CPA for transport and logistics
Accounting support for transport, logistics, delivery and fleet businesses. Margin, fuel, payroll, subcontracting, billing and cash flow.
Accounting support for transport, logistics, delivery and fleet businesses. Margin, fuel, payroll, subcontracting, billing and cash flow.
If you run a foreign transport or logistics company operating in France, an international fleet operator with French drivers, or a foreign investor entering the French logistics market, French regulatory and accounting requirements in this sector are significantly more complex than in most other European countries. From the unique TICPE fuel tax rebate to mandatory collective agreements for French drivers and strict transport licensing rules, working with a French chartered accountant who understands your cross-border context is essential.
To operate road transport for hire or reward in France, your company needs a Licence de Transport Interieur (LTI) — or for international routes, a Licence communautaire europeenne (LCE). Key requirements:
Foreign companies operating in France under their home country licence have strict limits on cabotage — the number of French domestic transport operations they can perform (currently 3 operations within 7 days under EU rules before they must leave or set up locally).
For foreign logistics companies wanting to permanently operate in France, setting up a French subsidiary and obtaining the LTI is the proper route. We work with legal partners to coordinate the commercial, accounting and licensing setup.
The Taxe Interieure de Consommation sur les Produits Energetiques (TICPE) is France's domestic fuel excise tax. French transport companies operating heavy goods vehicles (above 7.5 tonnes) can claim a partial TICPE rebate on professional diesel purchases.
The rebate amount varies annually but has historically been around 10-12 centimes per litre of diesel. For a fleet of 10 trucks consuming 50,000 litres each per year, this represents a potential rebate of 50,000-60,000 EUR annually — not a figure to overlook.
Claiming the TICPE rebate correctly requires:
For foreign logistics companies operating French-registered vehicles, this rebate is often missed because home-country accountants are unfamiliar with the French claim process. We handle TICPE rebate declarations as part of our transport sector accounting service.
French transport payroll is governed by two main collective agreements (conventions collectives) depending on the type of transport:
These collective agreements define:
For a foreign logistics company hiring French drivers, these collective agreements are mandatory and non-negotiable. Mistakes in applying the salary grids or expense allowances lead to URSSAF penalties and potential back-payment claims from employees.
We handle French transport payroll including the correct application of CCN Transport, URSSAF declarations, DSN monthly filings and driver expense reimbursements.
Under French accounting rules, fleet costs are recorded as follows:
For foreign groups with French transport subsidiaries, these accounting rules affect both local P&L presentation and consolidated group reporting.
Transport and logistics businesses face a structural cash flow challenge: fuel, payroll, tolls and maintenance are paid immediately, while clients pay on 30-60 day terms. Combined with fuel price volatility, this creates liquidity risk.
We help foreign transport companies operating in France:
For transport companies operating international road freight to/from France, the CMR document (Convention relative au contrat de transport international de marchandises par route) is the mandatory international consignment note. Every international road freight shipment covered by the CMR convention must be accompanied by a properly completed CMR note (3 originals: sender, carrier, recipient).
Accounting implications of CMR:
EU transport operators performing cabotage in France (domestic French transport after an international delivery) must respect the 3 opérations en 7 jours limit. Cabotage operations must be billed separately from the international leg (different VAT treatment and different regulatory regime).
From an accounting standpoint, foreign EU operators performing French cabotage must:
Missing the detachment obligations is one of the most frequently penalised infractions in French transport inspections (DREAL road checks).
French transport is subject to both the EU Driver Working Time Directive and the French code du travail provisions for heavy vehicle drivers. Practically, this means:
For payroll calculation, tachograph data must reconcile with time sheets. Discrepancies between tachograph records and payroll declarations are a primary audit trigger for both URSSAF (social contribution assessment) and the Inspection du Travail. We cross-reference tachograph data with payroll calculations to ensure full reconciliation.
| Vehicle acquisition mode | Balance sheet | VAT recovery | Depreciation/charge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outright purchase | Asset | Full (HGV/vans) / None (passenger) | Depreciation over 4–7 years |
| Financial lease (crédit-bail) | Asset + liability (French PCG) | Deferred via rentals | Annual rental includes financial charge |
| Operating lease (LOA) | Off-balance-sheet (French PCG) | Via rental invoices | Rental expense deductible in full |
For tax optimisation, the choice between purchase and lease depends on your current-year profitability: high-profit years favour accelerated depreciation (outright purchase with degressive rates); lower-margin years may favour operating lease (smooth expense recognition).
