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FRENCH RESIDENCY

Revealed: The biggest problems with France’s visitor visa (and how to solve them)

Most commonly used by second-home owners or people retiring to France, the various types of visitor visa provide a way to stay for longer periods in France without working - but getting them can be tricky. Here are some of the most common problems with visitor visas, and how to solve them.

Revealed: The biggest problems with France's visitor visa (and how to solve them)
Photo by THOMAS COEX / AFP

If you’re a citizen of a non-EU country and want to spend more than 90 days out of every 180 in France then you will need a visa, and the type of visa you need depends on your personal circumstances – for example if you’re coming to study you will want a student visa and if you have a job lined up you’ll want a working visa.

READ MORE: EXPLAINED: What type of French visa do you need?

One of the most popular visa types is what is commonly known as the ‘visitor’ visa – which is largely aimed at people who do not intend to work or study in France, such as pensioners.

While thousands of people successfully apply for these visas each year, there are certain recurring problems with them that readers of The Local have flagged up.

Here’s a look at the most common problems, and how to solve them.

Different types of visitor visa 

There are in fact two different visas which are both commonly labelled ‘visitor’ – they are intended for totally different circumstances, and having the wrong one can cause you all sorts of problems down the line.

Unfortunately they have very similar names and the major differences between them are not clearly explained.

Short-stay visitor visavisa de long séjour temporaire visiteur (known as VLS-T). This is a short-stay visa, typically six-months, and it’s most commonly used by second-home owners who don’t want to be constrained by the 90-day rule, although it is also used by others who want to make longer trips to France without working.

The crucial point about this visa is that you are not a resident of France, you keep your residency in another country, most usually your home country.

Long-stay visitor visavisa de long séjour valant titre de séjour visiteur (known as VLS-TS). This is for people coming to France to live who don’t intend to work or study – it’s most commonly used by retired people.

It’s title is quite misleading as people on this visa are not really visitors, they live here. In other countries it’s known as a ‘non lucrative’ visa – ie one for people who do not intend to work or earn money while in France. They key point about this one is that it makes you a full-time resident in France, which comes with responsibilities in areas including tax.

Find a full breakdown of the difference between the two here – VLS-T or VLS-TS: What are the key differences between France’s visitor visas?

Finances

Whichever type of visitor visa you get, you will need to give an undertaking not to work in France (more on that below) and as you are not working, you need to prove that you can support yourself financially and won’t become a burden on the French state. 

This is why the visitor visa, unlike some other visa types, requires proof of your finances.

The guideline amount is the French SMIC (minimum wage) – you will need to demonstrate that you have either a regular income such as a pension that is equivalent to or above French minimum wage, or savings that add up to 12 months of minimum wage.

The SMIC is regularly revised, but as present stands at €1,383 net per month, or €16,596 per year.

This is a guideline amount and other circumstances – such as having rent-free accommodation – can be taken into account in certain cases.

Health insurance 

As with all visa types, your application will need to be accompanied by a dossier of paperwork – find full details here

But the visitor visa will also require you to have full health cover. 

This tends to be more of a problem for Brits who usually don’t have private health insurance because of the NHS care available in the UK – but although the French application process asks for ‘assurance maladie’ this doesn’t have to mean full private health insurance.

In certain circumstances an EHIC or GHIC can be accepted, for pensioners S1 can be used and if you live in France and are renewing a visitor visa you can use your carte vitale for this purpose.

READ ALSO What’s the deal with health insurance and French visas?

For Americans, keep in mind that Medicare coverage will not be accepted.

Appointment services 

Once you have made your application and provided all the documents necessary, the next step is an in-person appointment for stage two.

This appointment process is usually run by private contractors and many readers – particularly those dealing with the TLS Contact visa services which is used in the UK among other countries – have reported an extremely frustrating experience.

From a lack of appointment slots to constantly glitching websites and very slow processing times, many people reported that trying to secure the final appointment was the most difficult part of the whole process.

‘We’ll give up our French property’ – Users speak of their frustration with the TLS visa website

OFII

You might think that getting the visa is the end of your problems – but no.

