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EXPLAINED: What you should know if you want to quit your job in France

You may have heard that getting a permanent contract job in France is like finding the golden egg, but what if you want to quit? Here is what you need to know:

EXPLAINED: What you should know if you want to quit your job in France
Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

Quitting your job in France is not that tricky, but there are a few things foreign workers you should be aware of. 

The first is that a “resignation” (la démission) in France is technically reserved for people that were on permanent work contracts. If you were on a fixed-term contract (CDD) then it is a bit trickier to resign – in most cases, you will need to prove you have been hired for a permanent contract job (a CDI). 

The second is to use ‘lettres recommandé‘ whenever possible – this is the type of letter where the recipient must acknowledge receipt. 

As alluded to, how to quit depends on which contract you were previously on, so the first step is to check which type of contact you have:

For employees on a permanent contract (CDI)

For salariés (or employees with the CDI contract) – you can technically “decide to leave [your] job at any time.”

Your resignation does not have to be ‘accepted’ by your employer, but you do have to give formal notice. The amount of time for the notice period depends on your contract – typically it is between one to three months prior to your final work date. For some professions, the notice period is set by a collective agreement and is listed in your employment contract; for others, the notice period is set by the law. 

You can check to see whether your industry has a ‘collective agreement’ regarding the notice period for resigning by using this simulator created by the French Labour Ministry. 

You can only be exempted from the notice period if you fall into one of the following categories:

  • You are pregnant or just gave birth – resignations motivated by pregnancy only require 15 days notice to the employer. Keep in mind your pregnancy must be “medically certified” (I.e. you’ll likely need to show documentation)
  • You wish to resign in order to raise your child after taking parental leave 
  • If you have already taken a leave of absence to create your own company 
  • If you are a journalist, and you are resigning due to the ‘conscience clause’
  • If your employer has exempted you from needing to respect the notice period. If this is the case, it is recommendable to get the exemption in writing.

You should keep in mind that this applies to anyone with a CDI job – which can include minimum wage workers.

What happens if you don’t respect the notice period?

You can be required to pay compensation to the company caused by your ‘rupture brutale.’

Keep in mind that once you submit your resignation, it is typically not retractable. If you wish to withdraw your resignation, you would have to do so within a short period of time after submitting it. The form of withdrawal depends on your company and contract. 

After resigning, your employer must give you specific documents, including your work certificate, a certificate of employment for the pôle d’emploi, a receipt showing your final salary, and finally a summary statement of any savings plans or profit-sharing schemes you took part in as an employee.

What about my paid leave?

Employees are entitled to payment in lieu of paid leave if they have been unable to take all their leave before the contract termination date.

However, if you are looking to take your paid leave after sending your resignation letter, then you could risk having your notice extended by as many days as you left for holiday. While your employer might waive this and allow the notice period to continue running while you are on vacation, keep in mind that they do not have to.

Any agreement – whether the period is extended or remains the same – would need to be communicated in writing between employer and employee.

Finally, your employer cannot force you to take paid vacation during your notice period if you have outstanding days. 

Can I qualify for unemployment benefit after quitting the job?

According to official French government websites, “Employees who resign are not, in principle, eligible for unemployment allowance known as the Allocation de retour à l’emploi (ARE) or le chômage as most people refer to it in France.”

That’s because le chômage, which is paid out for a certain period of time and of which the monthly amount is linked to the previous job’s salary, is basically only those who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own are entitled to this particular unemployment benefits.”

In some cases, you might be able to apply for unemployment insurance if you can prove that you”

  • Moved house (to accompany their spouse, civil partner, etc.).
  • Left your job to complete a training course that would offer a certification or a qualification
  • Plan to set up or take over a business.
  • Plan to enroll in a vocational retraining program.
  • If you are “engaged in a civic service or volunteering activity”

What about a “Rupture conventionnelle“?

This is when a permanent contract is terminated via mutual consent between the employer and the employee. Either party can request a rupture conventionnelle, but it cannot be imposed or forced on an employee by the employer.

Some critiques are that this option is a means of amicable dismissal for the employer, but it offers benefits for both the employee and the employer. 

The primary benefit to the employee regarding the rupture conventionnelle is the ability to access unemployment benefits afterwards, as well as a severance package (as negotiated with the employer). It can offer an alternative to simply resigning.

Severance pay cannot be less than the legal minimum, though if you are in a field that has collectively negotiated for severance pay standards, the minimum might be higher.

There is a specific legal procedure that must be followed for a rupture conventionnelle. The termination agreement must begin with a series of interviews, and then a written contract will be drawn up, which will then be validated by the DDETSPP (essentially the employment offices for your département). 

There is no notice period – the employee leaves on the agreed date.

If your employer rejects your request for a rupture conventionnelle, then you would follow the procedure listed above to resign.

