List of banks in France

The following list of banks in France is to be understood within the framework of the European single market and European banking union, which means that the French banking system is more open to cross-border banking operations than peers outside of the EU.

Policy framework

European banking supervision distinguishes between significant institutions (SIs) and less significant institutions (LSIs), with SI/LSI designations updated regularly by the European Central Bank (ECB). Significant institutions are directly supervised by the ECB using joint supervisory teams that involve the national competent authorities (NCAs) of individual participating countries. Less significant institutions are supervised by the relevant NCA on a day-to-day basis, under the supervisory oversight of the ECB.[1] In France's case, the NCA is the French Prudential Supervision and Resolution Authority, hosted within the Bank of France and known by the acronym ACPR.[2]

Significant institutions

As of 1 September 2025, the ECB had the following 12 banking groups based in France in its list of significant institutions.[3]

Of these, BNP Paribas, BPCE, Crédit Agricole, and Société Générale have been consistently designated as Global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) by the Financial Stability Board, including in the update of November 2025.[4] A study published in 2024 assessed that the bank with most aggregate assets in France (as opposed to total consolidated assets, as of end-2023) was Crédit Agricole at nearly €2 trillion, followed by BNP Paribas (€1.5 trillion), BPCE (€1.4 trillion), Société Générale and Crédit Mutuel (€1 trillion each), and La Banque Postale (€738 billion).[5] France is also home to subsidiaries of other euro-area significant institutions namely Crelan, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, and Santander.[3]

Less significant institutions

As of 1 September 2025, the ECB's list of supervised institutions included 93 French LSIs, 5 of which were designated by the ECB as "high-impact" on the basis of several criteria including size:[3]

LCH SA meets the criteria for SI designation, but has been classified by the ECB as a LSI by special derogation together with a handful of other financial market infrastructures.[3]

The 88 other French LSI were:

