Every investor in France eventually faces the same question: PEA or CTO? The PEA (Plan d'Épargne en Actions) offers a powerful tax shelter — 0% income tax on gains after 5 years — but restricts you to European equities. The CTO (Compte-Titres Ordinaire) gives you access to the entire world — Apple, Amazon, emerging markets — but taxes every gain at a flat 30%.
Neither is universally better. The right choice depends on your tax bracket, your investment horizon, and the assets you want to hold. This guide breaks down every key difference so you can choose — or better still, use both smartly.
Start with the PEA — the 5-year tax clock starts the day you open it, so open it now even with €100. Add a CTO later for global stocks, alternative assets, or once you hit the €150K ceiling. Most serious investors hold both.
What Is a PEA?
The Plan d'Épargne en Actions is a French tax-advantaged brokerage account created in 1992 to encourage investment in European companies. You deposit cash, invest in eligible securities, and — after a 5-year holding period — pay no income tax on gains, only social charges (17.2%).
Key Rules
- Contribution ceiling: €150,000 per person (only cash deposits count — gains don't)
- One PEA per person — two per household (one per adult)
- 5-year minimum for full tax benefits; any withdrawal before 5 years closes the account
- After 8 years: can convert to a lifetime annuity (rente viagère) — tax-free
- PEA-PME: separate account for SMEs, additional €225,000 ceiling
What Can You Hold in a PEA?
- French and EU-listed shares (CAC 40, DAX, FTSE, etc.)
- UCITS ETFs domiciled in the EU that replicate EU indices — and also many MSCI World and S&P 500 ETFs that qualify via synthetic replication (swap-based)
- EU-based SICAVs and FCPs (mutual funds)
- Not allowed: US individual stocks (Apple, Microsoft…), bonds as primary investment, crypto, REITs outside the EU
Yes — many swap-based (synthetic) ETFs qualify for the PEA while replicating global indices like MSCI World or S&P 500. Examples: Amundi MSCI World UCITS ETF (LU1681043599), BNP Paribas Easy S&P 500 (FR0011550177). Check AMF eligibility before buying.
What Is a CTO?
The Compte-Titres Ordinaire is a standard brokerage account — no ceiling, no lock-in, no restrictions on what you can buy. You invest globally and pay tax on gains each year you realise them.
Key Features
- No contribution ceiling — invest as much as you want
- No minimum holding period — sell anytime, pay tax when you do
- Multiple CTOs allowed per person, at different brokers
- Full universe: US/Asian stocks, crypto ETPs, bonds, warrants, CFDs (depending on broker), foreign ETFs
- Tax: 30% flat tax (PFU = 12.8% income tax + 17.2% social charges) on realised gains and dividends
PEA vs CTO: Complete Head-to-Head
| Criteria | PEA | CTO |
|---|---|---|
| Contribution ceiling | €150,000/person | None |
| Accounts per person | 1 (+ 1 PEA-PME) | Unlimited |
| Minimum holding | 5 years for tax benefits | None |
| Early withdrawal | Closes account before 5 yrs | Always possible |
| Tax on gains (after 5 yrs) | 17.2% (social charges only) | 30% flat tax |
| Tax on gains (before 5 yrs) | 30% flat tax | 30% flat tax |
| Tax on dividends | 0% if reinvested inside PEA | 30% flat tax |
| EU stocks | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| US stocks (Apple, Amazon…) | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| MSCI World / S&P 500 ETFs | ✓ Via swap-based ETFs | ✓ Yes (all) |
| Crypto, bonds, REITs | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| Inheritance on death | Gains crystallised, account closes | Step-up in basis — heirs inherit at market value |
| Loss offsetting | Losses stay inside the PEA | Losses offset gains across all CTOs |
| Available at | Banks, online brokers | Banks, online brokers, neo-brokers |
Tax Treatment: The PEA's Massive Advantage
The single biggest reason to open a PEA is tax. After 5 years, the effective tax rate on gains drops from 30% to 17.2% — a saving of 12.8 percentage points on every euro of profit. On a €100,000 gain, that's €12,800 saved.
But the tax benefit compounds through time in another way: dividends reinvested inside the PEA grow completely tax-free. In a CTO, every dividend is taxed at 30% before you can reinvest. Over 20 years, this alone can add 15–25% to your final portfolio value.
The PEA Time Value: Start the Clock Now
The 5-year clock starts on the date of your first deposit, not the date you first invest in stocks. You can open a PEA with €10 and park it in a money market fund — your clock is running. This is the most common mistake French investors make: waiting years before opening a PEA "until I have enough money."
Investment Universe: Where the CTO Wins
If you want to invest in US stocks — Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon — you cannot do it directly in a PEA. The same goes for Japanese equities, emerging market stocks from Asia, crypto-linked ETPs, and most individual bonds.
