The Véloci Blog

Understanding your finances
is already optimising them.

Analyses, deep dives and concrete data on French savings, taxation, retirement and wealth management — with no needless jargon.

Savings
💰
May 2025 8 min read

French households save a lot… but very badly.

France posts one of Europe's highest savings rates — over 17% of disposable income. Yet a massive share of this wealth sits idle in low-yield savings accounts. Anatomy of a national paradox.

Tax
📊
April 2025 7 min read

3 legal tools to pay less tax — that most French households ignore.

The PER, life insurance, the PEA… these tools have existed for years, are perfectly legal, and can save thousands of euros per year. Yet fewer than one French person in five really uses them.

Retirement
March 2025 9 min read

Retirement in France: the numbers no one really tells you.

Reform pushing retirement to 64, falling replacement rates, system deficit… France's pay-as-you-go pension will still be there, but probably not enough. What the data projects — and how to prepare today.

Bank & Independence
🏦
February 2025 6 min read

Is your bank advisor actually advising you?

A bank advisor is employed by their bank. They have sales targets, can only offer in-house products, and rotate jobs often. What that means concretely for your wealth.

Savings

French households save a lot… but very badly.

France posts one of Europe's highest savings rates. Yet a huge share of this wealth sits idle on low-yield accounts or stagnant euro funds. Anatomy of a national paradox — and how to break out of it.

France, Europe's savings champion

French households save. A lot. According to INSEE data, the savings rate of French households hovers around 17% of their gross disposable income — one of the highest levels in Europe, well ahead of Spain (7%), Italy (9%), and clearly above the euro-zone average (13%).

This savings reflex is deeply rooted in French culture. Caution about the future, distrust of financial markets, the memory of economic crises… all push the French to set money aside. And that's good news — on the surface.

17%
Savings rate of French households (gross income)
€6 trn
Total financial wealth of French households (Banque de France)
8%
Share of French holding direct equities (vs. 55% in the US)

The problem: where does the money go?

Saving is good. Saving intelligently is another story. The real issue in France isn't the amount of savings, but their poor allocation.

The vast majority of saved money lands in two types of products:

  • The Livret A, with outstandings above €400 billion at end-2023, paying 3% (lowered to 2.4% in 2025 according to projections)
  • Life insurance in euro funds, with over €1.3 trillion placed at average yields of 2.5% to 3%

These products aren't bad in themselves — they offer safety and liquidity. The problem is they become the only options used, even by savers with no immediate liquidity need who could target far higher returns.

"The vast majority of French savings earn yields below long-term inflation. That isn't saving — it's slow impoverishment."

The French allergy to capital markets

Just 8% of French households hold direct equities — versus 55% in the US and 25% in the UK. Even including equity funds and the PEA, the figure stays below 15% of the population.

This caution is historically understandable: the crashes of 2000, 2008 and subsequent crises left scars. But it's also costly. Over 20 years, the CAC 40 with dividends reinvested (GR index) has delivered over 8% per year on average. The Livret A returned around 1.5% over the same period.

+8%
Average annual return of the CAC 40 GR over 20 years (dividends reinvested)
+1.5%
Average return of the Livret A over the same period

To make it concrete: €10,000 invested 20 years ago produces:

  • ~€34,000 in a CAC 40 GR-type index (8%/year, dividends reinvested)
  • ~€13,500 in a Livret A (1.5%/year average)
  • A gap of over €20,000 for the same starting capital

The good news: it doesn't have to be this way

France has one of Europe's most tax-favoured savings toolkits. The problem is that the vast majority of savers don't use it — often because no one ever explained how.

Product Target yield Tax advantage Liquidity
Livret A2.4%Exempt (within cap)Immediate
Life insurance (unit-linked)4 – 8%Lighter taxation after 8 yearsGood
PEA (ETFs)5 – 9%Full income-tax exemption after 5 yearsGood
PER4 – 8%Deduction from taxable incomeLocked until retirement
SCPI4 – 6%Varies by structurePartial

The devastating effect of time

The strongest argument for changing approach is compound interest. The longer you wait to adopt a strategic allocation, the higher the opportunity cost — not linearly, but exponentially.

A saver investing €300/month starting at age 30 with an average 6% annual return will, at 65, have built around €425,000. If they wait until 40 to start the same plan, they'll have only €214,000 — half as much for the exact same monthly effort.

"Starting early, even modestly, always beats starting late with bigger amounts. Time is the most valuable asset in your wealth."

Where to start?

