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The seven biggest myths about the Brits living in France

There are a few longstanding misconceptions about the British population that calls France home. Time to put the record straight.

The seven biggest myths about the Brits living in France
Photo: AFP

1. They all live in 'Dordogneshire'

  (AFP)  

Dordogne the picturesque region of southwestern France might have been branded “Dordogneshire” due to the high number of Brits who now call it home, but the Périgord (as the area was once called) is far from the only corner of France where British expats/immigrants (whichever you prefer) have set up home.

Data given to The Local this week by France's stats guardians at INSEE revealed that the department (county) of France that counts the most Brits among its residents is… take a second to have a guess…think about it… Paris of course.

Some 8,529 Brits live in the French capital according to the most recent stats from INSEE. And the next most popular department is? Yes OK, it’s Dordogneshire, where 7,316 Rosbifs live among the rolling hills and rivers.

But plenty of other departments in France contain a large number of Brits too: There are just over 6,000 in Charente, western France, some 4,500 in the department of Haute-Vienne, next door to Dordogne, over 4,000 in Côte d’Armor in northern Brittany and a similar number in Yvelines in the greater Paris region.

So in short, out of the 153,000 Brits officially registered by INSEE as living in France in 2013, only 7,500 live in Dordogne. Myth well and truly busted.

2. Brits in France are all retired folk

Another popular stereotype about Brits in France is that they are all retirees who have spent their lives working in the UK before hopping over to France to buy a cottage in the sun where they can put their feet up, continue watching BBC, and enjoy living off their pension.

But the reality is, most Brits living in France are working for a living. The data backs this up.

Statistics from INSEE reveal that there are some 70,000 Brits in France aged over 55, and many of them will still be working full time of course.

There are around 55,000 Brits in France aged between 25 and 54 and 11,000 aged between 15 and 24.

Accord to another study by Britain’s Institute of Public Policy Research the percentage of British nationals living in France who were pensioners was only 22.5 percent.

The institute’s figures had some 250,000 British nationals living in France 57,000 of whom were pensioners.

So to cut a long myth short, most expats are here working in some form of another.

Which brings us to the next misconception.

3. Brits in France are all loaded 

The notion still seems to exist that anyone who moves abroad must be weighed down with suitcases full of cash.

But Brits in France are not snorting foie gras through rolled up €500 notes or bathing in Veuve Clicquot Champagne. In fact most endure the financial struggles that British citizens have to at home. Many struggle to find enough work to pay their way.

France-based Briton Brian Cave, who runs the blog Pensioners Debout, has pages of testimony from hard-up retirees who have to wear three jumpers and because they can't afford to heat their rural cottage.

“We are pensioners on a very low state pension of around £800 a month which is about half the suggested amount required to live a comfortable life here in France,” reads one letter written to Cave.
 
“We need to heat our property from September through to May…and we have struggled to keep warm in previous winters.”
 
Cave tells The Local: “The majority of Brits living in France are not loaded. There are people living on the breadline and others very close to it. It's totally untrue to think they are all rich.”

The fall in the exchange rate since the referendum has made matters worse for those who live off British pensions or rental income, with some 20 to 30 percent knock off their revenues.

All this to say, NO!, we don’t all live in a big villa on the Côte d'Azur or in a chateau in the Loire Valley.

4. They are 'traitors' or 'turn coats' who 'abandoned' the UK

(AFP)

Yet Brits abroad are often accused of this, especially when demanding to be able vote in general elections or June’s EU referendum, which many were barred from doing because they had been in France for over 15 years.

Because tens thousands of Brits had left the country of their own free will, to pursue jobs or lovers, take advantage of free movement, learn a new language or just to rest their weary legs in a place with guaranteed sun after 35 years earning their crust in the UK, they are often accused, on social media at least, of turning their backs on their country.

“You already voted. With your feet,” read one message to The Local before the Brexit referendum. Another read the “UK has nothing to do with you.”

Most Brits in France are heavily invested back home, whether through family and friends, property, pensions, principles or just sentiment. Just because Brits in France prefer baguettes to sliced bread, Kronenburg to Carling and have stopped putting milk in their tea, doesn't mean they are no longer British.

Perhaps we’ll leave the response to Christopher Chantrey, chairman of the British Community Committee of France.

