In brief: A CFA (Centre de Formation d'Apprentis) is the French apprenticeship training centre. It prepares apprentices for professional qualifications from vocational certificate level through to Bac+5 (Master's level), alternating theoretical instruction with workplace training. For CFA directors and administrative teams, the challenges are significant: quality certification compliance, apprentice tracking, funding-body justifications and audit evidence. Edusign supports CFAs on all these fronts. Similar institutions exist abroad under different names: the German Berufsschule, the Spanish FP Dual centre, or UK apprenticeship providers.
A CFA (Centre de Formation d'Apprentis) is a French institution specialising in apprenticeship-based training. It delivers theoretical and practical instruction to apprentices, alternating with their workplace training. The CFA plays a crucial role in preparing young people for professional and technological qualifications, from vocational certificate level (CAP) through to BTS and Bac+5 titles.
CFAs are established through agreements between regional councils and various partners: chambers of commerce, public or private educational institutions, businesses and associations. This agreement defines the administrative, pedagogical and financial arrangements of the centre, including staff recruitment, numbers of apprentices admitted, qualifications offered and catchment area.
Since the French vocational training reform of September 2018, the rules for creating and funding CFAs changed significantly. Contract-based funding via skills operators (OPCO, the French equivalent of training levies bodies) replaced former regional subsidies, making CFAs more dependent on the volume of apprenticeship contracts signed.
A CFA fulfils several complementary missions:
A CFA can be managed by a chamber of commerce, a private training organisation, an association or a public educational institution. Its legal status directly influences its funding conditions and accounting obligations.
Funding is provided primarily by:
A CFA must therefore produce reliable data on its enrolment, contracts and results to justify its funding to skills operators and oversight authorities. This is why administrative traceability is a critical issue for any CFA director.
CFAs are subject to a set of regulatory obligations that weigh directly on administrative teams:
Since 1 January 2022, quality certification (Qualiopi, France's national quality-certification framework for training providers) has been mandatory for all CFAs wishing to access public or pooled funding. This framework comprises 7 criteria and 32 indicators, several of which directly concern CFAs:
These criteria require precise documentary evidence: signed attendance sheets, pedagogical meeting records, satisfaction survey results, mid-programme reviews. Digitising this evidence has become essential for any CFA wishing to approach a quality audit with confidence.
Edusign is an administrative and pedagogical management suite particularly suited to the constraints of CFAs. It covers three critical needs:
For CFA directors, Edusign is not just another tool: it is the infrastructure that transforms administrative obligations into automatically generated compliance evidence, freeing teams to focus on pedagogical quality.
A CFA is specifically dedicated to apprenticeship training: the apprentice has employee status, signs an apprenticeship contract with a company, and alternates between the CFA and the workplace. A standard training organisation may welcome learners on continuing education programmes, self-funded training, or subcontracted delivery, without necessarily managing apprenticeship contracts. The regulatory framework, funding mechanisms and documentary obligations differ significantly between the two.
Since the 2018 reform, creating a CFA in France is simpler: no regional agreement is required. It suffices to hold a training registration number (NDA), obtain accreditation from the qualification certifier, and conclude apprenticeship contracts with companies. Funding is then provided by skills operators (OPCO) on a per-contract basis. Quality certification (Qualiopi) remains mandatory to access public funding.
Skills operators fund CFAs according to a cost-per-contract set by France Compétences, varying by qualification level (from a few thousand euros for a vocational certificate to over 10,000 euros for a Master's-level title). This amount covers the CFA's pedagogical costs and is paid directly to the institution over the course of the contract. Attendance traceability and compliance with the training framework are verified by skills operators, who may request supporting documents.
The CFA has an obligation of individual monitoring for each apprentice: regular liaison with the company, intervention in cases of difficulty, documented mid-programme review. It must also ensure that the training content corresponds to the target qualification framework, keep the digital liaison booklet (BIAF) up to date, and retain attendance evidence. In the event of contract termination, the CFA has a support role in finding an alternative solution.
A quality certification audit at a CFA covers all 7 criteria of the national quality framework, with particular attention to criteria 5, 6 and 7. To be prepared, you need: timestamped and signed attendance sheets for each session, evidence of trainer-apprentice exchanges (completed liaison booklet, meeting records), tracked and analysed satisfaction surveys, and a documented continuous improvement plan. Digitising this evidence with tools such as Edusign significantly simplifies the collection and presentation of supporting documents.