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šŸ” Big Mac Royale: A €1.25B Lesson in Royalty Substance

August 21, 2025

Extended Background

Global retail and franchising models like McDonald’s hinge on the payment of royalties for brand, know-how, and business support. France, a key market, became ground zero for challenges to the cross-border payment of royalties to group entities in favored tax jurisdictions—in this case, Luxembourg.

Detailed Arguments

Taxpayer

  • Justified the royalty increase by referencing the growing value of McDonald’s global brand and IP.

  • Cited internal benchmarking and asserted the fees reflected genuine business support, rights, and services.

Tax Authority

  • Claimed the spike in royalties was untethered to additional services or value, serving only to shift profits and erode the French tax base.

  • Argued for functional analysis and rejected reliance on contractual or nominal agreements alone.

Authorities and Court Reasoning

  • Investigators confirmed a lack of substantive changes in services rendered, supporting the profit-shifting position.

  • Grounded their judgment in economic substance, not form, demanding direct business justification for elevated intercompany charges.

Procedural Journey

  • Triggered largest tax and criminal royalty-based settlement in French history: over €1.25B (€609M tax plus a €508M criminal fine).

  • Dealt with both tax recovery and criminal penalties, handled through a French judiciary-approved deferred prosecution agreement.

Implications Beyond the Case

  • Stark warning to all retail/franchise MNEs: increases in royalties demand robust evidence of value and service; rates cannot rise on paper alone.

  • Cemented France’s aggressive audit and prosecution stance, emboldening further actions against perceived IP and royalty abuses.

  • Lesson: Arm’s-length benchmarking is vital, but actual business substance must match contractual claims.

Original Case Link:

CJIP (French, PDF)
Editorial Note:

Official judgments are always best linked to directly from court or sovereign government sites (PDFs or HTML), or through leading law firm/academic sources with appropriate commentary and official citations. Cases without direct links either are not fully published due to confidentiality or are referred to trusted legal commentaries.

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