What is IS (impôt sur les sociétés)?
✅ In brief
IS (impôt sur les sociétés) means that the company itself pays tax on its profits.
🧭 What you need to know
- IS applies in particular to many commercial companies.
- The company calculates its result and pays tax on that profit.
- The company officer or associés may then be taxed on remuneration or on certain distributed income.
- IS does not by itself settle the TVA question.
🛠️ How Leegal supports you
- Leegal helps you understand the wording shown during the creation process and prepare a clearer file.
- The flow can organize information, documents and points to watch, but it does not replace a personalized review.
- If your situation is specific, it is still preferable to ask a chartered accountant, a lawyer or another qualified professional for advice.
🔎 Points to check
- The legal form chosen.
- The planned remuneration.
- Expected profits.
- Advice from a chartered accountant for tax trade-offs.
⚖️ Limits to know
- Leegal is not a law firm or an accounting firm.
- Leegal explains the options and helps prepare formalities, but does not choose for you.
- Tax, social security or personal asset consequences can depend on your actual situation.
📌 Key takeaway
Under IS, the company pays tax on its profit, but that does not remove the other tax questions.
Related articles
- What is IR (impôt sur le revenu) for a business?
- What is the difference between IS and the option for the régime des sociétés de personnes?
- What is the difference between profit tax and TVA?
- What do “tax options” mean during creation?
- What is the régime réel simplifié IS?
Updated on: 06/07/2026
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