However, many investors don't realise that most passive global ETF strategies are accessible via a PEA through synthetic (swap-based) UCITS ETFs. You can effectively hold a globally diversified portfolio through a PEA using products like:
| ETF | Index | PEA eligible | TER |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amundi MSCI World UCITS ETF | MSCI World (1,500+ stocks) | ✓ Yes (swap) | 0.38%/yr |
| BNP Easy S&P 500 UCITS ETF | S&P 500 (US Large cap) | ✓ Yes (swap) | 0.15%/yr |
| Lyxor MSCI Emerging Markets | Emerging markets | ✓ Yes (swap) | 0.55%/yr |
| Invesco NASDAQ-100 UCITS ETF | NASDAQ-100 | ✓ Yes (swap) | 0.20%/yr |
| Apple (AAPL) share | US individual stock | ✗ Not eligible | — |
| Bitcoin ETP | Crypto | ✗ Not eligible | — |
If you want individual US stocks, sector ETFs listed on US exchanges, or alternative assets, only the CTO gives you that access.
Limits, Flexibility & Liquidity
PEA: The €150,000 Ceiling Explained
Only cash deposits count toward the €150,000 limit — not gains. So if you invest €100,000 and your portfolio grows to €280,000, you can still deposit another €50,000. The ceiling tracks your cash in, not your portfolio value.
For couples, each partner can hold a PEA, giving a household ceiling of €300,000. Add two PEA-PMEs and the total rises to €750,000 per household — more than enough for most investors.
Partial Withdrawals After 5 Years
After 5 years, you can withdraw part of your PEA without closing it — and continue contributing up to the ceiling. This makes it very flexible in practice. Before 5 years: any withdrawal triggers account closure and full 30% taxation.
Which Profile Should Choose Which Account?
Profile A — The Long-Term Passive Investor
→ PEA only, or PEA + PEA-PME
You invest monthly in MSCI World ETFs, plan to hold for 20+ years, and don't need the money until retirement. The PEA's 17.2% tax rate vs the CTO's 30% makes a massive difference over decades. No CTO needed unless you want individual US stocks.
Profile B — The US Stock Picker
→ PEA (for ETFs) + CTO (for US individual stocks)
You want to hold a global ETF core in your PEA and add individual positions in Apple, Nvidia or Tesla on the side. Open both: PEA for the bulk of passive investments, CTO for stock picking. Keep the CTO positions small — 30% tax is a high hurdle for single stocks.
Profile C — The High-Net-Worth Investor
→ PEA + CTO + Life Insurance
You've already maxed your PEA at €150,000. The CTO handles additional investments. Life insurance (assurance-vie) adds another tax-advantaged layer for sums above €150,000, especially for inheritance planning.
Profile D — The Short-Term Trader
→ CTO only
If you're actively trading — taking positions for days or weeks — the PEA's pre-5-year withdrawal restriction makes it impractical. The CTO's flexibility is worth the tax cost for an active trader.
The Smart Strategy: Hold Both
For most investors with a medium-to-large portfolio, the optimal strategy is to hold both accounts with a clear division of roles:
| Account | Role | Target allocation | Typical assets |
|---|---|---|---|
| PEA | Tax-efficient core | 70–80% of equity portfolio | MSCI World ETF, EU stocks, S&P 500 swap ETF |
| CTO | Satellite / overflow | 20–30% of equity portfolio | US individual stocks, thematic ETFs, emerging markets physical ETFs, crypto |
| Life Insurance | Inheritance & bonds | Separate pillar | Euro funds, SCPIs, balanced funds |
Unlike the PEA, losses in a CTO can offset gains elsewhere in your CTOs in the same year, and be carried forward for 10 years. If you hold volatile individual stocks in your CTO, you can strategically harvest losses at year-end to reduce your tax bill — a technique unavailable inside a PEA.
Our Verdict
The PEA wins on tax efficiency for long-term, diversified investors. The CTO wins on flexibility and investment universe. The ideal answer for most people is: open the PEA today, add the CTO when you need it.
- If you're just starting out: open a PEA with your first €100 at a zero-fee broker (Trade Republic, Fortuneo, Bourse Direct) — your 5-year clock starts now
- If you want US stocks: add a CTO alongside; keep it as a satellite, not the core
- If you're a high earner (TMI 30%+): maximise the PEA first — you save 12.8% on every euro of gain vs a CTO
- If you already have €150K in your PEA: open a PEA-PME (€225K ceiling) or a CTO, and look at life insurance for tax-efficient bond/SCPI exposure
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I open a PEA or a CTO first?
Open a PEA first — the 5-year tax clock starts from your first deposit, so begin as early as possible even with a small amount (€100–€500). The CTO can complement it for assets ineligible for the PEA (US individual stocks, crypto, warrants) or once you reach the €150,000 ceiling.
Can I withdraw from a PEA before 5 years?
Yes, but any withdrawal before 5 years triggers the 30% flat tax on gains and closes the account automatically. After 5 years you can make partial withdrawals while keeping the account open. After 8 years you can also convert to a tax-free annuity.
What is the PEA contribution ceiling in 2026?
The PEA ceiling is €150,000 per person (€300,000 for a couple). You can add a PEA-PME with an additional €225,000 ceiling. Only cash deposits count — reinvested dividends and capital gains inside the PEA do not.