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PFAS in water and the levy: water drop, industrial site, map of France and a euro symbol
PFAS levy: applicable from 1 September 2026 for industrial sites.

It is now official. A decree in the Official Journal confirms that the levy on PFAS discharges introduced by law no. 2025-188 ("forever pollutants") will take effect on 1 September 2026. For industrial sites discharging these substances into water, the bill starts running. Here is what you need to know — and above all, how to reduce it.

⏱ The deadline is set: 1 September 2026

Initially due on 1 March 2026, entry into force was postponed by six months "to secure its legal certainty". The decree now locks the date at 1 September 2026. Discharges are counted from that date: there is no more waiting room.

01/09/2026levy takes effect
€100per 100 g of PFAS discharged (indexed)
28substances targeted (incl. TFA)
−80%abatement if water is treated

1. What the decree changes

Law no. 2025-188 of 27 February 2025 established the "polluter-pays" principle for aqueous PFAS discharges. Its terms and date remained to be set. That is now done: the decree in the Official Journal confirms application from 1 September 2026.

The message is clear: every gram of PFAS discharged into water will now carry a cost, calculated on quantities measured from autumn 2026.

2. Who is concerned?

The levy targets permitted ICPE facilities (classified installations for environmental protection) whose activities cause PFAS discharges into water once the annual mass exceeds 100 grams.

On the front line: chemicals, surface treatment, plastics, technical textiles, paper, metallurgy, agri-industry, waste management… If your site is under the authorisation regime and discharges PFAS, ask the question now.

3. How much will it cost?

The rate is €100 per 100 g of PFAS discharged, with automatic indexation to inflation. The base is a list of 28 substances in the decree, including the widely reported TFA (trifluoroacetic acid).

PFAS levy from 1 September 2026: €100 per 100 g, permitted ICPE, 28 substances incl. TFA, 80% abatement
Key figures of the PFAS levy applicable on 1 September 2026.

The bill can climb fast. A site discharging 5 kg of PFAS a year faces a levy of around €5,000 (5,000 g ÷ 100 g × €100) — before indexation and abatement. For large emitters, the stakes run into tens of thousands of euros per year.

How do you reach 100 g of PFAS?

Not through a spectacular spill, but through accumulation. Annual mass = concentration in discharged water × volume discharged. Water at 1 µg/L (10× the drinking-water threshold) discharged at 100,000 m³/year (≈ 270 m³/day) already reaches 100 g a year. A continuous flow of weakly concentrated water is enough.

Equation: concentration (1 µg/L) × volume discharged (100,000 m³/year) = 100 g of PFAS per year
How 100 g of PFAS build up: concentration × volume discharged over the year.

And 100 g is almost nothing by weight — the weight of a chocolate bar — yet because PFAS are measured in billionths of a gram, that is enough to make 1 billion litres of water unfit for consumption (0.1 µg/L threshold), about 400 Olympic pools.

100 g of PFAS (a chocolate bar) make 1 billion litres of water non-potable, ~400 Olympic pools
100 g of PFAS: a tiny weight, a colossal impact on water.

4. Measurement & self-monitoring: what is expected

The amount is not declared by guesswork: it relies on measurements. Two cases:

  • Above 2 kg/year: continuous self-monitoring. Analyses start in September 2026.
  • Below: a measurement campaign over a representative period, at start-up then at least every 5 years.

⚠️ Anticipate the measurement

Without reliable discharge data, you cannot estimate the levy or prove a treatment's effectiveness. Characterising your effluent (which PFAS, at what concentration, for what flow) is the essential first step — to launch before the autumn.

5. The way out: −80% by treating your discharges

The decisive point, too often ignored: the text grants an 80% abatement on the levy base for sites that implement water treatment. Treating effluent is not only about compliance: it massively cuts the bill.

A site that invests in treating its PFAS discharges reduces both the quantity discharged and the taxable base. The levy becomes an ROI accelerator for treatment solutions.