He told a UK parliament committee this week: “We are British citizens. We are proud to be British and we want to continue to be British until the end of our lives.”

5.They are all anti-Brexit

There’s a common belief that any Briton living abroad must be against the idea of the UK leaving the EU, because they are the ones directly affected and have little interest in the UK “taking back control” as they don't live there.

But actually there are many Brits in France who backed leaving the EU. Although they are hard to track down and many may have gone into hiding.

“I don't feel in the minority  – I feel unique,” jokes Chris Balchin, who lives in Paris.

“I don't know many expats but certainly my French friends and acquaintances are shocked when I tell them that I support Brexit. 

“They grudgingly acknowledge the flaws of the EU but seem reluctant or even a bit scared to think that there could be a life outside it.”

So if Theresa May ever took her summer holiday in Dordogneshire, she would probably find a few who would offer her refuge her if the local Brits chased her out of town.

6. They don't speak French!

The common perception of Brits in France or anywhere for that matter is that we can’t string two words of the local lingo together other than “ Bonjour, parlez-vous anglais?”

But right now, across France there are British people uttering words, even sentences in French, albeit with a slight accent perhaps, that the locals seem to love.

Most expats know the key to la belle vie in France is mastering the language and spend a lot of time, effort and money on achieving it. 

Just check out Briton Darren Tullet, a former bar tender and English teacher in Paris who now presents TV in French.

7. They just hang around in pubs with other Brits

While Brits on the Costa del Sol in Spain may enjoy recreating Britain in the sun by opening pubs and fish and chip shops (or is that a myth?), Brits in France tend to be Francophiles desperately keen to blend in and look and sound as French as possible.

Most put a high value on having French friends and work hard to integrate into local communities. 

There are scores of Brits who are elected members of their village or town councils across France, after being persuaded to stand for election by the local French mayors.

While you might hear more English voices than French ones in some towns, those towns have not been overrun with Wetherspoon pubs and “greasy spoon” cafes. 

So that's it, we are not a load of retired moneybags squeezed into one part of France, refusing to speak the local lingo to locals and only hanging around in pubs with fellow traitors and Bremainers.

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PROPERTY

What do energy ratings mean for French property owners?

If you're buying, selling or renting a property in France you will need to get an energy rating, and the score given to the property will affect how or even if you can sell or rent it.

What do energy ratings mean for French property owners?

Since 2006, all properties in France have been rated on a scale of A to G on their energy efficiency – this is a rating based on things like how well-insulated the property is and what method is used for heating the property and the water.

The energy performance rating must be included in the paperwork of any property that is for sale or for rent and it looks like this.

Image Ministère de la Transition Écologique et de la Cohésion des Territoires

As well as providing useful information for a future owner or tenant on how much they are likely to be spending on gas/electricity bills, the energy ratings can also affect future plans for a property.

What the ratings mean

Any property that is rated A-C will generally be in good repair with an efficient heating system and an adequate level of insulation.

Properties rated D will likely be more difficult to keep warm in winter and cool in summer, and are likely to bring in a steeper bill for heating during the winter months.

However, properties rated E, F and G bring with them serious legal restrictions.

Heat sieves

Properties rated F or G are dubbed passoires thermiques (heat sieves) or sometimes passoires enérgetiques (energy sieves).

If you want to sell a property with an F or G rating you are required to pay for an extra ‘energy audit’ (at a cost of around €1,000) to give the buyer a detailed breaking of where the building is wasting energy and how it can be put right.

There are already restrictions in place on rents charged for F and G rated properties and from January 1st 2025 it will become illegal for landlords to renew a contract or offer a new contract on a G rated property. This will be followed by F and then E rated properties.

Because of these restrictions, properties with a F and G rating have a lower market value, and may be difficult to sell at all. 

E rating 

At present there are no legal restrictions on E-rated properties, but rental restrictions are scheduled to come into effect in 2034.

There are currently no plan to impose an energy audit in order to sell E-rated properties, but it doesn’t seem beyond the realms of possibility that this may become a requirement in the future.

Grants

On the bright side, owning property with a poor energy rating does mean that you are eligible for various grants to do the work necessary to improve its rating (which will have the happy side effect of cutting your energy bills).

The French government has a €5 million fund to help homeowners do energy-related renovations, mostly available via grants from the MaPrimeRenov scheme.

GUIDE: French property guides you might be eligible for

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