France is putting entrepreneurs on a much shorter leash in 2026: if you want the country’s signature “new business” break on payroll-style social charges, you’ll have just 60 days after your business officially starts to apply.
Miss that window, even by a day, and the benefit is gone for good for your first year. The change, written into France’s 2026 Social Security financing law, reshapes a program that many first-time founders and solo operators have relied on to keep early costs from spiraling.
Table des matières
What ACRE is, and why founders care
The program is called ACRE, short forAide à la Création ou à la Reprise d’une Entreprise, a government measure designed to help people starting or taking over a business. In practical terms, it temporarily reduces the mandatory social contributions collected by URSSAF, the French agency that functions somewhat like a combined payroll-tax collector and social-insurance funding authority.
Historically, ACRE could cut eligible social charges by as much as 50% for up to 12 months. It has been widely used by “micro-entrepreneurs” (France’s simplified sole-proprietor status, similar in spirit to a U.S. self-employed freelancer operating under streamlined rules), independent contractors, and some company founders, assuming they met eligibility requirements.
The big 2026 change: a hard 60-day filing deadline
Starting in 2026, applicants must submit an official ACRE request to URSSAF within 60 days of the business’s start date. That’s a major shift from prior practice, when some entrepreneurs effectively handled the paperwork later, sometimes around the time they filed their first revenue declaration.
The new rule turns ACRE into a use-it-fast-or-lose-it benefit. The start date of the activity is now the clock that matters, and the government is treating late applications as automatic denials.
Why France is tightening the rules
French lawmakers say the deadline is meant to make Social Security budgeting more predictable and reduce abuse tied to retroactive requests. It also gives administrators a cleaner, faster way to process files by pushing entrepreneurs to submit early and enabling more up-front checks.
In other words: less “automatic” relief, more compliance pressure, especially for first-time founders who don’t realize how quickly the paperwork must move.
What happens if you’re late: you pay full freight
The consequence is blunt. If you file after the 60-day window, you lose the right to the ACRE exemption for the entire first year of activity. That can mean significantly higher required social payments starting with the first URSSAF due date, right when cash flow is often at its tightest.
For entrepreneurs, the message is clear: administrative planning now has to start at the same time as the business plan, not after the first invoices go out.
How to apply on time
The process begins as soon as the business is registered. Entrepreneurs must submit the ACRE request to the appropriate URSSAF office within a maximum of two months (60 days). After that, the request is rejected.
Applications can be filed through URSSAF’s official online portal, either during the online business-creation process, or via a paper form with supporting documents. The same deadline applies to micro-entrepreneurs and other legal business structures.
Practical steps founders are being urged to take include: confirming required documents before launch, keeping copies and proof of submission, double-checking the exact start date that triggers the countdown, and setting calendar reminders to avoid missing the window.
Entrepreneurs who are unsure about timing or eligibility can contact URSSAF or a business-support network for guidance before the deadline expires.
A simple example shows how unforgiving the new rule is
Consider two micro-entrepreneurs who start on Jan. 1, 2026. One files an ACRE request on March 15, about 73 days later, and gets nothing. The other submits within the first week and can still receive up to the traditional 50% reduction in eligible social contributions for the first 12 months.
The takeaway for anyone launching in France in 2026: the benefit may still exist, but the margin for error is shrinking fast, and missing the deadline could make a new venture’s first year meaningfully more expensive.
| Profil | Date début d’activité | Date demande d’ACRE | Droit à exonération |
|---|---|---|---|
| Auto-entrepreneur A | 01/01/2026 | 20/01/2026 | Oui – exonération maintenue |
| Auto-entrepreneur B | 01/01/2026 | 15/03/2026 | Non – délai dépassé |
| Alternative | Description succincte |
|---|---|
| ARCE | Versement anticipé d’une partie des allocations chômage sous forme de capital |
| Aides régionales | Programmes locaux favorisant la création d’entreprise |
- ACRE 2026 : comprendre le nouveau délai de 60 jours et ses conséquences sur l’exonération des cotisations - 15 juillet 2026
- SBOM : pourquoi l’inventaire des composants logiciels est devenu un pilier de la cybersécurité des entreprises ? - 7 juillet 2026
- Prime Day 2026 en Australie : la Ninja Luxe Café Premier tombe à 497,99 AU$ - 7 juillet 2026