If you’re moving to France to live, the next stage is contact with the Office française de l’immigration et de l’integation (OFII) to arrange extra paperwork, a medical examination and (for some) compulsory French classes.

These ‘in country’ steps are important to ensure that your visa remains valid.

If you are a second home owner who does not intend to live in France, being instructed to contact OFII could be a sign that you have the wrong type of visitor visa, so it’s important to check this carefully. 

OFII: Your questions answered on France’s immigration office

Combining with 90-day rule

If you’re not living in France but are merely a frequent visitor here, such as a second-home owner, you should have the short-stay six-month visa.

This means that if you want to visit during the rest of the year, you fall back under the auspices of the 90-day rule.

Questions on how to ‘combine’ a visitor visa with the 90-day rule are the most commonly asked by second-home owners.

The short answer is that for the six months of the year that your visa is valid, you can ignore the rule and spend as long as you like in France. Once your visa expires, the 90-day ‘clock’ restarts, and every visit that you make to France counts towards your 90-day limit.

Visits to other EU or Schengen zone countries made while your French visa is valid will count towards your 90 days, as the visa only covers trips to France.

You also need to be aware of the rules on your home country on tax residency, as long periods spent out of the country can change your tax status.

READ ALSO How do I combine a French visa with the 90-day rule?

Working remotely 

One thing that both types of visitor visa require is an undertaking that you will not work while in France. Depending on your situation, that might include working remotely for a company back in your home country.

The rules as written are slightly vague on this – largely because remote working is a relatively new phenomenon and visa rules are yet to catch up – but coming to France to live on a visitor visa and doing regular remote work for a company in your home country could create problems in both the tax and the immigration system.

A grey area exists if you’re working remotely for a company based in another country that has no connection to France – for example you’re a copy-editor working for a UK-based company that operates only within the UK. 

It’s not uncommon for second-home owners or other regular visitors to log on and do a few bits of work remotely, and this is less likely to create visa problems.

However it could create other problems in relation to tax, insurance or your contract with your employer.

READ MORE: Ask the experts: What’s the deal with remote working and France’s visitor visa?

Volunteering

Several readers also asked us about the legal situation if you want to volunteer while on a visitor visa.

In France there are two different types of volunteer – benevolat and volontariat. The majority of volunteer workers are counted as bénévoles.

These are non-contractual volunteers who assist an organisation based on their spare time and availability – maybe helping out at a soup kitchen or community garden. The French government does not give this type of volunteering any legal status or protection – the work is unpaid and it is not full-time. These activities are seen as part of one’s vie privée (private life).

This type of volunteering is entirely compatible with a visitor visa.

Work done as a volontariat may not be – this type of work typically involves signing a contract, having set work hours and receiving some kind of compensation whether that is financial or in the form of tickets or reduced price access to events.

If you wish to volunteer during the 2024 Paris Olympics or Paralympics, this counts as benevolat, and so can be done by people on a visitor visa, or those who are using their 90-day allowance to visit France.

Volunteering in France: What are the rules and do I need a visa?

Do you have questions about the French visitor visa? Email us at [email protected] and we will do our best to answer them

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LIVING IN FRANCE

5 things Brits in France need to know about swapping driving licences

Now that the dust has settled from the somewhat chaotic post-Brexit period, the system for swapping a UK driving licence for a French one seems to be running fairly smoothly. There are, however, some things that UK licence holders need to know.

5 things Brits in France need to know about swapping driving licences

This article is aimed at holders of a UK or Northern Ireland driving licence who are living in France – tourists, visitors and second-home owners can continue to drive in France on a UK licence and do not need an international driving permit.

British students who are studying in France on a student visa can continue to drive on their UK licence during their studies – if however they settle in France afterwards, they need to follow the below process for swapping their licence. 

1 You’re special

Well, maybe special is over-stating it, but the system for holders of UK and NI licence holders is different to that of other non-EU nationals, and also different to the system for EU licence holders.

