+44 (0)333 414 9244 Mon - Sun, 8.30am - 6pm
Contact Us

French Citizenship: Requirements, Eligibility, and How to Apply (2026 Guide)

French citizenship offers far more than permanent residence rights. For many UK nationals, international families, students, and long-term residents in France, it provides lasting legal security, the ability to regain full European Union mobility rights, and the option to pass nationality to future generations.

For expert guidance on French citizenship planning for you and your family, you can call our dedicated team at IAS today on +44 (0)333 414 9244, or contact us online.

Request a call back from our immigration experts

    What are the benefits of choosing IAS’ Advice Package?

    Our Advice Package is the ideal option if you are looking for expert immigration legal advice. With this service, you will have a one-on-one session with one of our immigration lawyers.

    Your immigration lawyer will consider your case and offer bespoke advice, and they will advise you on the optimum route to take to achieve your desired result.

    During your advice session, you will be able to discuss your case and get detailed information about your options to proceed with your case. We will:

    Review your situation and explore your opportunities to get your desired immigration results.

    Advice on the most appropriate documentary evidence required to support your case.

    Discuss the requirements that you need to meet to qualify for your visa.

    Outline the expected time frames to process your application.

    After booking your first consultation, you will have 3 days to ask any follow-up questions free of charge.

    Regardless of what your personal immigration query might be, IAS is here to help and support your. Call us or enquire online to learn more about our Immigration Advice Package.

    Services we Provide

    French Citizenship

    French citizenship offers far more than permanent residence rights. For many UK nationals, international families, students, and long-term residents in France, it provides lasting legal security, the ability to regain full European Union mobility rights, and the option to pass nationality to future generations.

    At IAS, our advisers support clients across every stage of the French citizenship process, from initial eligibility reviews to document preparation and refusal challenges. For tailored guidance on the most suitable route, call +44 (0)333 414 9244 to speak with our team.

    What Is French Citizenship?

    French citizenship, known legally as nationalité française, is the formal legal relationship between an individual and the French Republic. Unlike residence rights, which are based on visas, permits, or family status, citizenship grants full and permanent nationality status.

    Once you become a French citizen, you can live in France without immigration restrictions, vote in national and local elections, apply for a French passport, and enjoy freedom of movement rights throughout the EU.

    This is particularly valuable for British citizens who want to restore easy movement across Europe following Brexit. A French passport allows you to live, work, retire, or study across the EU without separate immigration permission.

    Citizenship also creates responsibilities. Depending on your circumstances, these may include tax obligations, civic duties, and compliance with French nationality law when registering births, marriages, or children born abroad.

    The main distinction between citizenship and residency is permanence. A residence permit can expire or depend on ongoing work, family, or financial conditions. Citizenship, once granted, is far more secure and often transferable to children.

    The most common pathways include residence-based naturalisation, marriage, descent, birth in France, and in rare cases, exceptional service to France.

    Benefits of Becoming a French Citizen

    For many applicants, the benefits extend well beyond simply remaining in France permanently.

    A French citizen can live and work freely anywhere in the European Union, which makes this route especially attractive for UK-based professionals, retirees, remote workers, and cross-border families.

    Citizenship also provides access to one of the world’s strongest passports, simplified inheritance of nationality for children, and full political participation rights in France.

    In practical terms, this means you no longer need to worry about visa renewals, changing residence card rules, or future immigration policy reforms affecting your long-term status.

    For families with children born in the UK or another country, citizenship can also significantly ease the path to French nationality for the next generation.

    If you are unsure whether your residence history, ancestry, or marriage creates a direct entitlement, speaking with an IAS adviser early can help you avoid pursuing the wrong legal route. Call +44 (0)333 414 9244 for a personalised assessment of your options.

    Main Ways to Get French Citizenship

    French nationality law offers several recognised legal pathways.

    Citizenship pathwayWho qualifiesMinimum residency requirementProcessing time
    NaturalisationLong-term legal residents5 years12–18 months
    MarriageSpouse of French citizen4 years marriage12–18 months
    DescentChild of French parentNone6–12 months
    Birth in FranceCertain children born in FranceVariesVaries
    Investment-linked residence to naturalisationInvestors via residence routeUsually 5 years12–18 months
    Exceptional contributionSpecial service to FranceReduced/waivedVariable

    The right pathway depends on your family ties, study history, residence in France, and future long-term plans.

    French Citizenship by Naturalization

    Naturalisation is the most common route for foreign nationals who have built their life in France.

    The standard rule is 5 years of lawful and continuous residence, during which France must clearly be the centre of your personal, professional, and family interests.

