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Updated · February 2026·9 min read

Private Equity in France: FCPR, FPCI, SLP — Structures, Players and Regulation 2026

French private equity is the largest in continental Europe. FCPR, FPCI, SLP, SCR — understanding the vehicles, France Invest players and AMF regulation to navigate this ecosystem.

France has the largest private equity market in continental Europe, with over €35 billion invested in 2024 according to France Invest. The leading European market for technology venture capital and mid-market, the French private equity ecosystem is built on solid regulation, tax-efficient vehicles, and one of Europe's densest SME fabrics.

This guide explains how private equity works in France: investment vehicles, key players, AMF regulation, and how investment teams verify their targets.

Private Equity Investment Vehicles in France

France has an extensive range of legal vehicles dedicated to private equity, each addressing specific needs in terms of size, investors and tax benefits.

The FCPR (Fonds Commun de Placement à Risques) is the standard vehicle for institutional private equity in France. At least 50% of its assets must be invested in unlisted company securities or unlisted debt instruments. It provides tax benefits for unitholders.

The FPCI (Fonds Professionnel de Capital Investissement) is the professional version of the FCPR, reserved for sophisticated investors with a minimum investment of €100,000. More flexible than the FCPR in terms of eligible assets and constraint ratios.

The SLP (Société de Libre Partenariat) is the French equivalent of the Anglo-Saxon limited partnership. Inspired by the Anglo-Saxon model, it offers great flexibility in drafting articles and is the preferred vehicle for large institutional funds.

The SCR (Société de Capital-Risque) benefits from a corporate tax exemption on capital gains under certain conditions. Often used for investments in innovative SMEs or simple growth capital structures.

France Invest and the French PE Ecosystem

France Invest (formerly AFIC) is the professional association bringing together private equity players in France. It has over 400 members: PE and VC funds, fund of funds, management teams, and affiliated players (lawyers, auditors, investment banks).

France Invest publishes detailed statistics on sector activity: fundraising by vehicle type, investments by stage (VC, LBO, growth), divestments and IRRs. This data is the reference for any analyst or institutional investor seeking to understand the French market.

The major segments of the French market:

Large cap/mega deals: Funds like PAI Partners, Ardian, Eurazeo, Astorg operate on transactions > €500M. Their targets are sizeable companies, often in LBO structures.

Mid-market (€50-500M tickets): The most active segment, with funds like IK Partners, Equistone, Argos Wityu, Montagu. France is one of Europe's deepest markets in this segment.

Lower mid-market (€10-50M tickets): Very dense with dozens of regional and sector-focused funds.

Venture capital: Paris has emerged as Europe's leading VC hub with funds like Eurazeo Venture, Partech, Idinvest/Eurazeo Growth, Kima Ventures, and hundreds of smaller seed funds.

AMF Regulation and Compliance

Private equity in France is subject to supervision by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF). Management companies managing alternative funds (AIFs) above certain thresholds must obtain AMF authorization and are subject to the AIFMD directive.

Key obligations for authorized managers: - Minimum regulatory capital maintained at all times - Periodic reports to the AMF (AIFM reporting) - Independent asset valuation - Remuneration policy compliant with AIFM requirements - Investor reporting: annual report, pre-investment disclosures

The AIFMD (Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive) harmonizes regulation of alternative fund managers across Europe. A manager authorized in France benefits from the European passport to market its funds across the EU.

Public registries: The AMF publishes the list of authorized management companies, publicly accessible. SYNTA-IQ integrates this regulatory data to allow you to verify the status of a management company in seconds.

How French PE Funds Verify Their Targets

Investment teams at French PE funds have highly structured verification processes, supported by specialized external advisors.

Standard due diligence in France includes: - Financial DD by an audit firm (Vendor Due Diligence or Buy-side DD) - Legal DD by an M&A law firm - Tax DD - Strategic/commercial DD (market study) - Environmental and ESG DD (increasingly standard) - Optionally: technology DD, HR DD, insurance DD

Data sources used: French PE teams rely on INPI data for annual accounts, Bodacc data for legal events, aggregator databases for financials, and increasingly on platforms like SYNTA-IQ that centralize this data with a professional interface and direct document access.

We work directly with French official registries and a network of local partners who structure and enrich data for investment professionals.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an FCPR and an FPCI?
The FCPR is open to all investors (with a variable minimum ticket). The FPCI is reserved for professional or sophisticated investors with a minimum investment of €100,000. The FPCI offers more flexibility in its investment policy and regulatory ratios.
How do you check if a management company is AMF-authorized?
The AMF publishes the register of authorized management companies on its website. SYNTA-IQ cross-references this regulatory data with commercial registry information to give you a complete profile.
What is the minimum target size to attract a French PE fund?
This varies by segment. VC funds intervene from seed stage (a few hundred thousand euros). Mid-market growth capital funds generally target companies with EBITDA > €2-3M. Large cap LBOs target EBITDA > €50M.
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