Employees with a fixed-term contract (CDD)

If you are still in the ‘période d’essai‘ (trial period) then you can terminate your contract at any moment without needing to provide any justification. 

Outside the trial period, a CDD job may be terminated before the end of the contract under the following circumstances:

  • The employer and employee have made an agreement (best to get this in writing)
  • If the employee can prove they have been hired on a permanent contract (CDI). You should indicate in writing your intent to terminate the contract as well as showing proof of hiring (a promise of hiring, promesse d’embauche, or an employment contract, for instance). 
  • Serious misconduct (faute grave) – this is if the employer chooses to terminate the employee’s contract due to wrongdoing. Some examples of serious misconduct might be drunkenness during working hours, unjustified absences or an abandonment of post, insubordination (refusal to perform a work task provided for in the contract), harassment or violence towards the employer or other employees, or theft. You can learn more about what constitutes serious misconduct HERE.
  • Force majeure” – this is if the employee can demonstrate that they are going through an “unforeseeable and insurmountable” event that is “beyond their control” and makes continuing the employment contract impossible. Learn more HERE.
  • Incapacity to perform the job, accompanied by a doctor’s note

Technically, when quitting a CDD job, you must still respect a notice period, unless your employer waives it. Usually, the duration is calculated on a rate of one day of notice per week worked. This might be specified in your contract, but your notice period should not exceed two weeks. 

If there is ‘termination by mutual agreement’ then it is not mandatory to provide a notice period. You can also attempt to negotiate this with your employer.

How do I resign?

The best way to resign is by sending a ‘recommended’ resignation letter. You can find a template on the service-puclic.fr website HERE.

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BUSINESS

French barber still trimming at 90

French barber Roger Amilhastre could have hung up his clippers decades ago but he said his passion for the business gives him a reason to get up in the morning.

French barber still trimming at 90

“I love this job, it’s in my bones,” the 90 year old said, leaning on one of his cast-iron barber’s chairs from the 1940s.

“And despite my age, my hands still don’t shake.”

Even with arthritis, he is on his feet from Tuesday to Saturday, tending to his customers’ hair and beards in his shop in the small southern town of Saint-Girons, in the foothills of the Pyrenees.

“I would have liked to retire at 60, but my wife was sick and I needed to pay for the care home,” he said, which cost more than €2,000 a month.

Even after his wife died in January, he kept going to work to stave off sad thoughts.

“I’m not grumpy getting up [to go to work],” he said.

France’s national hairdressers’ union believes Amilhastre may be the country’s oldest active barber.

“We have a few who continue late in life, but 90 years old is exceptional,” union president Christophe Dore told AFP.

“I’m not sure if he is France’s oldest barber, but if not, he can’t be far off.”

According to national statistics institute INSEE, a little more than half a million people over 65 still work in France.

In the southern region of Occitanie, where Amilhastre lives, only 1.65 percent of people older than 70 years old still work, including 190 79-year-olds. But statistics do not go beyond that age.

Many of Amilhastre’s customers call him Achille, after his father who founded the barber’s shop in 1932, giving it his name and then teaching his son the profession.

The shop witnessed the German occupation of France during World War II.

“During the war, German police came to find my father to groom a captain who had broken his leg,” Amilhastre said.

German troops had taken over a large stately home in town called Beauregard.

“We were scared because they used to say that anyone who went up to Beauregard never came back,” he said. “Luckily, he did.”

He said he remembered a “tough period” for businesses when he first picked up the scissors in 1947.

But then the town rebounded, he said, with its men following a flurry of new hair trends from greased quiffs in the 1950s, to 1970s bowl cuts.

The barber’s shop survived an economic downturn as local paper mills closed in the 1980s sparking mass layoffs, and supermarkets pushed small shops out of business.

“People started looking for work further afield, so we had to adapt and stay open later in the evening,” Amilhastre said.

That same decade, the Aids epidemic worried customers, who understood little about the illness at the time.

“People were scared,” Amilhastre said. “They no longer asked to be shaved and when we did, we were petrified there’d be a cut, that someone would bleed and the virus would be passed on to the next customer.” 

Jean-Louis Surre, 67, runs the nearby cafe where Amilhastre once taught him to play billiards as a young boy.

Behind his bar, Surre said he remembered his mother taking him across the road to see Amilhastre for a haircut every month as a child.

“He’d pump up the chair to reach the mirror, use his clippers and then at the end perfume you with some cologne – you know, squeezing those little pumps,” he said.

He is one of several older customers to regularly drop by Achille’s – even just to read the newspaper or have a chat.

Inside the barber’s, Jean Laffitte, a balding 84-year-old, said he no longer really needed a haircut. “With what little is left up there, these days I come out of friendship,” he said.

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