Economic Life Simplification Bill Increases Merger Control Thresholds
Summary
The French National Assembly and Senate adopted the Economic Life Simplification Bill on April 14-15, 2026. Article 8 increases merger control thresholds under Article L. 430-2 of the Commercial Code, reducing the administrative burden on companies by exempting 20-30% of transactions from notification requirements. The change would have affected approximately 800 companies over the 2018-2022 period, including many SMEs. New thresholds enter into force on the first day of the fourth month following promulgation, subject to Constitutional Council validation.
What changed
Article 8 of the Economic Life Simplification Bill revises thresholds under Article L. 430-2 of the French Commercial Code. The thresholds, unchanged since 2004/2008, will increase in proportion to cumulative inflation (~40%) and GDP growth (~65%) since their introduction. Approximately 20-30% of currently notifiable transactions will become exempt. The Autorité retains a targeted call-in power for problematic mergers below the new thresholds. Overseas territory thresholds remain unchanged.
Companies considering mergers, particularly SMEs, should assess whether transactions may fall below the revised thresholds once effective. Legal and compliance teams should monitor the Constitutional Council ruling and promulgation timeline. Transactions completed after the effective date may benefit from the new thresholds. The change reduces regulatory costs but maintains scrutiny of the most problematic mergers.
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Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Adoption of the Economic Life Simplification Bill: the Autorité de la concurrence welcomes the increase in the merger control thresholds
Published on April 16, 2026
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Background
On 14 and 15 April 2026, the National Assembly (Assemblée nationale) and the Senate (Sénat) adopted the Economic Life Simplification Bill. Article 8 provides for an increase in the thresholds triggering merger control review by the Autorité de la concurrence, with the exception of those applicable to the French overseas territories, which remain unchanged. The increase is intended to reduce the administrative burden on companies, while enabling a more efficient allocation of the Autorité ’s resources, following several years of significant growth in the number of cases reviewed by the Autorité.
A simplification of merger control, which the Autorité has called for
Article 8 of the Economic Life Simplification Bill is the result of close collaboration with the French government to strike a balance between reducing the burden on companies, in particular SMEs, and the need to review merger transactions in the interests of consumers.
Merger control has been based, since 2004, on general thresholds and, since 2008, on additional thresholds specific to the retail sector and the French overseas territories.
These thresholds have remained unchanged since their introduction, despite significant changes in the economic environment. By December 2023, before the Bill was tabled in the Senate, cumulative inflation had reached nearly 40%, while cumulative growth in French nominal GDP stood at 65%. This trend reflects a corresponding increase in the average turnover of companies operating in France.
As a result, the absence of any revision of the thresholds has mechanically lowered their relative level and contributed to a significant increase in the number of transactions notified to the Autorité de la concurrence, which has progressively allocated growing resources to reviewing transactions that, in many cases, do not raise competition concerns. Between 2010 and 2025, the number of transactions notified rose by 59%.
Under Article 8 of the Bill, the thresholds set out in Article L. 430-2 of the French Commercial Code (Code de commerce) will be revised as follows:
The specific thresholds applicable to mergers in one or more overseas départements, in the département-région of Mayotte, in the islands of Wallis and Futuna and in the overseas collectivities of Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy remain unchanged. The Autorité will therefore continue to apply a high level of scrutiny in these territories, where concentration issues and the high cost of living require particular vigilance.
Positive impacts for both companies and the Autorité
Under the revised thresholds, around 20-30% of the transactions currently subject to notification will no longer be notifiable, reducing the administrative burden on companies. Over the period 2018-2022, this simplification would have affected around 800 companies, including many SMEs, which would not have been required to notify their merger transactions to the Autorité.
Moreover, the increase in the thresholds will enable the Autorité to allocate its resources more effectively, focusing on the most problematic mergers, the review of predatory acquisitions, and major transactions referred for examination by the European Commission.
Alongside the increase in the notification thresholds, the Autorité is continuing its work to introduce a targeted call-in power for reviewing potentially problematic mergers falling below the revised thresholds, while minimising legal uncertainty for companies.
Entry into force of the new merger control thresholds
Subject to validation of the Bill by the Constitutional Council (Conseil constitutionnel) and its promulgation by the President of the Republic, the new merger control thresholds provided for in Article 8 of the Bill will enter into force on the first day of the fourth month following the publication of the Bill. The new thresholds will therefore apply to merger transactions notified to the Autorité de la concurrence as from the date of entry into force of the aforementioned Article 8.
Contact(s)
Nicola Crawford Communications Officer +33155040151 Contact us by e-mail Print the page
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