There's no one-size-fits-all answer — every wealth situation is unique. But here are four questions to start structuring your savings intelligently:

  • Is my emergency fund (3 to 6 months of expenses) in place? If not, that's the priority.
  • Am I using my PEA? If it isn't open, every month of delay pushes back the tax-exemption date.
  • Am I a taxpayer? If yes, a PER can cut my tax bill immediately.
  • Is my life insurance invested in unit-linked funds? A 100% euro-fund contract in 2025 is money standing still.

These questions deserve personalised answers — and that's precisely what an independent wealth advisor can bring during a first review.

Is your savings really working for you?

A free 60-minute wealth review to analyse your current allocation and identify concrete optimisation levers.

Book my free review → See our services
Tax

3 legal tools to pay less tax — that most French households ignore.

France is one of the most heavily taxed countries in the world. But it also has one of the most generous toolkits of legal tax breaks. PER, PEA, life insurance: here's what you lose every year by not using them.

The French tax paradox

France posts one of the highest mandatory tax burdens among developed economies: nearly 45% of GDP. Income tax, social levies, VAT, property tax, wealth tax for the highest earners… the fiscal pressure on households is real and concrete.

Yet France has simultaneously built one of the most generous legal tax-optimisation systems in Europe. Mechanisms designed to channel household savings into the productive economy while cutting their tax bill. Mechanisms that — paradoxically — fewer than one taxpaying French household in five uses fully.

45%
Mandatory taxation rate in France (% of GDP)
€32,909
Annual PER deduction cap for an employee (10% of 8 PASS)
0%
Tax on PEA capital gains after 5 years held

1. The PER: turn your taxes into retirement savings

The Plan d'Épargne Retraite (PER), created by the 2019 PACTE law, is probably the most powerful and most under-known instrument in French savings. The principle is simple: amounts you contribute are deducted from your taxable income, within an annual cap.

For an employee, this cap is 10% of the previous year's professional income, within the limit of 10% of 8 times the Annual Social Security Cap (PASS) — about €32,909 in 2024. Unused caps from the past 3 years carry forward, which often makes it possible to catch up.

Concrete example: a taxpayer in the 41% bracket contributing €5,000 to their PER saves €2,050 in income tax — an immediate 41% net gain on the contribution.

The money is then invested (in unit-linked funds, ETFs, diversified funds) and grows tax-free until retirement. Exit taxation is the pension tax regime — often lower than today's marginal bracket, which amplifies the advantage further.

  • Ideal for taxpayers in the 30%, 41% or 45% brackets
  • Exit as lump sum or annuity at retirement
  • Early release possible in some cases: spouse's death, disability, purchase of main residence
  • Transferable between providers tax-free

2. The PEA: tax exemption within everyone's reach

The Plan d'Épargne en Actions (PEA) is the ideal vehicle to invest in equities in France. The advantage is huge: after 5 years held, all capital gains and dividends are exempt from income tax. Only social levies (17.2%) remain due.

The contribution cap is €150,000 per person (€300,000 for a couple). And the essential trick: the 5-year clock starts at the plan's opening date — not the contribution date. Every day your PEA isn't open is a day lost.

Holding period Tax on gains Social levies Total
PEA – under 5 years12.8%17.2%30%
PEA – after 5 years0%17.2%17.2%
Standard brokerage account12.8%17.2%30%

On a portfolio generating €50,000 of gains after 10 years, the difference between a PEA and a standard brokerage account represents €6,400 of tax savings. A certain saving, guaranteed by law, accessible to every French taxpayer.

3. Life insurance: queen of transmission and gentle taxation

Life insurance is often presented as a simple savings product. It is in fact an extremely powerful tax wrapper, when used well.

After 8 years held, withdrawals benefit from an annual allowance of €4,600 (€9,200 for a couple) on the gains. Beyond that, gains are taxed at a reduced 7.5% rate (+ 17.2% social levies) for contributions below €150,000.

But the most overlooked advantage is for estate planning: capital transferred via life insurance is outside the estate up to €152,500 per beneficiary (for contributions made before age 70). For a family with 3 children, that's up to €457,500 transferred free of inheritance tax.

  • Open from the first euro, across a wide range of underlyings
  • No contribution cap
  • Investment in euro funds (secured) or unit-linked (dynamic)
  • Beneficiary clause freely set — spouse, children, third parties

Golden rule: open a life-insurance contract as soon as possible, even with a minimal contribution, to start the 8-year clock. You can contribute more later.

The real cost of doing nothing

Not using these tools means voluntarily paying more tax than necessary. For a household in the 30% bracket who could contribute €3,000/year to a PER, the annual saving is €900 — or €9,000 over 10 years, before compound interest.

These tools don't require a big starting capital or deep financial expertise. They just require good guidance — and action.