The reason for this is that a pragmatic post-Brexit agreement was (finally) reached between France and the UK, in order to avoid the chaos that was triggered when thousands of Brits in France all tried to swap their driving licences at once.

Unlike almost all other post-Brexit agreements, this one applies both to people who moved to France before the end of Brexit transition period in 2021 and those who have moved here since. 

The below terms apply to everyone who has a UK or NI licence, regardless of their nationality or when they moved to France. 

2 But you still have to swap

It was technically always the case that Brits who were living in France should have swapped their licence for a French one, just as other EU licence holders do now, but in reality many people lived here for years or decades without ever exchanging their licence and there was little or no enforcement of the rule.

That has now changed and you must swap according to the following timetable;

If your UK licence was issued after January 1st, 2021 – you must swap within one year of moving to France.

If your UK licence was issued before January 1st 2021 – you only swap when you meet one of the following conditions;

  • The licence itself or the photocard is within six months of its expiry date. For more people the photocard expiry will come around first, but UK licences also require renewal when the holder reaches the age of 70
  • Your licence has been lost or stolen
  • You have been ordered to exchange your licence by a gendarme after committing a driving offence

For people who are exchanging because the licence is about to expire, it is important that you don’t start the process until your licence is within six months of the expiry date – early applications will simply be rejected.

3 It might not be as much of a nightmare as you think 

Unlike the old days when licence swaps were done by préfectures, the whole process has now moved online and is run through a single, central system.

The online portal for requesting a swap is known as ANTS and you can find it 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.

You might be pleasantly surprised by the fact the form itself is relatively straightforward (as French admin forms go), asking basic questions such as your personal details and the details of your driving licence.

You will have to upload supporting documents, but these are likely to be things that you already have to hand including

  • Proof of ID (passport or carte de séjour)
  • Proof of address (a recent utility bill or attestation from your utility provider)
  • If your driver’s licence is in a different name to your passport, you will need to supply your full birth certificate

You will also need to supply a photo – you can either use the internet-enabled Photomaton booths – find your nearest here – to create a digital photo with the required security code, or you can use the normal photo booths to print out a physical photo and send it by post after you have made your application. 

Once completed, you can use the ANTS site to track the progress of your application and upload any other documents that are requested.

4 But don’t leave it too late 

If you’re applying because your licence is about to expire then you cannot apply until you are within six months of the expiry date.

But it’s a good idea not to leave it until the last minute as the whole process does take time – things have improved massively since the dark days of 2020 and 2021 when people were waiting for years and their licences expired while they waited.

But it still takes time – the current average for a straightforward application with no extra documents required seems to be between four and five months, although processing times can vary, especially over holiday periods.

It’s therefore a good idea to make the application fairly soon after you enter that magic six-month window.

Once you make the application you should get an automated response acknowledging receipt – this is usually sent by SMS and/or email, it’s a good idea to check your spam folder if you don’t get the email.

Don’t panic if you don’t then hear anything for the next few weeks or even months, this appears to be normal. If your application is complete and there are no outstanding queries or other documents required, the next step will be a request to send in your old UK licence.

You send this by post (recorded delivery with a signature is strongly recommended) and at the same time you can download an Attestation de Depot de Permis de Conduire (certificate of deposit of driving licence) – you can use this to prove your continued entitled to drive in the period between sending in your old licence and receiving your new one.

Your French licence is then sent by registered post, and the window between posting the old licence and receiving the new one is usually not more than a month, you 

5 Help is out there 

If your application runs into problems or you have an untypical situation or find the ANTS website hard to use, don’t panic – help is available.

The Facebook group Driving in France – French Licence Applications is a good place to start with comprehensive guides and knowledgeable admins who are quick to respond to questions.

You can also chat to others in your situation and get updates on how long processing times seem to be.

If you have problems using the online system, your local France Services office may be able to help.

You can also head to The Local’s reader questions section, or email us at [email protected] if you have questions.

Digital licences

You might have heard about France’s new digital driving licence – unfortunately this is only available to people who have French citizenship (including dual nationals).

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