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Thursday, May 13, 2027 · 384 days away
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Macron Presidential Term Ends
Event overview
End of Emmanuel Macron's second and final term as President of France.
Emmanuel Macron's second and final term as President of the French Republic ends on Thursday 13 May 2027. Under the two-term limit introduced in 2008, he is barred from an immediate third consecutive candidacy, and power transfers to the winner of the April 2027 run-off.
Macron was first elected on 7 May 2017 and inaugurated at the Élysée Palace on 14 May 2017. Re-elected on 24 April 2022 against Marine Le Pen, he was sworn in for his second term on 7 May 2022; French presidential terms are five years under the 2000 quinquennat reform. Article 6 of the Constitution, amended by the constitutional law of 23 July 2008, states that no one may serve more than two consecutive terms. Macron was the youngest person elected to the presidency since the Fifth Republic's founding in 1958, taking office at 39, and he founded his own political vehicle, La République En Marche (now Renaissance), rather than inheriting an established party structure.
A French presidential handover follows a codified choreography: the outgoing president meets the successor at the Élysée, transmits the nuclear codes, and hands over the Grand Collar of the Légion d'honneur. The incoming president is sworn in at a Conseil constitutionnel session held at the Élysée, receives the insignia, and delivers an investiture address. Prime Minister Gabriel Attal or his successor — depending on events between now and 2027 — would typically resign at the moment of the transfer, opening the way for a new government nomination. The 21-gun salute at the Invalides and the descent of the Champs-Élysées by the new head of state are traditional features of the day.
After office, a former French president sits ex officio on the Conseil constitutionnel, though recent holders have declined to exercise the right. Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande both opted out, preferring to preserve independence for post-presidential commentary and memoir work.
Macron's second term began on 7 May 2022, and French constitutional custom treats the outgoing mandate as ending once the new proclaimed president is sworn in — typically within a week of the Conseil constitutionnel's proclamation of the run-off result. With the 2027 run-off on 25 April, the inauguration window falls between 8 and 13 May, and 13 May is the outer limit derived from the five-year term starting 14 May 2017. This is the first French open-seat transition since 2017 and the first under the consecutive two-term cap as applied to a re-elected president. By historical parallel, Jacques Chirac's 2007 departure after two terms (one seven-year septennat and one five-year quinquennat) remains the closest precedent, though Chirac was not term-limited in the same constitutional sense.
Only three French presidents have completed two full terms since the Fifth Republic's founding: François Mitterrand (1981–1995, on septennats), Jacques Chirac (1995–2007, one septennat and one quinquennat), and now Macron. Charles de Gaulle, Georges Pompidou, and Valéry Giscard d'Estaing did not reach a second completed term. Macron is the first to be term-limited by Article 6 as amended in 2008 rather than by electoral defeat or resignation, making the May 2027 transfer a constitutional-law first. The departing president retains lifetime allowances, a security detail, and office staff funded under the 1955 law governing former heads of state.
This milestone follows the French Presidential Election Second Round on 25 April and precedes the French Legislative Election on 13 June. Compare with the broader Spanish General Election 2027 cycle in southern Europe.
When exactly does Macron's term end? No later than 13 May 2027; the precise inauguration date of the successor is fixed by the Conseil constitutionnel after the 25 April run-off, typically within seven days of the result's proclamation.
Is the transition confirmed or expected? Confirmed. Article 6 of the Constitution bars a third consecutive term, and Macron has publicly acknowledged he will leave office at the end of his current mandate.
Who is responsible for the handover? The Présidence de la République coordinates the ceremony while the Conseil constitutionnel proclaims the successor and supervises the oath of office.
Where can I read the official announcement? The Journal officiel publishes the proclamation and investiture decree, and the Élysée's communication service covers the ceremony in real time.
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