The company had warned that jobs were at risk after the government cut the refunds paid by French social security from 30 percent to 15 percent starting this year, before they are eliminated completely in 2021.
The move came after France's National Authority for Health (HAS) concluded last June that there was no benefit to homeopathy, saying it had "not scientifically demonstrated sufficient effectiveness to justify a reimbursement."
Agnes Buzyn, the health minister at the time and herself a doctor, soon announced the phase-out of reimbursements that had once been on a par with standard drugs, at 65 percent.
Other European governments have also halted or curtailed their payouts to clients who opt for homeopathic treatments, which are based on the idea that a substance that causes certain symptoms can also help alleviate them.
"For the past two years, the virulent, unjustified and repeated attacks against homeopathy in France have weighed heavily on our company, which has seen its activity and economic results decline sharply," Boiron said in a statement.