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France

Europe (Schengen) · Primary language: French (English moderate in cities; EF EPI 2025 #38 globally)

Overview for US expats

EU powerhouse with top-tier healthcare (Numbeo Mar 2026), strong culture and education, and cost of living slightly lower than the US on average—balanced by high Paris costs, moderate safety (Numbeo ~44), and French essential outside major cities (EF EPI 2025 #38). Long-stay visitor visa suits retirees and remote workers; Talent Passport for skilled employees and investors.

Paris and Lyon are major metros

Long-stay visas, Talent Passport, and préfecture rules are national French matters. We keep one country profile for France and separate Paris and Lyon pages for capital and Rhône-Alpes context.

Everyday life

Healthcare quality (1–5)
5
Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
3
Safety (1–5)
3
Ease of living in English (1–5)
3

Data points (where available)

Numbeo cost of living index
66.2
Safety index
44.2
Healthcare index
76.9

Schooling for families (1–5)

Early childhood
4
Primary (elementary)
4
Secondary (middle/high)
4

Why France works well for expats

  • Top-tier universal healthcare (Sécurité sociale and complementary private); OECD outcomes above average, full population coverage; Numbeo healthcare index ~77
  • Long-stay visitor visa (VLS-TS Visiteur) allows renewable stays without local employment—ideal for retirees and remote workers with €1,300+/month income
  • Excellent public and international schools; Paris, Lyon, and major cities have strong bilingual and IB options
  • Rich culture, transport, and lifestyle; diverse regions from capital to coast and mountains; COL and rent overall ~3.6% and ~45% lower than US (Numbeo Mar 2026)

Tradeoffs and challenges

  • French is essential for administration, daily life, and integration outside Paris and expat hubs; English proficiency moderate by EU standards (EF EPI #38)
  • Safety index moderate (Numbeo Mar 2026 ~44); petty crime and pickpocketing vary by city and neighborhood
  • Bureaucracy can be slow and paperwork-heavy; consulate and prefecture processes vary
  • Cost of living in Paris and popular regions is high; housing is tight in desirable areas

Visa routes for US citizens

  • retirement

    Difficulty: medium

    Long-stay visitor visa (VLS-TS Visiteur): no work in France; minimum €1,300 net/month income, private health insurance (min. €30,000 coverage), proof of accommodation. Valid 3–12 months, renewable; used by retirees and remote workers earning abroad. Apply via France-Visas; validate online within 3 months of arrival.

  • work permit

    Difficulty: medium

    Talent Passport / EU Blue Card for highly qualified employees: gross annual salary ≥1.5× average (e.g. €59,373 as of Aug 2025), 3 years higher education or 5 years professional experience, permanent or ≥6‑month contract with French employer. Multi-year permit (up to 4 years); not subject to labour market testing.

  • entrepreneur

    Difficulty: medium

    Talent Passport entrepreneur and Business investor: new business creation or direct investment in French companies (Business investor requires ≥€300,000 in fixed tangible/intangible assets and job creation within 4 years). Multi-year residence permit; family members eligible for accompanying permits.

  • family reunification

    Difficulty: medium

    Family reunification for spouses and dependent children of French nationals or residents; requirements and processing vary by prefecture.

Example cities to explore

Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, Nice, Toulouse, Marseille

References and further reading

Next steps