Financial Due Diligence on a French SME: Complete Checklist for Funds and Investors 2026
How to conduct rigorous due diligence on an unlisted French SME: INPI, BODACC, Kbis sources, documents to request, accounting and legal red flags. The M&A and PE team checklist.
France offers one of the most transparent environments in the world for corporate due diligence. The richness of available public data β INPI annual accounts, BODACC events, Kbis extracts, INSEE data β allows you to build a solid profile of a target before even engaging in preliminary discussions.
This guide is designed for M&A teams, PE funds and family offices evaluating unlisted French SMEs. It covers sources to consult, documents to obtain, and red flags not to miss.
Phase 1 β Preliminary Due Diligence on Public Sources
The richness of French public data allows you to build a substantial dossier before any contact with the target.
Legal identity and RCS status: Confirm the SIREN, RCS status (active, under insolvency proceedings, struck off), legal form and share capital. Abnormally low share capital for the company's size warrants explanation.
Directors and history: Identify current directors via the Kbis. Check if they have mandates in other companies. Look for any personal insolvency proceedings or management ban orders.
Public annual accounts: France is one of the few countries where SME annual accounts are systematically filed and accessible. Download balance sheets and income statements for the last 3 to 5 fiscal years.
BODACC events: Review the BODACC announcement history: safeguard procedures, past court-ordered restructurings, published Treasury or URSSAF privileges. These elements are public and constitute major red flags.
SYNTA-IQ aggregates all this data in a single interface, working directly with French official registries and a network of partners who enrich and verify each data point.
Phase 2 β In-Depth Financial Analysis
Financial analysis of a French SME benefits from a solid documentary base β provided it is properly interpreted.
Documents to obtain from the seller: - Tax filings for the last 3 fiscal years - General ledger - Monthly cash flow table for the last 24 months - Management dashboard (if available) - Justification of exceptional items - Detail of off-balance sheet commitments
Key indicators to analyze: - Normalized EBITDA: Restate non-recurring items, above/below-market management compensation, charges billed to related parties. - Working capital and operating cycle: Rapidly growing working capital can signal future cash tensions despite positive results. - Equity vs net worth: Negative equity requires immediate recapitalization or constitutes a liability for the acquirer. - Tax and social liabilities: Check VAT, corporate tax declarations, and URSSAF contributions. Unprovided social liabilities are common.
French specificity: The difference between accounting income and taxable income can be significant. Profitable accounting results with recurring tax deficits warrant analysis.
Phase 3 β Legal and Regulatory Due Diligence
Legal due diligence on a French SME is facilitated by registry transparency, but certain elements remain contractual.
Legal documents to request: - Updated articles of association + all amendments - Register of shareholder decisions / general meeting minutes - Shareholder agreement (if any) - Significant contracts (top 5 clients, top 5 suppliers) - Commercial leases with assignment clauses - Employment contracts for directors and key employees - INPI-registered licenses, trademarks, patents
Regulatory checks: - Sector-specific operating authorizations - GDPR compliance (increasingly verified by funds) - History of tax and URSSAF audits - Ongoing litigation (Jurica database, seller declaration)
Change of control clauses: Identify contracts that provide for termination or consent obligations in the event of a transfer. These clauses can block or delay a deal.