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How to Negotiate a Collective Agreement in France: Company‑level Process for Employers & HR

posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to negotiate a collective agreement in France is essential for every employer operating in the country, whether a domestic SME or the French subsidiary of a multinational group. A company‑level agreement, known as an accord d’entreprise, is a legally binding contract negotiated between the employer and trade union representatives (or, in certain cases, elected employee delegates) that sets employment terms often more tailored than those in the applicable sectoral convention. This guide walks HR directors, in‑house counsel and business owners through every stage of the collective agreement process in France: eligibility checks, CSE consultation requirements, the negotiation and signing sequence, filing with the authorities, and the ministerial extension procedure where relevant.

The procedural steps below reflect the position as of June 2026; employers should verify the latest amendments on the Labour practice area or consult a qualified French labour lawyer.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies To

Definition and legal basis

In France, a collective bargaining agreement (convention collective or CBA) is a written agreement negotiated between representative trade union organisations and employers or employer groups. The French Labour Code (Code du travail) establishes the legal framework governing these agreements, distinguishing between two principal types:

  • Sectoral (branch) agreements, negotiated at industry level between employer federations and nationally representative unions. Once extended by ministerial order (arrêté d’extension), they apply to all employers within the sector.
  • Company (enterprise) agreements (accords d’entreprise), negotiated at individual company or group level. These can adapt, supplement or, on many topics since the 2017 Ordonnances Macron, derogate from sectoral conventions, provided they respect mandatory minimums set by statute.

This article focuses on the company‑level accord d’entreprise, which has become the dominant negotiating instrument for employers seeking to tailor working time, remuneration structures, remote‑working policies and organisational changes to their specific operational needs.

When companies choose an accord d’entreprise

Employers typically initiate company‑level negotiations for one or more of the following reasons:

  • Tailoring working conditions. Adapting working‑time arrangements, on‑call schedules or teleworking policies beyond the defaults of the sectoral convention.
  • Restructuring and competitiveness. Negotiating performance or competitiveness agreements (accords de performance collective) that temporarily adjust pay or hours in exchange for job‑preservation commitments.
  • Mandatory periodic negotiations. The Labour Code requires employers with union delegates to open negotiations at prescribed intervals on wages, working time, professional equality and quality of working life.
  • Harmonising terms post‑acquisition. Aligning employment conditions after a merger, transfer of undertaking or group restructuring.

For employers new to the French market, finding labour lawyers in France with collective‑bargaining expertise is an important first step before entering any negotiation.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Negotiating a Collective Agreement in France

Union representativity and who can sign

The Labour Code prescribes strict rules about who may negotiate and validly sign a company agreement. The default negotiation partner on the employee side is the union delegate (délégué syndical, or DS) appointed by a trade union that meets the legal representativity criteria at company level. A union is representative at company level if, among other conditions, it obtained at least 10 % of the votes cast in the first round of the most recent CSE elections.

For a company agreement to be valid, it must be signed by one or more union organisations that together secured at least 50 % of the votes cast in those elections. If signatory unions represent between 30 % and 50 %, the agreement can still enter into force if it is approved by a majority of employees in a referendum organised within two months of signature.

In companies with fewer than 11 employees, the employer may propose a draft agreement directly to staff, subject to approval by a two‑thirds majority in a vote. In companies with 11 to 49 employees without a union delegate, agreements may be negotiated with elected CSE members mandated by a representative union, or with an employee specifically mandated for that purpose. The precise procedural track depends on company size, the presence of elected representatives and the subject matter of the proposed agreement.

CSE consultation requirements and composition thresholds

The Comité Social et Économique (CSE) must be established in every company employing at least 11 employees for 12 consecutive months. While the CSE does not sign the collective agreement itself, its role is critical:

  • Information and consultation. The employer must inform and, where required, formally consult the CSE on matters that affect the organisation of work, employment conditions and health and safety. A company agreement that alters these topics will generally trigger a consultation obligation.
  • Timing. CSE consultation must occur before the agreement is finalised and signed if the agreement’s subject falls within the CSE’s consultation prerogatives. The employer provides the CSE with relevant economic and social data, and the CSE delivers a formal opinion (avis).
  • Expert assistance. The CSE may appoint an expert‑comptable (accountant/economist) to assist with its analysis of economic proposals, at the employer’s expense. This right can extend consultation timelines significantly.