  • Agence France Locale - Société Territoriale, owner of Agence France Locale
    • Agence France Locale
  • Al Khaliji France, affiliate of Khaleeji Commercial Bank
  • Allianz Banque, subsidiary of Allianz
  • Arab Banking Corporation SA, subsidiary of Arab Banking Corporation
  • Attijariwafa Euro Finances, subsidiary of Attijariwafa Bank
    • Attijariwafa Bank Europe, subsidiary of Attijariwafa Euro Finances
  • Axa Banque Financement, subsidiary of Axa Banque
    • Axa Home Loan SFH, subsidiary of Axa Banque
  • Bakia SCA
  • Bank Audi France, subsidiary of Bank Audi
  • Banque Banorient France, subsidiary of BLOM Bank
  • Banque BIA, joint venture of Banque Extérieure d'Algérie and Libyan Foreign Bank
  • Banque Cantonale de Genève (France) SA, subsidiary of Banque Cantonale de Genève
  • Chaabi Bank, subsidiary of BCP Group
  • Banque Chabrieres
  • Banque Delubac & Cie
  • Banque d'Escompte
  • Banque Fiducial
  • Banque Francaise Mutualiste
  • Banque Hottinguer
  • Banque Michel Inchauspé (Bami)
  • Banque Nomura France, subsidiary of Nomura Securities
  • Banque Pouyanne
  • Compagnie Financière Richelieu, owner of Banque Richelieu
    • Banque Richelieu France SA
  • Enyo SA, owner of Banque Saint Olive
    • Banque Saint Olive
  • Banque SBA, subsidiary of Banque Libano-Française
  • BEA International SA, subsidiary of Banque Extérieure d'Algérie
  • BGFI Bank Europe, subsidiary of BGFIBank Group
  • BOA France, subsidiary of Bank of Africa
  • Caisse De Credit Municipal d'Avignon (Crédit Municipal refers to a city-owned pawnbroker)
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Bordeaux
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Boulogne-Sur-Mer
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Dijon
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Lille
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Lyon
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Marseille
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Nancy
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Nantes
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Nice
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Nimes
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Reims
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Roubaix
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Strasbourg
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Toulon
  • Caisse de Credit Municipal de Toulouse
  • Carrefour Banque, subsidiary of Carrefour
  • Compagnie Financiere Lazard Frères, subsidiary of Lazard
    • Lazard Frères Banque, subsidiary of C. F. Lazard Frères
  • Credit Immobilier De France Developpement, holding of state-owned CIF Group
    • Caisse Centrale du Credit Immobilier de France-3CIF
    • CIF Euromortgage
  • Credit Municipal de Paris
  • EBI SA, subsidiary of Ecobank Group
  • Edmond de Rothschild (France), subsidiary of Edmond de Rothschild Group
  • Epargne Credit Des Militaires (ECM)
  • Europe Arab bank SA, subsidiary of Arab Bank
  • Fransabank France SA, subsidiary of Fransabank
  • GE SCF
  • Gresham Banque, subsidiary of Groupe Apicil
  • IC Financial Services, subsidiary of Iveco
  • Institut pour le Financement du Cinéma et des Industries Culturelles (IFCIC)
  • French branch of Klarna Bank AB
  • Loomis FX Gold and Services
  • Memo Bank SA, an online bank
  • Compagnie Financière Holding Mixte Milléis, holding entity of Milleis Banque
    • Milleis Banque Privée
    • Groupe Cholet Dupont, owned by Milléis
    • Cholet Dupont Oudart, part of Groupe Cholet Dupont
  • Mobilis banque, affiliate of Association Familiale Mulliez
  • National Australia Bank Europe SA, subsidiary of National Australia Bank
  • National Bank of Kuwait France SA, subsidiary of National Bank of Kuwait
  • Oddo BHF, subsidiary of Financière IDAT
  • Compagnie Financière d'Orange Bank, subsidiary of Orange Group
    • Orange Bank, subsidiary of C. F. d'Orange Bank
  • Rothschild Martin Maurel, subsidiary of Rothschild & Co
  • French branch of Saxo Bank A/S
  • Société Auxiliaire d'Etudes et d'Investissements Mobiliers (INVESTIMO)
  • Société Financière de la Nef
  • Socram Banque, subsidiary of Macif
  • Sofax Banque, subsidiary of TotalEnergies
  • Stellantis Financial Services Europe, subsidiary of Stellantis
  • Swisslife Banque Privée, subsidiary of Swiss Life
  • Toyota Material Handling Commercial Finance AB, subsidiary of Toyota
  • Tunisian Foreign Bank, subsidiary of Société Tunisienne de Banque
  • Younited

Other institutions

The Bank of France, Agence Française de Développement, and Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, all based in Paris, are public credit institutions that do not hold a banking license under EU law.

Defunct banks

Numerous former French banks, defined as having been headquartered in the present-day territory of France, are documented on Wikipedia. They are listed below in chronological order of establishment, divided into three categories.

Banks of issue in Metropolitan France

The Bank of France, created in 1800, secured its monopoly of bank issuance on the whole territory of Metropolitan France in 1848, which was only briefly contested in the aftermath of the annexation of Savoy in the early 1860s.

Colonial and overseas banks

Several colonial and overseas banks had most of their operations outside of Metropolitan France but were nevertheless based there, generally in Paris, for at least part of their existence. For example, the Banque de l'Algérie was originally headquartered in Algiers, but relocated its head office to Paris in 1900. The Ottoman Bank had dual headquarters in London and Paris.

Other banks

See also

References

  1. ^ "What are less significant institutions?". European Central Bank. 2 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Members and Observers". European Banking Authority. Retrieved 19 November 2025.
  3. ^ a b c d List of supervised entities - Cut-off date for changes in group structures: 1 September 2025 (PDF), European Central Bank, 24 October 2025
  4. ^ "2025 List of Global Systemically Important Banks (G-SIBs)". Financial Stability Board. 27 November 2025.
  5. ^ Giulia Gotti, Conor McCaffrey & Nicolas Véron (October 2024), Banking union and the long wait for cross-border integration (PDF), European Parliament