Key Points: How France Taxes Foreign Trusts
France does not recognise trusts in civil law but taxes them through a specific fiscal framework (Loi 2011-900, CGI Art. 792-0 bis). The framework applies to any arrangement meeting the French fiscal definition — regardless of label — including certain Liechtenstein foundations, Swiss stiftungen, and similar vehicles.
Trust assets are deemed to remain in the settlor’s patrimony for IFI and succession duty, applying transparency: the settlor (or a “deemed settlor” beneficiary) is taxed as if they owned the assets directly.
Distributions from a foreign trust to a French resident are taxed as capital income (CGI Art. 120, 9°) subject to the 30% flat tax (PFU). The underlying income type is irrelevant. The 40% dividend abatement does not apply.
At the settlor’s death, trust assets are taxed either at standard succession/gift duty rates (by kinship) where a clear transfer can be established, or at 45% (descendants) or 60% (others) as sui generis death duty where the transmission cannot be so characterised.
The trustee must file an annual declaration (form 2181-TRUST2) by 15 June each year if the trust has any French connection. Failure to file: €20,000 automatic fine + 80% surcharge on any tax due. The administration has a ten-year right of review where declarations have not been met.
The French fiducie (C. civ. Art. 2011) is a contractual mechanism valid for security and management purposes — but expressly prohibited for gratuitous transfers. It terminates on the settlor’s death and cannot replace a trust for wealth transmission.

What a Trust Is and How France Views It

A trust is a legal arrangement in which a person (the settlor) transfers assets to another person (the trustee) to be held and managed for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries and ultimately distributed to a capital beneficiary. The key feature for French lawyers is the split of ownership: the trustee has legal title; the beneficiary has the beneficial interest. This split is entirely foreign to French civil law, which requires every asset to have a single owner.

French courts recognise the validity of foreign trusts constituted abroad, provided they comply with the law of the country in which they were created and do not violate French ordre public — in particular, they cannot override the réserve héréditaire (forced heirship rules) where French succession law applies. A trust that tries to disinherit a French reserved heir through a charitable trust will be set aside to the extent of the reserved share.

For tax purposes, the 2011 reform created an entirely autonomous fiscal framework. The CGI Art. 792-0 bis definition covers all arrangements meeting the essential criteria — assets under a trustee’s control for the benefit of beneficiaries — regardless of label. This means certain Liechtenstein foundations, Swiss stiftungen, and similar non-trust vehicles with trust-like characteristics can fall within the French fiscal definition.

ℹ️
Three Trust Scenarios That Concern French Residents

French residents encounter three trust scenarios: (1) a French resident receives distributions from a foreign trust established by a non-resident; (2) a French resident is the settlor or beneficiary of an offshore trust holding assets outside France; (3) a non-resident has placed French-situs assets (French real estate, French securities) in a foreign trust. Each scenario has different French tax consequences. The core principle throughout is that France taxes as if the settlor never lost ownership.

Income Tax: Trust Distributions to French Residents

Distributions from a foreign trust to a French resident beneficiary are taxed as capital income (CGI Art. 120, 9°) — specifically, as income from foreign securities and similar placements. The characterisation of the underlying trust income (rent, dividends, interest, capital gains) is irrelevant: everything distributed by a trust to a French resident beneficiary is treated as revenus de capitaux mobiliers at the trust level.

Since 2018, these distributions fall within the PFU (flat tax) at a total rate of 30% (12.8% income tax + 17.2% social charges), or at the progressive income tax rate on global opt-in. The 40% dividend abatement does not apply. There is no 8-year abatement or taper. The distribution must be declared on the annual income tax return.

One nuance: where a French-US arrangement applies, the administration has accepted a transparency approach for simple trusts (which distribute income as earned), meaning the nature of the underlying income is preserved at the beneficiary level and treaty treatment of the specific income type applies. For complex/discretionary trusts, the same transparency principle applies but the US tax paid at distribution is credited against French tax. For grantor trusts (revocable), the administration treats the income as the settlor’s, not the beneficiary’s, since the settlor never truly divested.

Accumulated Income: CGI Art. 123 bis

Where a French resident holds rights in a trust that accumulates income rather than distributing it, CGI Art. 123 bis may apply. Since 2022, the 10% minimum holding threshold required for Art. 123 bis is presumed satisfied by the settlor or deemed-settlor beneficiary; only genuine evidence of the contrary rebuts this presumption — and the irrevocable, discretionary nature of the trust alone is not sufficient rebuttal.

Succession and Gift Duty

The 2011 framework created two parallel regimes for trust transmissions, depending on whether the transmission can be characterised as an ordinary donation or succession.

Where the Transmission Is a Donation or Succession

When assets leave the trust and are clearly transferred to beneficiaries in a way that can be characterised as a donation or succession, the assets are taxed at standard succession or gift duty rates based on the kinship between the settlor and the beneficiary, with the same abatements and tariffs that would apply to a direct transfer. The trust’s assets are added to the rest of the succession for progressive rate purposes. This is the preferred route where the trust structure permits a clear qualification.