How much could you really save?

A personalised tax review to pinpoint your optimisation levers — PER, PEA, life insurance, real estate — and quantify the concrete savings within reach.

Book my free review → See our services
Retirement

Retirement in France: the numbers no one really tells you.

Reform pushing the age to 64, falling replacement rates, projected system deficit, baby boomers retiring… France's pay-as-you-go pension will still be there, but probably won't sustain the lifestyle you hope for. The data, and what you can do today.

The French pension system: solid, but under pressure

France has one of the most generous pay-as-you-go pension systems among developed economies. Pensions are funded by contributions from the active workforce — and the average pension level in France is relatively high compared with neighbouring countries.

But the system faces growing demographic pressure. In 1960 there were about 4 active workers per retiree in France. Today the ratio has fallen below 1.7 active workers per retiree. And projections from the Conseil d'Orientation des Retraites (COR) indicate that this ratio will keep deteriorating in the coming decades.

1.7
Active workers per retiree today (vs. 4 in 1960)
74%
Average replacement rate for a private-sector employee (OECD)
47%
Average replacement rate for a self-employed worker

The 2023 reform: age 64 — and then?

The pension reform enacted in April 2023 raised the legal retirement age from 62 to 64, and accelerated the increase in quarters required for a full pension. An unpopular reform, but with demographic and financial logic that is hard to dispute.

Less often said: this reform does not solve the underlying problem. It delays the system's deficit by a few years — it doesn't remove it. Projections out to 2050 remain worrying, and further reforms are likely to be needed in the coming decades.

"The question isn't whether the pay-as-you-go pension will disappear — it won't. The question is at what level it will be able to maintain your standard of living."

Replacement rate: what you'll actually receive

The replacement rate measures the ratio between your last earnings and your first pension. It's the key number to estimate your retirement living standard.

And this is where the numbers get telling. In France, according to OECD and DREES data:

Profile Gross replacement rate Impact
Public-sector employee~75 – 80%Relatively preserved
Private-sector employee (full career)~70 – 75%Slight drop in living standard
Senior executive~55 – 65%Significant drop
Self-employed / liberal profession~40 – 55%Very large drop
Company director (dividend pay)~20 – 35%Critical gap

For a manager earning €5,000 net per month, a 60% replacement rate means a €3,000 pension — with fixed costs (rent, loans, health expenses) that don't necessarily fall in the same proportions.

The effect of time: why every year counts double

Retirement is often classed among "later problems". That's one of the costliest mistakes in wealth management. Compound interest radically reshapes outcomes depending on when you start.

€425k
Capital at 65 investing €300/month from age 30 (6%/yr)
€214k
Capital at 65 investing €300/month from age 40 (6%/yr)
€98k
Capital at 65 investing €300/month from age 50 (6%/yr)

Same monthly contribution, same return — but a 4× gap between starting at 30 and starting at 50. That's why "start now" isn't a cliché: it's a mathematical equation.

The 3 pillars of a solid retirement strategy

Against this backdrop, a complete retirement strategy rests on three complementary pillars, to calibrate to your situation, your age and your savings capacity:

  1. The individual PER — immediate tax deduction, capital invested in markets, lump sum or annuity at exit. Ideal for taxpaying workers who want to cut tax AND prepare retirement simultaneously.
  2. Capitalisation life insurance — maximum flexibility, lighter taxation, partial availability. Ideal complement to the PER so you don't lock all your capital until 64.
  3. Income real estate — recurring rental income, bank leverage, tangible wealth building. SCPIs, direct property or SCI depending on profile.

"The real question isn't 'when do I retire' but 'at what income level do I want to live in retirement' — then work backwards to know what to do today."

Self-employed: the most urgent case

Self-employed workers (craftsmen, retailers, liberal professions, managers) are the great forgotten group of the pension system. Their mandatory contributions are often lower, their entitlements more limited — and their replacement rate can fall below 50%.

For a liberal doctor, architect or director paying themselves €8,000/month, a 45% replacement rate means a €3,600 pension — more than halving their living standard. Anticipation, in this case, isn't optional: it's a necessity.

What will your retirement living standard be?

A personalised simulation to project your real retirement and define the savings strategy fitted to your situation, age and goals.

Simulate my retirement, free → See our services
Bank & Independence

Is your bank advisor actually advising you?

A bank advisor is employed by their institution. They have sales targets, can only offer in-house products, and rotate jobs often. What this concretely means for the quality of advice you receive — and what real independence changes.

An advisor caught between two chairs

Let's say it plainly first: bank advisors are not incompetent, and many do their best. But they operate in a system structurally designed to create conflicts of interest between their clients and their employer.

