⬅️ Trading taxation in France

Tax · Company · IS · France

Trading in a company subject to corporate income tax (IS) — rates, parent-subsidiary regime & participating interests

Running a trading activity in a company subject to corporate income tax (société à l'IS): rates of 15 % / 25 %, gains taxed through the IS result (not PFU), parent-subsidiary regime (régime mère-fille) and long-term capital gains — with double taxation on distribution to keep in mind.

📅 Updated: 06/2026 · Basis: CGI, BOI-IS-BASE-20-20-10-20

1Which vehicle for trading through a company?
📋 A company subject to IS, not an SCI:

To run a securities trading activity, the practical choice is a SAS or a SARL subject to corporate income tax (IS, impôt sur les sociétés). The company holds the securities account (compte-titres), collects the gains and taxes them within its result. The profits can then be retained and reinvested within the company, or distributed to shareholders as dividends.
⚠ An SCI is not designed for trading: an SCI (société civile immobilière) is a real-estate civil company, designed to hold and manage real property — not financial securities. Using it to house a securities portfolio is inappropriate both legally and from a tax perspective. For trading, the correct choice is an SAS / SARL subject to IS.
2The IS rate in 2025: 15 % then 25 %

The standard IS rate is 25 %. A reduced rate of 15 % applies to the profit tranche up to 42 500 €, but only if all of the conditions below are met.

Profit tranche IS rate Conditions
Up to 42 500 € 15 % Subject to cumulative conditions (see below)
Above 42 500 € 25 % Standard rate, no conditions
⚠ Cumulative conditions for the 15 % rate:
  • pre-tax revenue below 10 M€;
  • fully paid-up share capital;
  • capital held at least 75 % by natural persons (or by a company that itself meets this criterion).
If any single condition is not met, the entire profit is taxed at 25 %.
3Trading gains: included in IS result, not PFU

In a company, current trading gains — on securities, derivatives and crypto-assets recorded on the balance sheet — are included in the IS taxable result. They are taxed at 15 % / 25 % depending on the tranche, and not at the PFU rate: the flat tax is reserved for individuals.

Example — 60 000 € trading gains in an SAS eligible for the reduced rate

Trading profit for the financial yearnet gains included in the IS result60 000 €
IS at 15 %on the tranche up to 42 500 €6 375 €
IS at 25 %on the 17 500 € above 42 500 €4 375 €
Total ISi.e. ≈ 17,9 % of profit — can be retained within the company10 750 €
💡 The advantage is deferral: as long as the after-IS profit remains in the company, it can be reinvested without additional personal taxation. This is a compounding effect — provided you do not need to withdraw the gains personally (see section 5 on distribution).
4Participating interests & parent-subsidiary regime

Two preferential regimes apply to strategic holdings — not to ordinary trading. They are essential in a holding company context, but generally do not apply to an actively managed portfolio of investment securities.

Long-term capital gains on participating interests (titres de participation, holding period ≥ 2 years)

"0 %" regime: the capital gain on participating interests (titres de participation) held for at least 2 years is exempt, but an expenses add-back (quote-part de frais et charges) of 12 % of the gross gain is added back and taxed at the standard rate → effective charge of approximately 3 % (BOI-IS-BASE-20-20-10-20, 03.04.2024).
⚠ Not for a trading portfolio: this regime covers only genuine participating interests (titres de participation) (durable holding with strategic purpose). An ordinary trading portfolio qualifies as investment securities (titres de placement) and remains taxed within the ordinary IS result (15 % / 25 %).

Parent-subsidiary regime (régime mère-fille) on dividends

Dividends received from a subsidiary are 95 % exempt: only an add-back of 5 % is included in the taxable result. Conditions: holding of at least 5 % of the share capital and voting rights and a commitment to retain the shares for 2 years.
💡 Disposal of shares on the manager's retirement: a fixed allowance of 500 000 € (art. 150-0 D ter) may, depending on the situation, apply to the manager disposing of their shares — subject to conditions (holding period, company size, etc.). This point must be verified case by case with an accountant (expert-comptable), as it only reduces the income tax assessment base.
5Individual (securities account) vs. company subject to IS

A company is not "always better". It accumulates efficiently at the IS rate, but adds a second layer of taxation on distribution. The table compares both approaches.