Where the Transmission Cannot Be So Characterised: Sui Generis Rates

Where the trust is irrevocable and discretionary and the settlor has effectively divested, but the transmission does not fit neatly as a donation or succession, a sui generis death duty applies at the settlor’s death (CGI Art. 792-0 bis, II):

Situation at date of death Rate
Beneficiary’s share is identified and the beneficiary is determined Kinship tariff between settlor and beneficiary (standard succession rates)
Assets pass globally to descendants but shares cannot be individually identified 45% (maximum direct line rate, last tranche of CGI Art. 777, Table I)
All other cases: assets remain in trust, pass to non-descendants, or no individual allocation 60% (maximum rate for non-lineal/non-relatives, last tranche of CGI Art. 777, Table III)
Trust constituted after 11 May 2011 by a French-resident settlor, or trustee in an ETNC 60% in all cases regardless of beneficiary kinship

The trustee is primarily liable to pay these duties. If the trustee is based in an ETNC country or a jurisdiction without a mutual assistance treaty with France, the beneficiaries are jointly and severally liable. Successive transmissions within a trust are handled by deeming each beneficiary who receives trust assets to become a new “deemed settlor” for future transmission purposes.

French courts have consistently held that an irrevocable trust deed where the settlor effectively divested constitutes an indirect donation taking effect at death (Cass. com. 15-5-2007; Cass. com. 6-11-2019; Cass. crim. 6-1-2021 — confirming that failure to declare trust assets in a succession can constitute tax fraud even for trusts characterised as irrevocable and discretionary where actual divestment is disputed).

Where Assets Stay in the Trust After Death

Assets that remain in the trust after the settlor’s death are not a new mutation at the time of their eventual distribution to beneficiaries who were already identified at the last transmission, provided the allocation is unchanged. A distribution to a different person or on different terms triggers gift duty at that point, the first beneficiary being treated as the donor.

IFI: Real Estate Assets in Trust

Real estate assets held in a trust are included in the settlor’s IFI base at their net market value on 1 January each year (CGI Art. 970). The same applies to deemed-settlor beneficiaries after the original settlor’s death. If the trust deed does not specify the allocation between multiple deemed-settlor beneficiaries, the asset is divided equally between them.

Territoriality rules apply: a French-resident settlor is taxed on all trust real estate worldwide; a non-resident settlor is only taxed on French-situs real estate within the trust.

An exception for capacity to pay: the Conseil constitutionnel held that a settlor can challenge IFI inclusion if they can prove the trust assets give them no capacité contributive — but crucially, the irrevocable and discretionary nature of the trust alone is not sufficient proof. Only where the settlor demonstrates it has no access whatsoever to any benefit (pecuniary or non-pecuniary) from the trust assets can the inclusion be challenged.

⚖️
Regulatory Note: IFI Transparency Principle

The IFI transparency rule for trusts (CGI Art. 970) operates as a systemic rule that cannot be rebutted merely by pointing to the irrevocable or discretionary character of the trust. The administration consistently treats the settlor or deemed-settlor beneficiary as the full IFI taxpayer on trust real estate. The only effective rebuttal requires concrete evidence of total absence of any benefit — a high threshold in practice.

The Specific Trust Levy (CGI Art. 990 J)

The specific trust levy is a substitute for IFI where the settlor (or deemed-settlor beneficiary) fails to declare trust real estate assets for IFI purposes. It applies at the highest IFI rate (currently 1.5%) on the net fair market value of all IFI-eligible assets in the trust on 1 January, with no IFI threshold and broader scope than IFI itself — exemptions for business property, woodlands, etc. do not apply. The levy is paid by the trustee by 15 June each year. The levy and IFI do not cumulate: if the trust assets have been properly declared for IFI, the levy is not due.

Conventions fiscales do not in principle protect against the specific levy, according to the administration, although the Paris Court of Appeal held otherwise in a Canadian trust case in 2023 (CA Paris 6-2-2023 n° 21/10189), finding the trust qualified as a “person” under the France-Canada treaty.

Mandatory Declarations: What Must Be Filed and When

The declaration obligation is triggered by any French connection, broadly defined. The trustee must file where: the settlor, any deemed-settlor beneficiary, or any beneficiary is French tax resident; the trust holds any French-situs asset (not limited to real estate); the trustee itself is French tax resident (even with no other French connection); or a non-EU trustee acquires French real estate or enters a business relationship in France.

Declaration Forms and Deadlines
Form 2181-TRUST1 Within 1 month of creation, modification, or termination of trust
Form 2181-TRUST2 By 15 June each year — composition and fair market value of assets on 1 January
Scope (French resident settlor) Worldwide trust assets
Scope (non-resident settlor) French-situs assets only
Filing address Recette des non-résidents, 10 rue du Centre, TSA 50014, 93465 Noisy-le-Grand Cedex
Penalty for non-filing €20,000 automatic fine + 80% surcharge on any IFI due
Administration review period 10 years where declarations have not been met (LPF Art. L 169, L 181-0 A)
⚠️
Warning: Non-Compliance Carries Criminal Risk

The Cour de cassation’s criminal chamber confirmed in 2021 (Cass. crim. 6-1-2021) that failure to declare trust assets in a succession — even for a trust characterised as irrevocable and discretionary — can constitute the offence of tax fraud (fraude fiscale) where the settlor did not effectively divest. The civil and fiscal qualification of the trust is not determinative for criminal purposes.