A relationship manager in a retail bank is, above all, an employed salesperson. They have monthly targets for selling financial products — insurance, loans, investments, premium cards. Their pay, reviews and career prospects depend partly on these commercial results.

This isn't a moral critique. It's the structural reality of the French banking model. And that reality has direct consequences for the quality of advice.

The in-house products problem

A large-bank advisor can only offer their institution's products. Their life insurance is the bank's. Their SCPIs come from the in-house asset manager. Their investment funds come from the internal fund manager.

Yet the market features hundreds of insurers, asset managers, SCPIs and ETFs. The best available products are rarely those of a single bank. And bank-contract fees are generally significantly higher than those of contracts distributed by independent advisors operating in open architecture.

2 – 3%
Average annual fees on a bank life-insurance contract (management + unit-linked fees)
0.8 – 1.5%
Average fees on an open-architecture life-insurance contract through an independent advisor

On a €100,000 capital over 15 years, a 1.5% gap in annual fees represents more than €25,000 of difference in the portfolio's final value — purely from fees, independent of gross performance.

Advisor turnover: follow-up made impossible

Another often-ignored structural issue: the average time in role for a bank advisor is 2 to 3 years. In the major brands, some branches see their teams almost entirely replaced every 3 years.

Wealth management is a long-horizon discipline. A well-built tax strategy must be followed up, adjusted to regulatory changes, life events and market opportunities. That long-term follow-up is structurally incompatible with high turnover.

"Every time you get a new advisor, you become a client to discover all over again. Your history, your projects, your constraints… everything has to be re-explained. That isn't wealth advice — it's file management."

What an independent wealth advisor does differently

An independent wealth advisor operates in a fundamentally different framework:

  • Access to the entire market — they can select the best products across every insurer, fund manager, bank and platform available
  • Transparent compensation — through advisory fees and/or disclosed commissions, with a regulatory obligation to disclose to the client in advance (DER)
  • No sales quotas — the only objective is client satisfaction and performance
  • Relationship continuity — you have a single contact who knows your situation in detail over the long term
  • Regulatory credentials — the advisor is registered with ORIAS and holds the CIF, IAS, IOBSP credentials matching the products they distribute

It's not just for the rich

The idea that an independent advisor "is for the very wealthy" is a deeply rooted — and false — myth. Most independent advisors work with very varied profiles: young professionals saving €200/month, families wanting to structure their estate, business owners optimising their pay.

And the first appointment is always free and with no commitment — letting you evaluate the fit before any engagement.

How to assess the quality of your current advice?

A few questions to assess your current situation objectively:

  • Do you know the total fees on your current investments (management fees + entry fees + contribution fees)?
  • Has your advisor ever explained how the PER or PEA works, and checked whether you have access?
  • Have you received a written personalised recommendation document (DER — Engagement Disclosure Document)?
  • Is your advisor still the same as 3 years ago?
  • Are your investments exclusively your bank's products?

If you answered "no" to several of these, getting an independent second opinion is probably worthwhile — at no cost, no commitment.

Get an independent second opinion.

60 minutes to analyse your current investments, their real fees, and tell you honestly whether your situation can be optimised. Free, no commitment.

Get a second opinion → Why Véloci
Complete Guide

How to choose a wealth advisor in Nancy in 2025: the complete guide.

Regulatory credentials, independence, open architecture, transparent compensation… choosing a wealth advisor is a decision that commits your wealth for 10, 20, 30 years. Here are the objective criteria and the questions to ask — before signing anything.

Why choosing your advisor matters

A wealth advisor isn't a service provider you swap out easily. They're a trusted contact who will structure your savings, optimise your tax, prepare your retirement and plan your estate — over 10-to-30-year horizons.

Bad guidance from the start has heavy mathematical consequences: excessive fees, ill-suited products, missed compound returns. For someone starting to invest at 35 with €500/month, a 1% annual return gap represents more than €80,000 of difference by retirement.

In Nancy, several professionals use the title "wealth advisor" — but not under the same conditions or constraints. Here's how to find your way.