Activated carbon media, the reference technology to reduce PFAS in water
Activated carbon, specific resins, reverse osmosis: the key technologies to abate PFAS.

Three technology families are the reference to reduce PFAS in water:

  • Granular activated carbon (GAC): very effective on long-chain PFAS.
  • Specific ion-exchange resins: high capacity, useful on short-chain PFAS.
  • Reverse osmosis: the most complete membrane barrier, across a very broad PFAS spectrum.

DIMM's solutions against PFAS

DIMM distributes all of these technologies and supports their implementation:

  • Granular activated carbon (GAC) & carbon cartridges (Pentair/Pentek, Ecosoft): PFAS adsorption, in columns for effluent or in cartridges at the point of use.
  • Specific ion-exchange resins: high capture capacity, including short-chain PFAS.
  • Ecosoft domestic reverse osmosis (Cross Max, A2O Pure): drinking water free of PFAS, direct-flow under-sink.
  • Professional & industrial reverse osmosis (MO6500 → MO10000 range): large volumes of ultra-pure water (98–99% of impurities removed).
  • Housings, media & water analysis: PFAS diagnosis, sizing and consumables.

6. Not just the levy: drinking-water monitoring

The levy is only one part. Since 1 January 2026, testing for 20 PFAS substances is mandatory in the sanitary control of water for human consumption. A government report, expected by the end of 2026, should propose even stricter standards.

7. The overall PFAS-law timeline

Beyond water, the law progressively bans products containing PFAS. The main milestones:

27 February 2025
Enactment of law no. 2025-188 on "forever pollutants".
1 January 2026
Ban on cosmetics, ski wax, clothing textiles, footwear and waterproofing agents containing PFAS (excluding PPE). Mandatory testing of 20 PFAS in drinking water.
1 September 2026
Entry into force of the levy on aqueous PFAS discharges (permitted ICPE).
1 January 2030
Ban extended to all textiles (except industrial technical textiles listed by decree).

8. What to do now

  • Check your status: permitted ICPE? More than 100 g of PFAS discharged per year?
  • Characterise your effluent: a PFAS analysis of your discharges (substances, concentrations, flow).
  • Estimate the levy and compare it to the cost of treatment — including the 80% abatement.
  • Choose and size the solution (carbon, resin, osmosis or a combination) before 1 September.

💡 The right reflex

The more you anticipate, the more you control the bill. A PFAS-targeted water analysis followed by proper sizing lets you both comply and earn the abatement. DIMM's teams support this diagnosis and the choice of technologies.

Conclusion: act before the autumn

With this decree, the PFAS levy is no longer a distant prospect: it applies from 1 September 2026. Waiting means paying full price. Anticipating — measuring discharges, treating effluent — means complying and halving the bill thanks to the 80% abatement.

DIMM supports professionals in PFAS diagnosis and the choice of treatment technologies (activated carbon, specific resins, reverse osmosis) suited to each discharge.

Key points & references

  1. Decree in the Official Journal: PFAS levy in force on 1 September 2026 (six-month postponement from 1 March 2026).
  2. Basis: law no. 2025-188 of 27 February 2025 protecting the population from PFAS risks.
  3. Rate: €100 per 100 g discharged, indexed. Scope: permitted ICPE, above 100 g/year.
  4. Base: 28 substances in the decree, including TFA.
  5. Measurement: continuous self-monitoring above 2 kg/year; otherwise a representative campaign at start-up then at least every 5 years.
  6. 80% abatement for sites implementing water treatment.
  7. Drinking water: mandatory testing of 20 PFAS in sanitary control since 1 January 2026. Evolving regulation — information dated June 2026, to be confirmed on Légifrance.

Affected by the PFAS levy? Anticipate now.

DIMM has supported water-treatment professionals since 1991. PFAS-targeted water analysis, activated carbon, specific resins, reverse osmosis: our teams help you measure your discharges, treat them and reduce your levy.

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