies) and must be positioned in accordance with the illuminated advertising rules (Arts. R 581-36 and R 581-27)
- Digital microaffichage must be equipped with an ambient-light gradation system (Art. R 581-41, III)
Prior Declaration for Microaffichage?
A declaration is not required for posters affixed directly to a shop window — these are not "devices or materials" in the sense of the provision; they are simply advertisements applied to an existing surface. Where a physical support structure is involved, however, the declaration requirement may be engaged, and operators should verify with the relevant municipality.
The Two Regimes at a Glance
| Rule / requirement | Exceptional-size devices (Art. R 581-56) | Microaffichage on shopfronts (Art. R 581-57) |
|---|---|---|
| What it covers | Any device exceeding national or RLP size limits for its support type | Small-format panels on commercial shopfronts, not relating to the occupant's activity |
| Essential condition | Linked to a temporary event | Integrated into or affixed to a commercial devanture |
| Size limits | Determined by the mayoral authorisation; digital content capped at 50 m² | < 1 m² per panel; cumulative max. one tenth of shopfront and max. 2 m² |
| Density rules | Exempt — density rules do not apply | Not addressed — specific per-panel and cumulative caps apply instead |
| Banned in agglom. <10,000 inhab.? | Yes — regardless of luminosity | Luminous versions banned; non-luminous arguably permitted |
| Motorway/express road visibility | Prohibited (40 m / 200 m zones) | Not specifically addressed |
| Installation duration | From 1 month before to 15 days after the event | Not limited by regulation |
| Mandatory visible mentions | Date/number of arrêté municipal and authorised advertising surfaces (Art. R 581-21, IV) | None specified |
| Prior authorisation from mayor? | Yes — case by case, Art. L 581-9, al. 2 | Not required for posters on window; verify for structured supports |
| 0.25 m wall projection rule? | Applies to luminous versions | Does NOT apply — microaffichage may project perpendicularly |
| Luminous version: extinction 1am–6am? | Yes | Yes |
| Digital version: gradation required? | Yes — where in agglom. or at airports/stations/sports venues | Yes |
Both the exceptional-size device regime and the microaffichage framework sit at the margins of the standard advertising rules — which is precisely where the regulatory analysis tends to be most demanding. Our team provides clear, actionable advice on every dimension of the French outdoor advertising regime.
Book a ConsultationThis article is for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Legal advice should be sought for any installation in a borderline situation. Legal references are correct to the best of the author's knowledge as of the date of publication.
Get Advice
Contracting with a French Party?
We advise sellers and buyers on French sales law, warranties, retention of title and cross-border terms. Speak to our team.
Get Legal AdviceKey Legal References
Exceptional-size devices — authorisation power
Exceptional-size devices — full technical regime, bans, installation window
Mandatory mentions on exceptional-size devices — arrêté date/number and surfaces
Microaffichage on commercial shopfronts — legislative authority
Microaffichage on commercial shopfronts — size rules and prohibitions
Absolute location prohibitions (apply to exceptional-size devices)
Motorway visibility prohibition — 200 m zone
Non-luminous wall-mounted positioning rules
0.25 m wall projection limit (does NOT apply to microaffichage)
Ground-mounted device prohibited locations and setbacks
Illuminated advertising rules applicable to luminous exceptional-size devices and luminous microaffichage
Digital gradation requirement — ambient-light adaptation system
Digital surface cap 50 m² for digital exceptional-size devices