Failure to consult the CSE when legally required can render the resulting agreement vulnerable to challenge before the labour courts.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure: How to Negotiate a Collective Agreement in France

The collective agreement process in France follows a structured sequence. The table below summarises the accord d’entreprise steps, and the numbered sub‑sections that follow provide operational detail.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Preparation: mandate, scope, mapping of applicable CBAs Employer + in‑house counsel / external labour lawyer 1–2 weeks
2. Notify trade unions & CSE and share information pack Employer (HR) Notice issued, then 15–30 days before first meeting
3. CSE consultation and receipt of opinion CSE (employer provides documents) 15–30 days (may extend if expert appointed)
4. Negotiation rounds & drafting provisional text Employer negotiation team + union representatives 2–8 weeks (complexity‑dependent)
5. Signature by parties Employer + qualifying union signatories 1 day (signing meeting)
6. Filing with DREETS / publication Employer or signatories Filing immediate; administrative processing varies
7. Ministerial extension request (if applicable) Social partners (sectoral) → Ministère du Travail Several months (variable)

Step 1, Prepare the internal mandate and map applicable CBAs

Before any contact with unions, the employer’s management or board should formalise a clear negotiation mandate. This internal resolution identifies:

  • The scope of the proposed agreement, which topics will be negotiated (e.g., working time, variable remuneration, telework policy).
  • The negotiation team, typically HR leadership plus any external labour counsel. The mandate letter should specify the team’s authority to commit the employer.
  • Applicable sectoral conventions, each company is covered by one or more conventions collectives identified by their IDCC (identification number). The employer must identify the relevant sectoral provisions that the company agreement will supplement, adapt or derogate from.
  • A negotiation plan and timetable, a provisional schedule of meetings and target completion dates, which will be refined during opening discussions with unions.

This preparatory work is the employer’s internal exercise. It sets the boundaries for negotiation and ensures the team enters discussions with a coherent position. Employers commonly engage external labour counsel at this stage to audit existing CBAs, assess legal risk and draft the initial proposed text. The preparation phase typically takes one to two weeks for a straightforward agreement, longer for complex multi‑site restructurings.

Step 2, Open negotiations and notify unions and the CSE

Once preparation is complete, the employer formally opens the negotiation process by notifying all representative trade union organisations present in the company. The notification should:

  • State the subject matter of the proposed negotiation.
  • Invite each representative union to designate its negotiation delegation.
  • Include (or announce the provision of) a comprehensive information pack covering the economic, financial and social data relevant to the negotiation topics.

Where the agreement’s subject triggers a CSE consultation obligation, the employer must simultaneously inform the CSE and schedule the consultation process. The information pack shared with the CSE typically includes financial data, headcount breakdowns by category, and an assessment of the anticipated impact of the proposed measures. Allow 15 to 30 days between notification and the first bargaining session to give union delegations and the CSE adequate time to review the materials. Compressing this period risks a procedural challenge later.

Step 3, Conduct the CSE consultation

CSE consultation is a mandatory step whenever the proposed company agreement affects the organisation, management or general operation of the business, or working conditions and employment levels. The consultation process follows a specific sequence:

  1. Provide the information. The employer delivers the information pack to the CSE, either through the Base de Données Économiques, Sociales et Environnementales (BDESE) or by direct communication.
  2. Allow adequate review time. The CSE must be given sufficient time to examine the information. The Labour Code sets default consultation deadlines, generally one month from receipt of complete information, extendable to two months if the CSE appoints an expert.
  3. Hold the consultation meeting. The CSE meets, asks questions and debates the proposals. The employer or its representatives must attend to respond to queries.
  4. Receive the formal opinion. The CSE issues a reasoned opinion (avis motivé), which is recorded in the official minutes (procès‑verbal). The opinion is consultative, it does not bind the employer, but failing to obtain it before signing the agreement is a procedural defect.

If the CSE exercises its right to appoint an economic expert (expertise économique), the employer generally bears the cost. This can significantly extend the consultation timeline and should be factored into the negotiation schedule from the outset.

Step 4, Conduct bargaining rounds and draft the agreement text

Negotiation rounds are the substantive heart of the collective agreement process in France. Practical points for employers:

  • Incremental proposals. Experienced negotiators typically table initial proposals that leave room for structured concessions. Each round should narrow the gap and address union counter‑proposals in a documented manner.
  • Record keeping. Minutes of each session should be drafted, ideally by a neutral secretary, and signed by all parties. These records protect the employer in the event of a later dispute about the negotiation’s good faith.
  • Negotiation style. Industry observers note that French union representatives typically expect detailed, logical discussion of each clause. Emotional or high‑pressure tactics tend to be counter‑productive. Presenting concrete data, worked examples and reasoned legal analysis typically yields better results.
  • Provisional text. As consensus emerges, the employer’s counsel consolidates agreed points into a draft agreement text. Circulate the near‑final text to all parties with sufficient time for review before the signing session.

The number of bargaining rounds varies widely, from two or three sessions for a focused single‑topic accord to ten or more for a comprehensive restructuring agreement. Allow two to eight weeks for this phase.

