Most articles on this topic end with «it depends» and leave you guessing. Not very useful when you're planning a move, a residence permit renewal, or a citizenship application.
The rules have changed for three specific procedures. Since January 1, 2026, the French language thresholds set by the State have been raised for the first multi-year residence permit, the first resident card, and French citizenship. A new civic exam has also been added - but only for the two residence permits. Below are the exact levels, who is concerned, what daily life actually demands beyond the paperwork, and how to get there. The requirements cited here come from the official fact sheets on service-public.gouv.fr (sources at the bottom).
To enter France on a long-stay visa, no general French level is required according to the sources consulted. To live there long-term, the threshold depends on the procedure. As of January 1, 2026: first multi-year residence permit = A2 level, first resident card (10 years) = B1 level, French citizenship = B2 level (spoken and written). For day-to-day life (doctor, kids' school, regular admin), spoken B1 is the real comfort threshold - this is a practical guide, not an official rule. Exemptions are not the same across procedures: those over 65 are exempt for the residence permits, while exemptions for citizenship are far more restrictive. A civic exam (40-question multiple choice, 32/40 minimum) is required in addition to the language test - but only for the first multi-year permit and the first resident card.
Overview - the 4 thresholds you should know
- Long-stay visa (entering France) - No general French level required according to the sources consulted. You can arrive in France without speaking a word of French.
- First multi-year residence permit (1 to 4 years) - A2 level required since January 1, 2026, for those under 65, first issuance only.
- First resident card (10 years) - B1 level required since January 1, 2026, for those under 65, first issuance only.
- French citizenship - B2 spoken and written required since January 1, 2026 (naturalization by decree and declaration through marriage).
Important: these are regulatory minimums for the procedures concerned, not comfort thresholds. To live well day-to-day (talk to your doctor, follow your kids' schooling, understand a building meeting), spoken B1 is the practical floor below which life gets heavy. This is practical guidance, not law.
1. To enter France - no general French level required
Good news first: to get a standard long-stay visa (student, work, French spouse, visitor), no general French level is required according to the sources consulted. Some specific situations may include a training commitment on arrival (the integration contract, contrat d'intégration républicaine), but this is not a test you sit before leaving.
You can land in Paris speaking zero French and start learning once on the ground. Plenty of people do - international students, French spouses, employees relocated by their company. The language requirements kick in when you want to stay long-term: at the move to a multi-year permit, the resident card, or citizenship.
2. First multi-year residence permit - A2 level since January 1, 2026
For whom: non-EU foreign nationals under 65 applying for a first multi-year permit (1 to 4 years depending on the basis). Renewals are not subject to this new requirement (source: service-public.gouv.fr, fact sheet F34501).
Before 2026, no French level was required for the multi-year permit. Since January 1, 2026, A2 is mandatory for first issuance.
A2 is the «elementary» level. You can:
- Introduce yourself, talk about daily life
- Understand short sentences on familiar topics (family, shopping, work)
- Communicate in simple, routine situations
It's well within reach in 6 to 12 months of regular practice if you start from zero. For an English speaker who really commits, 3 to 4 months is realistic (practical guide, not a guarantee).
Exception: certain categories exempt from the integration contract are not subject to this requirement.
3. First resident card (10 years) - B1 level since January 1, 2026
For whom: non-EU foreign nationals under 65 applying for a first resident card, usually after several years of legal residence in France (source: service-public.gouv.fr, fact sheet F34501).
Before 2026, A2 was enough. Since January 1, 2026, the bar is B1 - one full level higher.
B1 is the entry into autonomy. At this level, you can:
- Handle most situations encountered when traveling or living in France
- Produce simple, coherent speech on familiar topics
- Tell a story, describe an experience, give a brief opinion
- Catch the gist of a conversation between French people at normal speed - partly
It's also the level where most learners plateau for a year or two. The «B1 plateau» is the most well-known stall in French learning: you read, you write, your teacher understands you, but the moment a French person speaks fast with colleagues, you lose the thread. If you're aiming for the resident card, plan seriously more time than for A2.
Exception: holders of refugee status are not affected by this requirement.
4. French citizenship - B2 spoken and written since January 1, 2026
For whom: foreign nationals who want to become French, by naturalization by decree or by declaration following marriage to a French citizen (source: service-public.gouv.fr, fact sheet F11926).
This is where the jump is biggest. Before 2026, B1 was enough. Since January 1, 2026, B2 is required for both spoken and written French - and it applies to both routes: naturalization by decree AND declaration by marriage.
B2 is the «upper intermediate» level - the threshold where you actually master the language. At B2, you can:
- Understand the main ideas of a complex text or an abstract discussion
- Communicate with enough spontaneity and ease for normal interaction with a native speaker
- Express your views on current events, defend a point
- Follow TV news, read a press article without a dictionary
Going from B1 to B2 typically takes another 6 to 12 months of serious practice. It's also the level where understanding natural spoken French becomes essential - naturalization panels test this in interview.
For the full procedure, see our article what level of French for French citizenship.
5. French level for daily life (practical guide, not regulatory)
This section and the next step outside the strict legal framework. They are field benchmarks - what we observe in real life, drawn from expat experience and job ads. No law mandates them.
In real life, here is what each situation actually demands:
- Admin (préfecture, CAF, social security) - spoken B1, written A2. Many forms have their own logic - factor in some specialized vocabulary.
- Doctor and health - spoken B1 minimum. Describing symptoms, understanding a prescription, asking precise questions about treatment is demanding.
- Kids' school - B1+ to B2 for parent-teacher meetings, school letters, evaluations.
- Housing (visit, lease, inventory, building meetings) - B1 minimum. Contracts are written in legal French - be patient with yourself.