The 3% Annual Property Tax

Any legal entity (including entities without legal personality, such as trusts) that directly or indirectly owns real estate in France owes an annual 3% tax on the market value of that property (CGI Art. 990 D). Numerous exemptions apply — in practice the tax only bites entities in non-cooperative tax jurisdictions or those that fail to disclose beneficial ownership. The trustee can benefit from exemptions on condition of proper disclosure. The administration treats trusts as located in the jurisdiction of the law governing them for the purpose of the location criterion in the exemptions.

The French Fiducie: What It Is and What It Cannot Do

The fiducie (C. civ. Art. 2011 et seq.) was introduced in 2007 and extended to natural persons in 2009. It is a contractual mechanism by which a transferor (constituant) transfers assets to a fiduciary (fiduciaire) to be managed for a specified purpose for the benefit of designated beneficiaries, with the transferred assets forming a separate patrimony — distinct from the fiduciary’s personal estate. This adopts the concept of patrimoine d’affectation (dedicated patrimony), previously unknown in French law.

The critical limitation: a fiducie constituted for the purpose of a gratuitous transfer is absolutely null (C. civ. Art. 2013). The fiducie cannot be used as a succession-planning tool, a substitute for a will, or a mechanism for reducing succession duty. It is reserved for:

  • Fiducie-gestion: management of assets (financial portfolios, business assets) where the transferor wants professional fiduciary management with clear separation of the asset pool.
  • Fiducie-sûreté: security for creditors — assets are transferred to the fiduciary as security for a debt, with the fiduciary keeping or selling the assets in case of default. This has become an important tool in French secured finance.

Permitted fiduciaries are restricted: credit institutions, investment firms, insurance companies, and (since 2009) lawyers. Both the transferor and the fiduciary must be residents of the EU or a country with a French tax treaty containing an anti-fraud assistance clause. The contract must be written, registered within one month at the tax office of the fiduciary’s seat, and published at the land registry if it covers real estate. Duration: up to 99 years. The fiducie terminates automatically on the death of an individual settlor (except a fiducie-sûreté which survives death of the individual settlor).

For IFI purposes, assets transferred to a fiducie remain in the constituent’s patrimony (CGI Art. 969) — as though they never left. For income tax, the regime is one of fiscal neutrality: the creation of the fiducie does not trigger realisation of gains; the fiduciary’s income is taxed in the constituent’s hands as if the assets were held directly.

💡
Fiducie vs Trust: The Essential Difference

The fiducie cannot replace a trust for wealth transmission purposes. It terminates on the settlor’s death (unlike a trust), cannot be used for gratuitous transfers, and cannot stretch across generations. A French resident who holds assets through an Anglo-American trust is subject to the CGI Art. 792-0 bis fiscal framework, not the fiducie rules. The two regimes are entirely separate — using a French fiducie does not insulate a trust from the 2011 fiscal framework.

Summary: Compliance Checklist for Trust Connections with France
Does any French connection exist? French-resident settlor, beneficiary or trustee; or French-situs assets in the trust. If yes, form 2181-TRUST1 (on creation/change) and form 2181-TRUST2 (annually by 15 June) must be filed.
IFI exposure: if the trust holds French real estate (or worldwide real estate for a French-resident settlor), the settlor is taxed on the full value at 1 January. The irrevocable/discretionary character of the trust is not a valid defence against IFI inclusion.
Specific trust levy: if trust real estate has not been declared for IFI, the 1.5% specific levy applies with no threshold and no standard IFI exemptions. The trustee pays by 15 June each year.
Succession planning: if trust assets cannot be clearly characterised as passing by donation or succession, expect 45% or 60% sui generis death duty at the settlor’s death. Trusts constituted after 11 May 2011 by French-resident settlors always face 60%, regardless of beneficiary kinship.
Accumulated income: if the trust accumulates income rather than distributing it, CGI Art. 123 bis may apply — the 10% holding threshold is now presumed satisfied for the settlor and deemed-settlor beneficiaries since 2022.
Criminal risk: failure to declare trust assets in a succession can constitute tax fraud under French criminal law, even for trusts that are legally irrevocable and discretionary. Non-compliance creates both fiscal and criminal exposure.
Do You Have a Foreign Trust With French Connections?

Our French law practice advises trustees, settlors and beneficiaries on CGI Art. 792-0 bis compliance, declaration obligations, IFI exposure, succession planning for trust assets and cross-border estate structuring.

Book a Consultation

Legal Notice. This article is provided for general information and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. The French fiscal treatment of trusts is complex, fact-specific and subject to ongoing case law development. Always consult a qualified French tax lawyer before making decisions affecting trust structures with French connections.