Analysis · Wealth & Estates — Civil Code art. 1078

Gift-partition and art collection — 2026 guide

The civil and tax instrument allowing collectors to transfer, during their lifetime, all or part of their collection to their children while freezing the value of the works at the date of the deed (Civil Code art. 1078). It prevents later estate disputes over valuation, offers tax stability over three decades, and combines with the split of ownership and with direct-line allowances (French Tax Code art. 779: 100,000 EUR parent to child, renewable every 15 years).

Analysis by Jonathan Bensaid · Tax lawyer · Paris & Geneva · 28 April 2026
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The essentials in 30 seconds

A simple gift must be brought back into the estate at the value on the date of the donor's death. If the work of art has appreciated, a frequent case in the art market, the recipient will have to compensate the co-heirs up to the amount of the gain, sometimes 10 or 20 times the initial value.

The gift-partition (Civil Code art. 1078) freezes the allocations as at the date of the deed. Thirty years later, even if the work is worth ten times more, no accounting is owed between co-heirs. This is the essential tool for avoiding family conflicts in the estates of collectors.

Combined with the split of ownership (gift of the bare ownership with reservation of a usufruct), it reduces the taxable base and allows the donor to retain the enjoyment of the collection until death, the full ownership then reconstituting itself without any additional cost or duties (French Tax Code art. 1133).

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Mechanism — why the gift-partition rather than a simple gift

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1. Civil conditions

The notarial deed is mandatory. The gift-partition must include all living descendants or those represented.

  • Donor — legally capable, acting freely
  • Recipients — all living descendants or those represented (omitting a child means partial nullity)
  • Mandatory notarial deed — execution before a notary
  • Equal or unequal shares — possible, but declared and accepted
  • Irrevocable in nature — save for serious ingratitude (Civil Code art. 955), non-performance of charges, or the birth of a child afterwards (art. 960)
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2. Tax conditions

Application of the allowances under Tax Code art. 779 and of the progressive scale of gift and inheritance duties.

  • Allowance under Tax Code art. 779 — 100,000 EUR per parent and per child
  • Renewable every 15 years — tax carry-back of earlier gifts
  • Progressive scale — gift and inheritance duties from 5% to 45%
  • Specific regime — reserved for descendants (save for the trans-generational gift-partition, art. 1078-4)
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3. Combining with the split of ownership

The most frequent structure: gift-partition of the bare ownership with reservation of a usufruct for the donor.

  • The donor retains the enjoyment of the collection (the works remain with them)
  • Duties calculated on the value of the bare ownership only (Tax Code art. 669)
  • On extinction of the usufruct (death of the donor), full ownership reconstitutes itself free of charge and without additional duties (Tax Code art. 1133)
  • It is also possible to give full ownership, or the usufruct alone
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4. Common mistakes to avoid

Five classic pitfalls that can weaken the deed or partly annul it.

  • Omitting a child from the gift-partition, causing partial nullity of the deed
  • Under-valuing the works, exposing the parties to reassessment with an 80% surcharge (Tax Code art. 1729 c)
  • Forgetting the 15-year tax carry-back on earlier gifts
  • A gift-partition without split of ownership where enjoyment is essential to the donor
  • Failing to anticipate the liquidity needed to pay the duties, with a risk of forced sale
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Worked example — collection of 2.4 M EUR, 3 children

Comparison of the two scenarios: gift-partition in full ownership versus in bare ownership.

A 65-year-old collector transfers to 3 children

Take a collector aged 65, owner of a collection valued at 2.4 M EUR, wishing to transfer it to their 3 children. Let us compare the tax impact of the two main structures.

Two scenarios

Scenario 1 — Gift-partition in full ownership

Value allocated per child: 800,000 EUR. Allowance under Tax Code art. 779: 100,000 EUR. Taxable base: 700,000 EUR per child. Duties per child: around 138,000 EUR (2026 scale). Total duties: around 414,000 EUR. The donor loses the enjoyment of the works as at the date of the deed.