Step 5, Sign, ratify and bring the agreement into force

Signing and filing a collective agreement requires strict compliance with representativity rules. The agreement is validly signed when:

  • The employer (or its authorised representative) signs on the employer side.
  • On the employee side, one or more trade union organisations that together obtained at least 50 % of votes cast in the first round of the last CSE elections sign the agreement. If signatories represent 30–50 %, a staff referendum may be triggered to validate the accord.

From the date of signature, the agreement has immediate contractual effect between the signatory parties. Non‑signatory representative unions have a right of opposition within a specified period (generally eight days) if the signatory unions represent less than 50 % and no referendum route has been used. Once any opposition period has expired without a valid blocking objection, the agreement enters into force on the date specified in its text, or, absent a specified date, the day after filing.

Step 6, File the agreement with DREETS and publish

After signing, the employer must file (déposer) the agreement with the competent authority. Since the digitalisation of administrative procedures, filing is conducted online via the TéléAccords platform operated by the Ministère du Travail. The filing dossier includes:

  • The signed agreement (PDF).
  • A copy of the minutes confirming notification to all representative unions.
  • The CSE opinion (PV d’avis) if consultation was required.
  • Any annexes referenced in the agreement.

The filing is transmitted to the DREETS (Direction Régionale de l’Économie, de l’Emploi, du Travail et des Solidarités) and to the greffe du conseil de prud’hommes (labour court registry). There is no government fee for filing. Once processed, the agreement is published in a national database, employers may request that certain confidential provisions be withheld from public access.

The ministerial extension procedure applies primarily to sectoral agreements. In order to extend a collective agreement to all employers in the sector, the signatory social partners file a request with the Ministère du Travail, which issues a ministerial order (arrêté d’extension) after consulting the Commission Nationale de la Négociation Collective. This process typically takes several months. Company‑level agreements do not require extension to bind the signatory employer and its employees, but employers should be aware of extension mechanics when their company agreement intersects with sectoral provisions.

Documents Needed for Collective Bargaining: Employer Checklist

Preparing the right documentation before and during negotiations is critical. The following collective bargaining checklist sets out the documents needed for collective bargaining at each stage, with notes on format and purpose.

Document Notes
Employer negotiation mandate / internal resolution Issued by employer (board or authorised manager). Names negotiators and defines scope of authority. Keep as PDF on file.
List of applicable sectoral conventions (conventions collectives) Identify each applicable CBA by IDCC code. Map specific clauses the company agreement will adapt or derogate from.
Draft agreement text (proposed clauses) Word/PDF format. Must include: scope, duration, substantive clauses, revision and termination mechanisms.
Information pack for the CSE Economic data, financial statements, headcount by category, social impact assessment. Required when consultation triggers expert report. Provide via BDESE or direct transmission.
Minutes of negotiation meetings (procès‑verbaux) Drafted by employer or neutral secretary. Signed by all parties present. Archive originals.
CSE opinion (PV d’avis) Official CSE opinion delivered after consultation. Must be obtained and recorded before signature if consultation is mandatory.
Signed agreement (original) Wet‑signed or electronic signature by employer and qualifying union signatories. Scanned copy used for filing.
Filing / registration receipt Confirmation of deposit via TéléAccords (DREETS). Keep for audit and compliance records.
Ministerial extension request dossier (if seeking extension) Applicable to sectoral agreements. Includes application signed by social partners per Ministère du Travail requirements.

Employers should maintain a complete negotiation file from mandate through to filing receipt. This record is invaluable in the event of a procedural challenge.

Timeline for Negotiating a Company Agreement: Key Deadlines

Timelines vary substantially depending on company size, the number of negotiation topics and whether the CSE exercises its right to appoint an expert. The table below provides indicative durations.

Phase Small company (typical) Medium / large company (typical)
Preparation & mapping 1 week 1–3 weeks
Notification & first meeting 1–2 weeks 2–4 weeks
CSE consultation 15–30 days 30–60 days (may require expert)
Negotiation rounds 2–6 weeks 1–4 months
Signature & filing 1–7 days 1–2 weeks
Administrative processing / extension decision Filing immediate; no extension needed 3–9 months (if ministerial extension sought for sectoral overlay)

Consequences of missed deadlines. If the employer fails to respect mandatory consultation timelines, for example, signing the agreement before the CSE has delivered its opinion, the agreement may be annulled by a labour court (tribunal judiciaire or conseil de prud’hommes) on application by a union or CSE member. Courts may also order the employer to re‑run the consultation process, delaying the agreement’s implementation by months. Employers approaching tight deadlines should seek specialist counsel rather than risk procedural invalidity.

The overall timeline for negotiating a company agreement in a mid‑sized French company with an active union presence is typically three to six months from preparation to filing. Complex multi‑site or restructuring negotiations can take considerably longer.

