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DRIVING LICENCES

Reader question: Can expired UK driving licences be swapped for French ones?

Good news! A post-Brexit deal was finally agreed in June 2021 that permits Britons living permanently in France to swap their driving licences for a French one.

Reader question: Can expired UK driving licences be swapped for French ones?
Photo: AFP

After several years during which the exchange of driving licences was effectively suspended, a deal has finally been announced between French and British authorities.

We say finally because the impasse over this issue dragged on so long that many people’s UK licences expired while they were waiting – leaving people stranded in rural areas with no transport.

But there is at last some good news for them – people whose licences expired while they waited can now swap them for French ones without having to take the (complicated and expensive) French driving test.

You can read full details of the new deal and who it applies to HERE.

If you had already applied under the old system – if you had previously applied and have an application number, the advice is simply to wait.

No application from UK licence holders were being processed until the deal was agreed. Processing has now begun again, but there is a big baklog to get through.

If you fit the new criteria, your licence will be exchanged and you should be contacted to ask for extra documents or to send in your expired licence. Once you have sent in your old licence, you will receive an attestation that allows you to drive until your new licence arrives.

If you have not applied – if your licence expired while the system was not accepting applications from UK licence holders, you can now apply. 

Yu do this via an online portal, which you can find HERE.

If you haven’t used it before you will need to create an online account, or if you already have online accounts for French government services such as Ameli or tax declarations you can login by clicking on the France Connect button.

Once logged in, select Je demande l’échange ou l’enregistrement de mon permis de conduire étranger (I request the exchange or registration of a foreign driving licence) and fill in the details requested on the form such as name, address etc.

Once you have completed the form, you get to the section where you can supply supporting documents as requested. These vary slightly depending on your circumstances but will include: 

  • Proof of ID;
  • Proof of address such as a recent utility bill;
  • If your driver’s licence is in a different name to your passport, you will need to supply your full birth certificate;
  • Photos – these must be taken in a government-approved photo booth or via the app;
  • The documents need to be scanned and uploaded to the website, not sent by post, although photos can be sent in the mail. 

You can find a full guide to each step of the process of filling out the form at the Facebook page Applying for a French Driving Licence.

UK nationals do not need to supply a post-Brexit carte de séjour with their application – so if your licence has expired but you have not yet received your carte de séjour, you can go ahead and apply and there is no need to provide translations of the documents you supply, unless asked.

For more information on exchanging your UK driving licence for a French, one click here

Member comments

  1. Although the advice is that those who submitted their applications prior to Brexit to sit back & wait I have a different result. I submitted mine in December 2020 and received an online acknowledgment. My application was simply rejected by SMS message two days ago. My licence expires on 24 January 2022 so that maybe the reason for rejection ? My ANTS site , however, indicates my application is still pending ! Confused de Nerac !
    On another point relating to UK Driving licences it used to be the law that on arriving at 70 years of age one was required to swap your licence for a French one. According to a lady at ANTS this regulation appears to have been quietly dropped .

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For members

LIVING IN FRANCE

EXPLAINED: The website that speeds up French bureaucracy ‘by up to 50%’

Notorious for their slow speed, French administrative procedures have become more streamlined in recent years - and now a French government website claims it can speed up common processes like exchanging foreign drivers' licences and renewing residency permits.

EXPLAINED: The website that speeds up French bureaucracy 'by up to 50%'

From driver’s licences to submitting documents related to residency permits for foreigners, the French website démarches simplifiées (procedures simplified) seeks to make it easier – and faster – to handle French administrative procedures online.

The website is a recent innovation by the French government that aims to streamline administrative procedures and make more processes that once required in-person, paper-heavy meetings available online.

According to the site, the goal is to decrease administrative processing times by 50 percent in France. As of mid-December, more than seven million files had been submitted via démarches simplifiées.

It doesn’t change the actual processes, or mean that you don’t still need a dossier of documents, but what it aims to do is bring a whole host of different processes together on one site.

However, it is still optional for local authorities to use, so exactly what you can do with it depends on where you live – some préfectures seem more engaged with it than others.

You can still do any of these processes directly via your préfecture if you prefer not to use the site.

Why would I use this website?

It has a variety of different processes, but probably the main reasons a foreigner living in France might use this website would be to submit files related to a visa or residency permit renewal or a driver’s licence.

More French administrative tasks have been migrating to the site recently, however. For example, the police prefecture for the city of Paris has moved some procedures, like declaring “an animal nuisance” – signalling to local authorities that there may be a rat or pigeon infestation – to démarches simplifiées

READ MORE: Bedbugs, mice, and mould: How to handle infestations in your French home

As more French procedures become computerised, this website might become more necessary in day-to-day life in France, but for now, it is a good first step before making an in person meeting or completing an admin task that requires mailing documents.

How do I use this website?

Some of the website is in English, such as the log-in page, while other parts of the website are solely available in French.

To log on, you can go to THIS link. You can sign in using FranceConnect, or by creating an online account.

Screenshot of log-in page for Démarches Simplifiées

Once you logged in, you first select the type of procedure you want to do, for example Démarches relatives au permis de conduire (tasks relating to driving licences) or Démarches relatives aux étrangers résidant en France (tasks relating to foreigners living in France) for anything relating to residency permits.

You then find an alphabetical list of départements and you can see which services your local préfecture offers online.

If the service you need is not listed under your département name then unfortunately it’s back to the old-fashioned method for you.

If it is listed, however, you can go straight to the section you need and make your request online.

If you are looking for options in Paris, for example, the page would resemble the one below:

Screenshot of the ‘procedures relevant to foreigners living in France’ section of the Démarches Simplifiées website

It seems that préfectures are gradually adding more services to the site, so it’s worth checking regularly what your local préfecture offers.

Once you click on the form that is relevant to you, then Démarches Simplifiées will open a file that will be accessible to you in your online portal on the website after logging in.

You can then submit requests online and track your application to see the status of your request.

Is it really 50 percent faster?

That’s what the website claims, although we’re yet to see any independent verification of that . . .

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