Criterion Individual (compte-titres ordinaire) Company subject to IS (SAS / SARL)
Taxation of trading gains PFU 30 % / 31,4 % — immediate taxation IS 15 % (≤ 42 500 €) then 25 % — in the result
Capitalisation / deferral Taxed on each disposal Deferral possible as long as gains are not distributed
Dividends received from subsidiaries PFU on the dividend Parent-subsidiary regime: 95 % exempt (add-back 5 %)
Long-term capital gains on participating interests (≥ 2 years) Not applicable Add-back 12 % → effective charge ≈ 3 %
Personal withdrawal of gains Already available after PFU Double taxation: IS then PFU on the distributed dividend
⚠ Double taxation on distribution: a trading profit taxed at IS (15 % / 25 %), then distributed as a dividend, is subject in addition to the PFU (30 % / 31,4 %) at the shareholder level. For a trader who withdraws gains each year, the immediate PFU on a personal securities account (compte-titres ordinaire) is often simpler — and sometimes less burdensome overall. A company is primarily justified in a context of long-term capitalisation and reinvestment.

Frequently asked questions

What is the corporate income tax (IS) rate in 2025?

The standard IS rate is 25 %. A reduced rate of 15 % applies to the profit tranche up to 42 500 €, subject to the following cumulative conditions: pre-tax revenue below 10 M€, fully paid-up share capital, and capital held at least 75 % by natural persons (or by a company that itself meets this criterion). Above 42 500 € of profit, the 25 % rate applies.

Are trading gains in a company subject to the PFU?

No. The flat-rate withholding tax (PFU, "flat tax") is reserved for individuals. In a company subject to IS, current trading gains (securities, derivatives, crypto-assets recorded on the balance sheet) are included in the IS taxable result and taxed at 15 % / 25 % depending on the tranche — not at the PFU rate.

Does the "0 %" regime for participating interests (titres de participation) apply to my trading portfolio?

Rarely. The long-term capital gains regime for participating interests (titres de participation) held for at least 2 years exempts the capital gain, but adds back an expenses add-back (quote-part de frais et charges) of 12 % of the gross gain, taxed at the standard rate — resulting in an effective charge of approximately 3 % (BOI-IS-BASE-20-20-10-20). This regime applies only to genuine participating interests (strategic and durable holdings), not an ordinary trading portfolio, which qualifies as investment securities (titres de placement) and remains taxed within the ordinary IS result.

How does the parent-subsidiary regime (régime mère-fille) work?

Dividends paid by a subsidiary to the parent company are 95 % exempt: only an expenses add-back of 5 % is included in the taxable result. Main conditions: holding of at least 5 % of the share capital and voting rights and a commitment to retain the shares for 2 years. This regime avoids the economic double taxation of dividends within a group.

Is an SCI suitable for a trading activity?

No. An SCI (société civile immobilière) is a real-estate civil company — designed for holding and managing real property, not for trading securities. To run a trading activity, an SAS or SARL subject to IS is the appropriate structure in practice. Do not confuse the two: using an SCI for financial instruments is inappropriate both legally and from a tax perspective.

Is a company really more advantageous than a personal securities account (compte-titres ordinaire)?

It depends on your objective. A company subject to IS allows gains to be retained and reinvested at the IS rate of 15 % / 25 % as long as they are not distributed (deferral effect). But upon distribution to shareholders, the dividend is then subject to the PFU (30 % / 31,4 %): this creates double taxation (IS then personal tax). For an individual who withdraws their gains each year, the immediate PFU on a personal securities account is often simpler — and sometimes less burdensome overall. This should be assessed case by case with an accountant (expert-comptable).

For comparison — individual taxationThe PFU (flat tax) — equities & dividendsThe reference regime for a securities account: 30 % / 31,4 %, option for the progressive income tax scale (2OP)Tax filingWhich forms to fill in?2042, 2074, 2086, 2047 and the IFU — the right form for each type of income
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Matthias Sax
Matthias Sax — Active trader & fintech founder
Builds tax tracking tools for traders and knows the trade-off between a personal securities account and a company subject to IS — capitalisation versus double taxation on distribution.

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Education, Not Tax Advice

This content is general education — not tax or legal advice. For binding guidance, consult a qualified tax advisor. As of: 06/2026