Background: Meridian Freight Ltd, a Birmingham-based road freight operator, set up a French SAS (Meridian France) in Lyon to serve French domestic and cross-border routes post-Brexit. Fleet: 12 French-registered trucks, 18 French-employed drivers.
Year 1 payroll: 18 drivers × average gross salary €32,000 = €576,000 gross. Under CCN Transport routier, employer contributions came to 44% = €253,440. Total labour cost: €829,440. This was €92,000 more than the UK-model budget projected (UK NI: 13.8% vs French charges: ~44%).
Driver expense allowances: under the CCN, drivers on overnight trips receive indemnités de déplacement (€38.30/day in 2026). These allowances are exempt from URSSAF social charges up to the CGI limit — but only when properly documented (trip reports with departure/arrival times and overnight stops). For Meridian's 14 overnight drivers, correct documentation saved €48,000/year in URSSAF contributions vs treating allowances as taxable pay.
TICPE rebate: 12 trucks × 45,000 litres/year average = 540,000 litres × €0.115 rebate = €62,100/year recovered. We file the quarterly DGDDI declarations electronically.
Year-1 result: after depreciation (€65,000 on trucks at 5-year linear), TICPE recovery, and allowances: IS profit €18,400. IS at 15% = €2,760.
Key lesson: labour cost was the critical budget error. French transport payroll is dramatically more expensive per driver than UK because of CCN minimum grids, high employer charges, and mandatory expense allowances. We model this correctly during the business plan phase so clients aren't surprised.
Contact our transport specialists — 58 rue de Monceau, 75008 Paris | Request a quote
Transport and logistics companies operate in a margin-sensitive environment where fuel, fleet costs, payroll and billing speed directly affect liquidity. Reporting needs to stay close to operations.
Good operational work still creates cash pressure when billing lags behind delivery.
Fuel, maintenance, leasing and tolls need to be reviewed regularly, not only at year end.
Client, route, vehicle or service type can each reveal where profitability is created or lost.
Fleet growth or infrastructure spending should always be tested against near-term liquidity.
Wherever you are in France, we deploy a 100% digital interface to deliver fast, highly-structured accounting and financial steering.
Samuel Hayot is a French chartered accountant and statutory auditor registered with the Paris professional bodies.
The firm is based in Paris 8 and operates with a delivery model designed for businesses located across France.
Pennylane, Dext, Silae and an automation-first setup built for visibility and speed.
Visible phone number, simple contact path, fast engagement letter and tighter qualification of the mandate.
30 complimentary minutes with Samuel Hayot to challenge your reporting and surface your priority levers.
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The TICPE (Taxe Interieure de Consommation sur les Produits Energetiques) rebate allows French HGV operators (7.5 tonnes+) to recover a portion of the excise tax on professional diesel purchases — typically 10-12 centimes per litre. To claim it, your company must operate French-registered vehicles, maintain fuel purchase records per vehicle, and file with the French customs authority (DGDDI). Foreign companies with French subsidiaries operating French trucks can claim this rebate. We handle the declarations.
Most French road freight drivers are covered by the CCN Transport Routier de Marchandises (IDCC 0016). It defines mandatory salary grids by driver category, per diem expense allowances (partially exempt from social charges), overtime rules and weekend/night premiums. These are legally binding for any company employing French drivers. Getting the salary grids or expense allowances wrong leads to URSSAF penalties. We manage transport payroll including all CCN obligations.
EU-based transport operators can perform cabotage (French domestic operations) on a limited basis: up to 3 operations within 7 days after an international delivery, before returning abroad. Beyond this, permanent French domestic transport requires a French entity, a Licence de Transport Interieur (LTI) and a certified transport manager. Non-EU companies face stricter rules. We advise on the right structure and coordinate with transport licensing specialists.
Under French PCG, owned HGVs are depreciated over 5 years; leased vehicles under operating leases remain off-balance-sheet (unlike IFRS 16). Fuel, tolls and maintenance are deductible operating expenses. Input VAT is fully recoverable on commercial vehicles but not on passenger cars. For foreign groups consolidating a French transport subsidiary, these differences from IFRS must be reconciled. We provide both French statutory accounts and English-language management reporting.