- Skilled work (manager, civil service, law, medicine) - B2 to C1 depending on the role. French professional writing is demanding.
- Social life, neighbors, shops - spoken A2 to B1 works for everyday interactions.
In practice, the real comfort threshold for living long-term in France is solid spoken B1. Below that, you'll constantly depend on others to translate, explain, bail you out. Above it, you become autonomous.
6. French level by industry (practical benchmarks)
Important: the levels below are not regulatory. No law sets a French level requirement to work in France (with rare exceptions - civil service, regulated professions). These are practical thresholds drawn from job ads and on-the-ground feedback.
Tech, startups, multinationals
Expected level: A2 to B1 often enough. Many tech companies in Paris run in English. French is useful for HR, the cafeteria, Friday drinks, but not essential for daily work.
Management, finance, consulting, law, healthcare
Expected level: B2 to C1, spoken and written. You write notes, read contracts, run meetings. Professional written French is codified and demanding.
Civil service
Expected level: B2 minimum, often C1. And for the entrance exams (concours), French writing - composition, essay - is the screen that filters applicants.
Hospitality, retail, tourism
Expected level: spoken B1. French-dominated customer service, with English a plus in tourist areas.
Construction, industry, logistics
Expected level: spoken A2 to B1. Lots of foreign workers in these sectors - the «French of the worksite» is the common language. Written French matters less.
7. Exemptions - two very different regimes
Exemptions depend on the procedure. The two regimes must be kept separate - mixing them up can get a file rejected.
Exemptions for the multi-year permit and resident card
According to service-public.gouv.fr (fact sheets F34501 and F39530):
- Over 65 at the date of application - automatic exemption from both the language test and the civic exam
- Disability or chronic health condition making the test impossible - adjustments or full exemption on presentation of a medical certificate
- Categories exempt from the integration contract (students, certain visas, etc.)
Exemptions for French citizenship
The regime is far more restrictive. According to service-public.gouv.fr (fact sheet F11926), the exemptions are:
- Disability or health condition making the language assessment impossible (medical certificate, with possible expert review)
- Recognized political refugee or stateless person + over 70 + at least 15 years of legal residence in France (the three conditions must all be met)
For declaration by marriage, only the disability/health exemption applies. There is no automatic «over 65» exemption for citizenship. Always check service-public.gouv.fr before assembling your file.
8. The civic exam - residence permits only
Since January 1, 2026, a civic exam has been added to the language requirement, but only for the first multi-year permit and the first resident card (source: service-public.gouv.fr, fact sheet F39530). The fact sheets cited in this article document the civic exam for residence permits; citizenship sits within a separate documentary framework.
For the residence permits, the format:
- Format: multiple choice in French, 40 questions, 45 minutes maximum, on a digital platform
- Pass mark: 32 correct answers out of 40 (80%)
- Validity: certificate with no expiry
- Exemptions: over 65, or adjustments/exemption for disability (medical certificate)
- Topics: republican principles and values, rights and duties in France, history-geography-culture, institutional system, life in French society
The exam is in French - not English, not any other language. That's part of why the language threshold was raised in parallel: to read and understand the questions, you already need an A2 level.
9. How to reach the required level
A realistic plan based on where you start:
For English speakers (US, UK, Canada, Australia)
- 0 to A2 (multi-year permit): 3 to 6 months of regular practice (45 min to 1h per day)
- A2 to B1 (resident card): another 6 to 12 months
- B1 to B2 (citizenship): another 6 to 12 months
- Total from zero to B2: 15 to 30 months on average
For Italian, Spanish, Portuguese speakers
- Cut the durations above by 25 to 40% - shared vocabulary speeds up A2 and B1
- B2 stays demanding for everyone, regardless of native language proximity
For German speakers and Scandinavians
- Faster A1 to B1 thanks to familiarity with conjugated languages
- Speaking work still takes time - French sounds (R, U, nasal vowels) are foreign to all these languages
The right resource mix
- In-person classes (Alliance Française, OFII, private schools): essential for structure and corrections, especially at A1 and A2
- A method for understanding natural spoken French: this is the stall point for most learners around B1. You understand your teacher but not your neighbors, because your ear is trained on slow, clearly articulated French. 360 French Immersion by HelloFrench is built specifically for this: 60 authentic dialogues between native speakers in word-by-word karaoke mode, per-sentence pronunciation scoring, and 180 role-plays for speaking practice. The tool to bridge the gap from textbook French to French as it's actually spoken in France.
- Tandem and conversation: essential from B1 onward. Find an exchange partner or a language café in your city.
- French media: RFI Journal en français facile for A2 to B1, France Inter and France Culture for B2 to C1. Reading the press (Le Monde, Le Parisien) speeds up reading fluency.
- DELF: if you're aiming for citizenship, take the DELF B2. It's the diploma that covers every administrative use (indefinite validity, unlike TCF score certificates).
Discover 360 French Immersion →
Official sources
- service-public.gouv.fr - F34501: resident card and multi-year residence permit, how to prove your knowledge of French
- service-public.gouv.fr - F39530: multi-year residence permit and resident card, how to take the civic exam
- service-public.gouv.fr - F11926: French citizenship by naturalization, conditions and supporting documents
- Law n° 2024-42 of January 26, 2024 on controlling immigration and improving integration
- Decree n° 2025-647 of July 15, 2025 (Légifrance) - in force January 1, 2026
- France Éducation International - official TCF tests (state-mandated test administrator)
NB: This article reflects the rules in force as of January 1, 2026. Thresholds, exemptions and procedures may change - always check service-public.gouv.fr before filing a residence permit or naturalization application. If you're preparing a test (DELF B2 or TCF IRN), plan ahead for registration delays, which can run 2 to 3 months at busy exam centers.





