2025 Universal Registration Document

General and financial elements

Present throughout France, VINCI Insertion Emploi helps build connections between the various stakeholders across the country’s regions who are focused on integration and employment (businesses, local and regional authorities, integration structures). It rolls out solutions to help the long-term or very long-term unemployed, such as:

  • Managing social clause aspects: In France, public procurement contracts include social integration clauses promoting the integration of long-term job seekers. The construction industry accounts for 52% of these clauses. In 2025, this represented around 2.5 million hours of work for VINCI companies. To address these social clause requirements, companies can recruit staff, hire temporary workers on integration programmes, or subcontract work to social enterprises and structures focused on integration. Within this framework, ViE supports the development and implementation of action plans that are adapted for the operations involved. It oversees these plans at regional level by working with local stakeholders (non-profits, social enterprises supporting integration, structures helping people return to work). ViE enables people on integration programmes to receive support throughout the entire process, helping them to secure stable employment. It acts as a “connector” between the various stakeholders: integration structures, job seekers, VINCI projects and program management teams. Ensuring close alignment with the specific features and needs of each region, ViE works with the operational teams to meet or even exceed the contractual requirements of VINCI’s companies when possible.
  • Program management support: ViE supports contracting authorities to develop, implement, manage and coordinate an integration approach in line with their market, with a focus on local communities. It facilitates the application of inclusive procurement policies by subcontracting to social and solidarity economy (SSE) organisations, such as social enterprises (EA) and sheltered workshops (Esat).
  • Innovative back-to-work programs: ViE creates innovative approaches to help people return to work, including Step, a regional employment strategy launched in France in 2017, in partnership with local training organisations. Designed for young people between the ages of 18 to 25 who have been unemployed for two years or more, this programme involves VINCI partner companies and non-profit organisations sponsoring technical projects. Structured in three phases, it starts with three months of training, focused on soft skills (interpersonal and organisational skills) and the completion of a technical project sponsored by a non-profit (e.g. renovating a bungalow or bike shelter). This is followed by a period of immersion in a VINCI company, of varying length depending on the region. The program ends with six months of coaching after these first two phases to support the integration of its participants in the workplace or to help map out their career plans more clearly. Around 20 young people benefited from the Step programme in 2025. Participants work under fixed-term contracts with the Group during this period, benefiting from training and preferential conditions to support their reintegration into the workplace.
Activity of VINCI Insertion Emploi (ViE) and changes
Activity of VINCI Insertion Emploi (ViE) and changes
  2025 2024 2023 2025/2024 change
Number of people benefiting from social integration measures

Number of people benefiting from social integration measures

20253,293

Number of people benefiting from social integration measures

2024

2,944

Number of people benefiting from social integration measures

2023

2,700

Number of people benefiting from social integration measures

2025/2024 change

+11.9%

Number of hours of integration employment

Number of hours of integration employment

20251,244,103

Number of hours of integration employment

2024

1,252,315

Number of hours of integration employment

2023

1,261,930

Number of hours of integration employment

2025/2024 change

−0.7%

Number of hours of training

Number of hours of training

202540,253

Number of hours of training

2024

40,904

Number of hours of training

2023

46,500

Number of hours of training

2025/2024 change

−1.6%

Whether they are supported by ViE or manage integration initiatives directly, Group companies develop a proactive approach to maximise the benefits for the regions and their communities. More than simply complying with their social clause requirements, they often exceed the contractual number of hours and promote this approach with their customers, including those in the private sector.

Social joint ventures

VINCI is involved in four social joint ventures in France operating in areas that are aligned with the Group’s business activities (maintenance of workforce camps and motorway rest areas, construction site logistics, and routine maintenance for infrastructure and buildings). These social joint ventures aim to promote collaboration between businesses and stakeholders from the social sector to support the integration of disadvantaged populations as an extension of the Group’s business activities. These companies, which are jointly managed and whose capital is split between an integration organisation and a Group subsidiary, develop pathways to help socially excluded people into employment. To achieve this inclusion, the social joint ventures offer the advantage of combining two key components: assistance provided by social action professionals and a springboard to employment through support from a private sector organisation. Together accounting for more than €18 million in revenue, these social enterprises had 431 employees under integration programs at the end of 2025. The social joint ventures co-founded by the Group are as follows:

  • Liva, co-founded by VINCI Construction and the Ares group, specialised in construction site logistics (233 employees, including 155 on integration programmes);
  • Baseo, co-founded by VINCI Construction and the ID’EES group, specialised in services for project workforce camps (165 employees, including 142 on integration programmes);
  • Ïnva, co-founded by VINCI Autoroutes and the La Varappe group, specialised in multi-service activities, indoor and outdoor cleaning, green spaces, and service area facilities maintenance (287 employees, including 114 on integration programs);
  • Tim, co-founded by VINCI Energies France and the Vitamine T group, specialised in installation work, facilities management, level 1 multi-technical maintenance and occupant services (24 employees, including 20 on integration programmes); Operating in various VINCI Group businesses, the social joint ventures are renowned for their professionalism and work on iconic Group projects such as The Link (the future TotalEnergies headquarters), the Edenn office complex, the Austerlitz A7/A8 project and Line 15 West of the Grand Paris Express.

Give Me Five programme

Launched in 2018, VINCI’s Give Me Five program addresses the challenge of providing guidance and support for the professional integration of young people aged 12 to 25 from priority neighbourhoods as defined by urban policy or rural areas across France. This initiative aims to offer these young people opportunities to explore the world of work, gain insights into careers shaping tomorrow’s cities, and access internships. This program aims to combat social inequalities and support social cohesion by promoting diversity and equal opportunities. The program is built around five key areas for action:

    • Guidance: Give Me Five supports young people aged 12 to 18 with career guidance and opportunities to discover various professions, through dedicated guidance workshops in schools as well as events for the sharing of experiences by VINCI employees and visits to the Group’s sites. This bespoke guidance initiative is being rolled out in partnership with the Ministry of National Education across France. In 2024-2025, VINCI supported around 6,500 middle school students through this program. From September 2024 to June 2025, VINCI also launched new guidance initiatives targeting vocational education pathways (CAP professional aptitude certificate and second-year students) to expand the pool of beneficiaries, promote vocational training programs, and ensure continuous support throughout their journeys.
    • Individual support: The actions carried out by the non-profits Viens Voir Mon Taf and Crée Ton Avenir have continued moving forward since 2018 through educational programs and workshops for middle school students and their teachers in charge of orientation hours. They are being deployed in schools covered by the Give Me Five program's orientation initiative in the Greater Paris area as well as the Hauts-de-France, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, and Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes regions. Each year, around 7,000 middle school students benefit from these initiatives. Since December 2024, students welcomed for placements at VINCI sites have had the opportunity to benefit from career guidance mentoring from Group employees as part of the program's individual support.
    • Integration: VINCI draws on the expertise built up by VINCI Insertion Emploi (ViE) to facilitate connections between 18- to 25-year-olds and recruiters from Group companies, while supporting the professional integration of young people with diverse profiles through gap year and graduate internships, from professional high school diplomas through to master’s programs.
    • Learning: Convinced of the benefits of hiring and training young people on apprenticeship programs for the future of the students and that of the companies and the regions where they operate, VINCI has offered the “Apprenticeships: VINCI is all in!” program since 2021, open to all types of training (vocational certificates, professional baccalaureates, advanced technician diplomas, engineering schools). On its platform of the same name, it lists the schools and universities that offer training courses relating to VINCI’s careers, as well as the corresponding apprenticeship and professional development contracts available in Group companies. This initiative is supported by the involvement of teams from VINCI Insertion Emploi and Mozaïk RH to facilitate meetings between recruiters from Group companies and young people from priority neighbourhoods as defined by urban policy or rural areas across France during dedicated apprenticeship fairs held in Paris, Lyon, Nantes, Marseille, and Bordeaux. In 2025, over 8,500 young people were on apprenticeship or professional development contracts with a Group company.
    • Employability: VINCI and the teams from VINCI Insertion Emploi (ViE) are rolling out an employability program to help secure a return to stable employment for young people aged 18 to 25 who have been unemployed for at least two years and face a high risk of exclusion. The educational approach behind this regional employment program, known as Step, is presented on page 276.