Scenario 2 — Gift-partition of the bare ownership (usufruct retained)

Value of the bare ownership (donor aged 61-70, art. 669): 60% of 2.4 M EUR = 1.44 M EUR. Value allocated per child: 480,000 EUR. Allowance: 100,000 EUR. Taxable base: 380,000 EUR. Duties per child: around 62,000 EUR. Total duties: around 186,000 EUR, that is -228,000 EUR versus scenario 1. The donor keeps the collection with them until death.

Tax saving from the split of ownership

-55% in duties in this example. On extinction of the usufruct (death of the donor), full ownership reconstitutes itself without any additional duty (Tax Code art. 1133). This is the natural choice for a collector who wishes to continue living with their works.

Combining with other tools

The gift-partition combines with: dation in payment (payment in kind) (Tax Code art. 1716 bis) where liquidity is insufficient; a contribution to an endowment fund to secure the collection beyond the family sphere; the exemption for assets classified as historic monuments (Tax Code art. 795 A); and the tax residence of the donor, as a move to Switzerland changes the applicable tax rules, with caution on the exit tax (Tax Code art. 167 bis).

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Lead counsel — Jonathan Bensaid

Jonathan Bensaid, founding partner of the firm, admitted to the Paris & Geneva Bars, advises collectors and their families on structuring collection transfers over 5 to 15 years: gift-partition with split of ownership, dation in payment, lasting structures (endowment funds, foundations). The dual Paris-Geneva admission makes it possible to structure the French and Swiss aspects at the same time for cross-border estates.

  • Civil Code art. 1078
  • Tax Code art. 779
  • Split of ownership (Tax Code art. 669)
  • Art collections
  • Cross-border estates
  • Paris & Geneva Bars
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Q&A — 6 frequent questions from collectors

Can a single work be included in a gift-partition?

Yes. A gift-partition may cover a single asset just as it may cover an entire estate. For a major work in a collection, this is often the chosen solution: the work is allocated to one particular child, and the others receive compensation, either in cash or through a second gift covering other works.

Can a gift-partition be revoked?

No, save in extremely limited cases: serious ingratitude of the recipient (Civil Code art. 955), non-performance of charges, or the birth of a child after the gift (art. 960). The gift-partition is irrevocable by nature, which is precisely what ensures its tax and civil stability.

What is the difference from a trans-generational gift-partition?

The trans-generational gift-partition (Civil Code art. 1078-4 et seq.), introduced in 2006, makes it possible to include grandchildren as beneficiaries, subject to the agreement of the children concerned, who waive their reserved portion in favour of their own children. It is a useful tool for skipping a generation on certain shares.

Is an appraisal needed to value the works?

Not mandatory, but strongly recommended. The tax authorities may challenge the value adopted in the gift. A cross-examined appraisal by two accredited experts (auctioneers or CNES experts) secures the valuation and makes it possible to defend the assessment in the event of an audit. Under-valuation exposes the parties to an 80% surcharge (Tax Code art. 1729 c).

How much does a notarial gift-partition cost?

Notary's fees: around 1% to 1.5% of the value transferred for the first 6,500 EUR, tapering thereafter. For a gift-partition of 2 M EUR, expect around 25,000 EUR in deed costs (notary plus fixed registration duties). This is in addition to the transfer duties calculated on the taxable base.

Can a gift-partition include a work held jointly with my spouse?

Yes, but the deed must be consented to by both joint owners. If you are married under a community-property regime and the work is community property, the gift-partition will cover community assets, with a deed signed by both spouses. The notary structures the allocation according to the applicable civil rules (equal or unequal shares).

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Prepare the transfer of your collection

A confidential first exchange with a tax lawyer of the firm, without commitment. A presentation of the collection, the intended beneficiaries and the objectives (family stability, tax optimisation, multi-generational governance).

Jonathan Bensaid, avocat fondateur

Written by

Me Jonathan Bensaid, avocat fiscaliste, fondateur du cabinet Bensaid Avocats, inscrit aux Barreaux de Paris & Genève.