6,000+
Independent advisors registered with ORIAS in France
4
Main regulatory credentials to check (CIF, IAS, IOBSP, ORIAS)
1st meeting
Always free at a serious independent advisor

The 5 objective criteria to evaluate an advisor

Before any sales pitch, here are the five dimensions to evaluate objectively:

  1. Regulatory credentials — an advisor must be registered with ORIAS and hold the credentials matching the products they distribute (CIF, IAS, IOBSP). Without these, they aren't legally authorised to practice.
  2. Open vs closed architecture — an open-architecture advisor can select products from the entire market (every insurer, every SCPI, every ETF). A closed-architecture advisor can only offer those from their group or network. It's a fundamental difference.
  3. Transparency on compensation — an advisor can be paid by advisory fees, commissions, or both. The law requires transparent prior disclosure via the DER (Engagement Disclosure Document). Ask for it before any advice.
  4. Experience and specialisation — some advisors specialise in self-employed taxation, others in wealth management, others in supporting young professionals. Check that the advisor's profile matches your situation.
  5. The relationship and pedagogy — advice quality is worthless if you don't understand it. A good advisor takes time to explain, simplifies without dumbing down, and adapts their tone to your financial literacy.

The credentials to verify on orias.fr

ORIAS (Organisme pour le Registre unique des Intermédiaires en Assurance) is the official register of professionals authorised to practice in France. Before any engagement, check that your advisor is listed — consultation is free and public on orias.fr.

The four main credentials of a complete advisor are:

  • CIF — Financial Investment Advisor. AMF credential authorising advice on financial products (funds, ETFs, securities).
  • IAS — Insurance Intermediary. Authorises distribution of life-insurance, cover and retirement products. Regulated by the ACPR.
  • IOBSP — Banking and Payment Services Intermediary. Authorises work on mortgage loans. Regulated by the ACPR.
  • Carte T — For advisors who also handle real-estate transactions (not systematic).

"An advisor who can't share their ORIAS number, or isn't on the register, is not legally authorised to give you investment advice. That's an immediate red flag."

Independent advisor in Nancy vs bank advisor: the comparison

Criterion Independent advisor (e.g. Véloci) Bank advisor
Product accessEntire market (open architecture)In-house products only
Sales targetsNo quotasMonthly sales quotas
Compensation transparencyDER mandatory, disclosedPartially transparent
Follow-up continuitySingle contact, long termTurnover every 2–3 years
Average life-insurance fees0.8 – 1.5% / year2 – 3% / year
Holistic expertiseTax + investments + real estate + retirementVaries by profile
First appointmentFree, no commitmentUsually free
Multiple credentialsCIF + IAS + IOBSPDepends on bank

The 10 questions to ask at your first meeting

At a first meeting with an advisor, you're entitled to ask all of these — and a serious professional will answer without hesitation:

  1. Are you registered with ORIAS? What's your registration number?
  2. Which credentials do you hold (CIF, IAS, IOBSP)?
  3. How are you paid: fees, commissions, or both?
  4. Do you work in open or closed architecture?
  5. Which insurance companies and asset managers do you work with?
  6. Do you have sales targets on specific products?
  7. How long have you been practising as a wealth advisor?
  8. How many clients do you currently support?
  9. How do you ensure long-term follow-up with your clients?
  10. What are your engagement and termination terms?

"An advisor who hesitates or dodges these questions has something to hide. Transparency is the bedrock of a trust-based wealth-management relationship."

Nancy and Grand Est: regional specifics worth knowing

Wealth management isn't the same everywhere in France. Nancy and the Grand Est region have features that shape optimal strategies:

  • An accessible real-estate market — Nancy property prices remain well below those of major French metropolises. Gross rental yields can reach 5 to 7% in the city centre, making it very attractive for investors.
  • A high density of self-employed and executives — the Grand Est economic fabric (industrial SMEs, liberal professions, craftsmen) creates significant needs around pay optimisation, retirement and business transmission.
  • Proximity to Luxembourg and Belgium — for cross-border workers, specific tax issues arise: cross-border regimes, bilateral tax treaties, optimisation of international pay.
  • A strong student and early-career population — Nancy is a major university city (Université de Lorraine, Sciences Po Nancy, ICN Business School). Young graduates entering the workforce particularly benefit from a structured wealth start from their first working years.

Véloci: the independent wealth advisor based in Nancy

Véloci is an independent wealth-management firm based in Nancy, member of the Inovéa network — one of France's leading networks of independent advisors with more than 200 partner firms.

Concretely, what this means for you:

  • Access to more than 50 insurance companies and partners to select the best solutions on the market
  • Full credentials: ORIAS, CIF, IAS, IOBSP
  • A single contact — Nicolas Gadek — who knows your file in detail
  • Appointments available in person in Nancy and by video anywhere in France
  • An educational approach: every decision, product and tax impact is explained clearly
  • A 100% free, no-commitment first meeting of 60-90 minutes

Looking for an independent advisor in Nancy?

A free, no-commitment first meeting to analyse your wealth situation and answer all your questions on how we work, our credentials, and our approach.

Book my free review → Discover Véloci