Cerium(III) fluoride (or cerium trifluoride), CeF<sub>3</sub>, is an ionic compound of the rare earth metal cerium and fluorine.
It appears as a mineral in the form of fluocerite-(Ce) - a very rare mineral species related mainly to pegmatites and rarely to oxidation zones of some polymetallic ore deposits. CeF<sub>3</sub> may be used as a Faraday rotator material in the visible, near-infrared and mid-infrared spectral range.
The crystal structure of cerium(III) fluoride is described as the or tysonite structure. It contains 9-coordinate cerium ions that adopt an approximately tricapped trigonal prismatic coordination geometry, although it can be considered 11-coordinate if two more distant fluorides are considered part of the cerium coordination environment. The three crystallographically independent fluoride ions are 3-coordinate and range in geometry from trigonal planar to pyramidal.