France / Individual Taxpayer – Numerical Case Study: How CEHR and CDHR Apply in Practice

France / Individual Taxpayer – Numerical Case Study: How CEHR and CDHR Apply in Practice

To fully understand how these mechanisms impact you, consider the following simplified example.

To fully understand how these mechanisms impact you, consider the following simplified example.

Your Situation

You are a French tax resident with:

• Total income: €1,000,000
• Taxable income after deductions: €700,000
• Income tax paid: €180,000
• Tax credits and optimization strategies applied

Your effective tax rate is therefore approximately 18% (€180,000 / €1,000,000).

Step 1: Application of CEHR

Because your income exceeds the CEHR thresholds:

 

  • A 4% CEHR applies on part of your income

 

CEHR due: approximately €20,000

 

Your total tax now becomes:

 

  • €180,000 (income tax)
  • €20,000 (CEHR)
    = €200,000 total tax

 

Your updated effective tax rate: 20%

Step 2: Application of CDHR

Assume the CDHR sets a minimum effective tax rate of 25% (illustrative).

 

Your current effective rate is 20%, which is below the threshold.

 

A top-up is required.

CDHR Calculation

  • Minimum required tax: €1,000,000 × 25% = €250,000
  • Current tax paid: €200,000
  • CDHR due: €50,000

Final Outcome

Component                                             Amount
Income Tax                                                €180,000
CEHR                                                          €20,000
CDHR (top-up)                                         €50,000
Total Tax                                                    €250,000

Your final effective tax rate becomes 25%, regardless of your optimization strategies.

Key Takeaways for You

  • The CEHR increases your tax because your income is high
  • The CDHR increases your tax because your effective rate is too low
  • Even well-structured tax planning may be partially neutralized

Most importantly, your tax outcome is no longer driven solely by income—it is driven by your effective tax rate floor.

Planning Insight: What You Should Do Differently

In this environment, you should:

  • Simulate your effective tax rate before year-end, not after filing
  • Quantify the real benefit of each tax optimization strategy
  • Anticipate CDHR exposure early, especially if your rate drops significantly
  • Align your French and international tax positions

The objective is no longer just tax efficiency — it is controlled, predictable taxation.

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This material has been prepared for general informational purposes only and is not intended ti be relied upon as accounting, tax, or other professional advice. Please refer to your advisors for specific advice ».