Costs, Fees and Practical Considerations

There is no government fee for filing a company collective agreement in France. However, the overall cost of the negotiation process can be significant, particularly if the CSE appoints an expert. The table below sets out indicative cost ranges (amounts are approximate and subject to market variation).

Item Typical range Notes
External labour law counsel €1,500 – €15,000+ Depends on complexity. Simple single‑topic agreements at the lower end; multi‑site restructuring at the upper end.
CSE expert (expertise économique) €3,000 – €20,000 Appointed at CSE’s discretion. Cost borne by the employer in most cases. Fees are set by agreement between CSE and expert, subject to judicial review if contested.
Translation / certified copies €0 – €1,000 Relevant for foreign parent companies or cross‑border workforces requiring translated versions.
Filing / registration (DREETS) €0 No government filing fee. Online filing via TéléAccords.
Ministerial extension support (sectoral) €0 – €5,000 The Ministry charges no fee, but dossier preparation and legal support carry costs.

Employers should budget for the possibility that the CSE will appoint an expert, as this is a right that cannot be unilaterally blocked and typically adds both cost and time to the process.

What Changes in 2026 for the Collective Agreement Process in France

As of June 2026, no material legislative amendments have altered the core procedural steps for negotiating a company collective agreement under the Labour Code. The fundamental framework, representativity thresholds, CSE consultation obligations, signature requirements and filing via TéléAccords, remains as established by the 2017 Ordonnances Macron and subsequent implementing decrees.

Employers should, however, be aware of the following developments that industry observers expect to have practical significance in 2026 and beyond:

  • Increased scrutiny of CSE consultation adequacy. Recent case law has reinforced the requirement that the employer must provide the CSE with complete and sufficiently detailed information before the consultation clock starts. Incomplete information packs have been held to invalidate consultation periods.
  • Digital negotiation tools. The growing acceptance of electronic signatures and video‑conference bargaining sessions, accelerated since 2020, has prompted some sectoral agreements to formalise remote‑meeting protocols. Employers should verify whether their applicable sectoral convention addresses this point.
  • Ongoing ministerial restructuring of branch conventions. The Ministère du Travail continues its programme of merging smaller sectoral conventions into larger branch agreements. Employers whose sector is subject to a merger should check the latest position on Legifrance, as the applicable sectoral baseline for company‑level derogations may change.

Before initiating negotiations, verify the current statutory text on Legifrance and check the Ministère du Travail website for any circulars or guidance notes issued since January 2026.

Common Pitfalls When Negotiating a Collective Agreement in France, and How to Avoid Them

  • Beginning bargaining without proper CSE notification. The employer signs a collective agreement only to face annulment proceedings because the CSE was not formally consulted. Mitigation: issue written notice to the CSE with the full information pack at least 15 days before the first negotiation meeting. Record the date of delivery.
  • Failing to verify union representativity thresholds. An agreement signed by unions representing less than 50 % of first‑round votes, without triggering the referendum process, is invalid. Mitigation: obtain official CSE election results and calculate signatory union scores before the signing session. If the 50 % threshold is not met, initiate the referendum procedure within the prescribed two‑month window.
  • Drafting clauses that unlawfully derogate from statutory minimums. While company agreements can derogate from many sectoral provisions, certain matters (bloc 1 topics such as minimum wage classifications, equality and social protection) remain governed by sector‑level agreements or statute and cannot be overridden at company level. Mitigation: map the proposed agreement’s clauses against the Labour Code hierarchy and sectoral provisions, ideally with legal counsel.
  • Neglecting to keep signed minutes of each round. Absent minutes, the employer cannot demonstrate good‑faith negotiation if challenged. Mitigation: appoint a neutral minute‑taker and circulate draft minutes for approval after each session.
  • Underestimating the CSE expert appointment. When the CSE appoints an economic expert, timelines extend and costs increase. Employers who have not budgeted for this possibility can face pressure to make concessions to avoid further delay. Mitigation: build a contingency buffer of 30–60 days and €5,000–€20,000 into the project plan.
  • Multi‑site coordination failures. In companies with multiple establishments, each may have its own CSE. Failing to co‑ordinate consultation across sites leads to inconsistent timelines and potential challenges. Mitigation: establish a centralised project plan and appoint a single co‑ordination point for all CSE consultations.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Henri Guyot at aerige, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Service-public.fr, Collective Agreement
  2. Ministère du Travail, Collective agreements
  3. Legifrance, French Labour Code
  4. Eurofound, Collective bargaining in France
  5. ETUI, Decentralisation of collective bargaining in France
  6. ILO, Collective Agreement: France
  7. Flichy Grangé Avocats, Collective Negotiation and Working Time
  8. Remote.com, What is CBA in France?

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