The government is preparing a major reform of social assistance. The idea: replace several benefits paid by the CAF with a single allowance.
A bill provides for the creation of a single social allowance, intended to combine several benefits (RSA, activity bonus, housing assistance, etc.) in a single device. The stated objective is to simplify access to rights and make the system more understandable for beneficiaries: because almostone in three French people do not claim aid to which he is eligible, due to lack of information or because of the complexity of the procedures. Here is what we already know about this reform which could profoundly transform the way CAF aid works.
What is the single social allowance?
The single social allowance, more precisely called unified solidarity allowance (ASU), is a reform of the social assistance system which aims to group several benefits paid by the CAF into a single system, with a single payment and harmonized rules. Broadly speaking, the reform mainly concerns three major aids: the RSA (active solidarity income), the activity bonus and certain housing assistance, including APL. Today, these benefits are calculated separately and paid independently. The government’s idea is to group them together in a single calculation and monthly payment, in order to simplify administrative procedures for recipients.
Who is affected by the unified solidarity allowance?
The single social allowance would mainly target households which already benefit from this aid. The profiles concerned would be in particular: RSA beneficiaries, low-income workers who receive the activity bonus, and households who receive housing assistance. However, at this stage, other CAF benefits, such as the allowance for disabled adults or family benefits, are not included in the project, even if the CAF also ensures payment. This reform would therefore be part of a broader desire to modernize the social system and reduce situations where certain people do not claim the assistance to which they are entitled.
What will actually change for beneficiaries?
The main change would be the merger of this aid into a single allocation. Today, a beneficiary can receive the RSA, the activity bonus and housing assistance separately. With the reform, these benefits would be calculated together and paid as a single payment. Concretely, this could also simplify procedures, but also avoid errors or overpayments. Furthermore, the government is putting forward another objective: to ensure that returning to employment is always more advantageous than inactivity, by adjusting the calculation rules aids. All household resources should be grouped together in the same calculation, the “social reference income”based on the net social amount indicated on pay slips, as well as on the Monthly Resources System (DRM) supplied by the Nominative Social Declaration (DSN) transmitted by employers to the CAF.
A single social account to follow all your help
The reform could also be accompanied by a new digital tool: the single social account. This online portal would allow beneficiaries to consult all their aid in the same place, check their rights and simulate the impact of a change in situation, such as a return to employment. The objective is to make the system more understandable for beneficiaries and to avoid disruptions in rights, which can sometimes occur when a household’s situation changes.
When could the unified solidarity allowance come into force?
For the moment, the reform has not yet been adopted. The government plans to table a bill on the single social allowance, which must be presented to the Council of Ministers before being examined by Parliament. Discussions could begin in spring 2026. If the text is adopted, the implementation of this new allocation could then be done gradually in the following years. If the reform is adopted, it would mainly concern beneficiaries of the RSA, the activity bonus and housing assistance. Its objective is to simplify procedures, improve access to rights and make the system more readable. For now, however, the project is only at the legislative stage. The exact rules, amounts and calculation methods will still have to be clarified during parliamentary debates.








