- Principle
As noted earlier, there’s no fixed ceiling — it depends on whether the gift is modest relative to the donor’s wealth and income and is tied to a special occasion (birthday, wedding, graduation, etc.).
For guidance, notaires and tax authorities often use informal rules of thumb when advising clients.
- Typical “reasonable” range (for €500,000 income)
If the donor earns about €500,000/year and has assets consistent with that income, a gift of roughly 1–2% of annual income would often be viewed as proportionate for a major occasion.
That works out to:
€5,000 to €10,000 for a standard event (birthday, graduation, wedding present, etc.)
Possibly up to €20,000 or so for a very special event (e.g. child’s wedding, milestone anniversary) — but that’s at the high end and should clearly match the occasion.
- Key conditions to stay within “présent d’usage”
To keep it safely tax-free:
Occasion-based: The gift is clearly tied to a socially recognized event (wedding, birthday, graduation, etc.).
Proportionate: It doesn’t change the donor’s lifestyle or deplete assets.
Customary: It’s the kind of thing people of similar means might reasonably give.
Documentation: It’s helpful to note (privately) what the occasion was and the donor’s income level, in case of audit. There’s no need to declare it if it’s truly a présent d’usage.
- When to get advice
If the amount goes well above 2–3% of income (say, >€15,000–€20,000 on €500,000 income) or there’s no special occasion, a notaire or fiscaliste should review it. The tax office could otherwise requalify it as a donation taxable at 60% (for non-relatives).