Crypto Law Profile

France PACTE Initial Coin Offering Visa Regime

France’s PACTE Law created an optional AMF visa for public offerings of utility tokens, requiring issuer, disclosure, safeguarding and AML controls. The visa regime was replaced by MiCA-era rules from Oct. 18, 2024.

France Historical Law May 24, 2019

At a glance

Regime Type Optional AMF visa for public ICOs of utility tokens before MiCA.
Current Status Historical; former visa articles were abrogated from Oct. 18, 2024.
Regulator AMF reviewed applications, information documents and visa references.
Scope Covered token offers not treated as financial instruments or excluded products.

Overview

France’s PACTE Initial Coin Offering Visa Regime was a national, optional approval framework created by Article 85 of Loi n° 2019-486 of 22 May 2019. The regime inserted former Articles L.552-1 to L.552-7 into the French Monetary and Financial Code and let token issuers seek an Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) visa before a public token offering. It was aimed at token offerings outside existing financial-instrument regimes, mainly utility token ICOs. As of 3 June 2026, the PACTE ICO visa is historical: former Articles L.552-4 to L.552-7 were abrogated in connection with France’s MiCA adaptation, and current French rules route offers and admissions of non-ART/non-EMT crypto-assets through MiCA Title II notifications to the AMF.

What the PACTE ICO visa covered

The regime applied to issuers carrying out a public offer of tokens and choosing to request an AMF visa. Former Article L.552-2 defined a token as an intangible asset representing one or more rights in digital form that could be issued, registered, stored or transferred using distributed ledger technology. Former Article L.552-3 treated a public token offer as any proposal to the public to subscribe for those tokens, while excluding offers to a limited number of persons set by AMF rules. AMF materials described the eligible category as digital assets not classified as financial instruments.

The visa was not mandatory. The AMF stated during the PACTE rollout that fundraising without an AMF visa would remain legal in France, but issuers without a visa could not use general solicitation. The AMF announced the first optional ICO approval on 19 December 2019 and described eligible offerings as public offerings of utility tokens that were not treated as financial instruments.

Key provisions of the optional visa process

  • Issuer status: the issuer had to be a legal entity established or registered in France.
  • Information document: the issuer had to prepare a document giving useful information on the offer and issuer; promotional communications had to be accurate, clear and not misleading.
  • Safeguarding: the issuer had to maintain arrangements for monitoring and safeguarding funds and digital assets raised during the offer.
  • AML/CFT: AMF materials identified compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing rules as a condition of the visa process.
  • AMF powers: the AMF could order communications referring to a visa to stop and withdraw the visa if the offer no longer matched the information document or guarantees.

The AMF visa was framed as a review of minimum statutory guarantees and of whether the information document was complete and understandable. It was not an endorsement of the commercial merits of the project, did not authenticate the financial, accounting or technical information presented, and did not include AMF verification of smart contracts linked to the offering. The former framework also required subscribers to be informed of the offer results and, where relevant, of the organisation of a secondary market.

Status and MiCA transition

DateEvent
22 May 2019PACTE Law promulgated.
24 May 2019Former Monetary and Financial Code ICO visa provisions entered into force.
19 Dec. 2019AMF announced its first optional ICO approval.
18 Oct. 2024Former ICO visa articles were abrogated and the Code was amended for MiCA.
30 Dec. 2024MiCA generally applied to offers and admissions of crypto-assets other than asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens.

For current offers by persons with a French home member-state nexus, AMF guidance now describes a MiCA white-paper notification pathway. The AMF states that offerors of crypto-assets other than asset-referenced tokens or e-money tokens, persons seeking admission to trading and platform operators must notify a white paper to the AMF, with supporting classification explanations and host-state information, at least 20 working days before publication. This profile is a legal-reference summary and does not provide legal, tax, investment or compliance advice.

Key provisions

Optional AMF Visa

Token issuers could request an AMF visa before a public token offering; the visa applied to the offer and was not mandatory.

ICO Visa May 24, 2019 Source

Eligible Token Offers

The former framework covered token offers outside specified financial-instrument and other regulated-product regimes.

Scope May 24, 2019 Source

Information Document

Issuers had to prepare an information document with useful offer and issuer information; communications had to be accurate, clear and not misleading.

Disclosure May 24, 2019 Source

Issuer and Safeguarding Guarantees

AMF checked that the issuer was a legal entity established or registered in France and had means to monitor and safeguard assets raised.

Investor Protection May 24, 2019 Source

AML/CFT Controls

AMF materials identified anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing compliance as part of the visa conditions.

AML/CFT May 24, 2019 Source

Withdrawal and Public Statements

AMF could stop communications referring to the visa, withdraw a visa, or publicly address misleading statements about a visa.

Supervision May 24, 2019 Source

MiCA Replacement

Ordonnance n°2024-936 abrogated the old visa articles and rewrote CMF L.552 for MiCA Title II offer and admission notifications.

MiCA Oct 18, 2024 Source

Timeline

  1. Final Parliamentary Adoption

    National Assembly adopted the PACTE bill at final reading.

    Adopted Source
  2. PACTE Law Promulgated

    Loi n°2019-486 was promulgated and published in the Journal officiel on May 23, 2019.

    Published Source
  3. ICO Visa Provisions in Force

    Former CMF Articles L.552-1 to L.552-7 entered into force.

    In force Source
  4. AMF General Regulation Amendments

    Ministerial order homologated AMF General Regulation provisions for token offer visas.

    Published Source
  5. First AMF ICO Visa

    AMF announced its first optional approval for an initial coin offering.

    Effective Source
  6. Former Visa Articles Abrogated

    Ordonnance n°2024-936 abrogated former CMF Articles L.552-4 to L.552-7.

    Repealed Source
  7. MiCA Offer Framework Applies

    MiCA became the EU framework for crypto-asset offers and admissions, subject to its scope and exceptions.

    Effective Source

Who it affects

Actors

Crypto-asset Offerors, Investors, Token issuers, Utility Token Issuers

Asset classes

Crypto assets, Utility tokens

Official sources

Editorial note

Historical profile. Former Monetary and Financial Code Articles L.552-4 to L.552-7 were abrogated by Ordonnance n°2024-936; current French offer and admission rules operate through MiCA Title II notification to the AMF.