Legal Compliance with the Loi Doubin
Legal Compliance with the Loi Doubin
What are the specific disclosure obligations imposed on French franchisors under the Loi Doubin (Doubin Law), and what are the penalties for non-compliance?
2 Answers
In the UK‑style short and human answer: under the French Loi Doubin, a franchisor must give a written pre‑contractual disclosure document (DIP) at least 20 days before any franchise agreement is signed or any payment is made, containing honest, detailed information about the franchisor, the network, financials, contracts, obligations and risks so a prospective franchisee can decide with their eyes open. If the franchisor fails to disclose on time, provides misleading or incomplete information, or doesn’t update material facts, the consequences can hurt including criminal fines (for example up to €1 500 for individuals and larger amounts for companies), the possibility of the franchise contract being declared null and void, and civil damages to compensate the franchisee for harm caused by the lack of truthful disclosure.
Under France’s Loi Doubin (codified at L. 330-3 of the Commercial Code), franchisors must give prospective franchisees a pre-contractual information document (DIP) with comprehensive, truthful details (e.g., franchisor identity, financials, network size, contract terms) at least 20 days before signing or any payment so the candidate can decide with full knowledge.