    Applicants must show more than physical presence. The authorities will examine tax compliance, employment, income stability, family life, and whether your long-term plans are genuinely anchored in France.

    The residency period may be reduced to 2 years in specific cases, most commonly where the applicant has completed at least two years of higher education in France and obtained a recognised degree.

    This is why post-study naturalisation remains one of the strongest long-term options for international graduates seeking French citizenship for students.

    Applicants must also meet integration and language requirements, maintain lawful status throughout the qualifying period, and demonstrate good character.

    French Citizenship by Marriage

    French citizenship by marriage is available to the spouse of a French national through a declaration route.

    The standard rule requires 4 years of marriage, provided the relationship is genuine and ongoing at the time of application.

    The marriage must be legally valid under French law and, if it took place outside France, it must usually be formally transcribed into the French civil register before the declaration can proceed.

    From 2026, the language requirement for marriage-based nationality declarations is also B2 CEFR, matching the updated standard for decree-based naturalisation.

    Where couples live abroad, the authorities may request stronger evidence of ongoing marital life, shared finances, or regular contact with France.

    French Citizenship by Investment

    France does not operate a direct citizenship by investment programme.

    This means simply purchasing French property or making a passive financial investment does not create a direct entitlement to nationality.

    However, high-net-worth individuals, entrepreneurs, and founders may qualify first for French residence through routes such as the Talent Passport or business investment permissions.

    Once they complete the required lawful residence period, they may later apply through the standard naturalisation route, subject to the same integration, language, and good-character requirements as all other applicants.

    For this reason, French citizenship by investment is better understood as an indirect residence-to-naturalisation pathway rather than an immediate nationality programme.

    French Citizenship by Birth or Descent

    This heading is especially important for applicants researching French citizenship by descent.

    French nationality commonly follows the principle of jus sanguinis, meaning nationality passes through a French parent.

    If one of your parents was French at the time of your birth, you may already be French automatically, even if you were born in the United Kingdom or another country.

    This route is particularly relevant for:
    children born abroad to French parents, adults whose births were never registered with French consular authorities, and descendants exploring whether nationality passed automatically through one parent.

    Birth in France may also confer citizenship rights under jus soli, particularly when a child born to foreign parents continues to live there into adolescence.

    These cases can become highly technical, especially where births abroad were never properly recorded. IAS can help assess whether you are already French without needing to naturalise.

    French Citizenship Requirements

    Although each legal route has different rules, most applications require the following core elements.

    RequirementDescriptionSupporting documents
    ResidenceUsually 5 years legal stayResidence cards, address history
    LanguageB2 FrenchDELF, DALF, TCF, TEF
    IntegrationCivic and social assimilationInterview records
    Good characterNo serious convictionsPolice certificates
    Financial stabilityStable lawful incomePayslips, tax returns
    Civil statusIdentity and family proofBirth and marriage certificates

    French authorities assess these requirements holistically, focusing on whether your life is genuinely established in France.

    French Language Requirement

    The French citizenship test now plays a central role in 2026 applications.

    For both naturalisation by decree and citizenship by marriage, the minimum standard is now B2 level French in speaking, reading, writing, and listening.

    Accepted evidence usually includes DELF, DALF, TCF, or TEF results, provided the certificate remains valid.

    For decree-based naturalisation, applicants must also pass the new civic examination introduced in 2026, which tests knowledge of French history, values, institutions, and civic responsibilities.

    This civic exam requirement does not apply in the same way to marriage declarations, where the focus remains on assimilation and language rather than decree-based testing.

    Because the jump from B1 to B2 is significant, many otherwise eligible applicants benefit from legal and practical guidance before choosing when to submit. For strategic advice on timing your application, contact IAS on +44 (0)333 414 9244.

    Documents Required for French Citizenship Application

    Document preparation is one of the most important parts of any successful application.

    DocumentPurposeWhere to obtain it
    PassportIdentityHome country authority
    Residence permitLawful stayFrench prefecture
    Birth certificateCivil statusCountry of birth registry
    Marriage certificateSpousal routeCivil registry
    Tax recordsFinancial integrationFrench tax office
    Language certificateB2 complianceApproved exam provider
    Criminal recordGood characterHome state + France

    Foreign documents often need sworn translation and, in some cases, legalisation or apostille certification.

    How to Apply for French Citizenship

    The process begins by confirming the correct legal route.

    Once eligibility is established, the next stage is collecting civil status records, tax evidence, proof of residence, language certificates, and criminal background documentation.

    Applications are then submitted either through the prefecture, the nationality portal, or the relevant French consulate if you live abroad.

    Most applicants are then invited to an interview, after which the file moves to final review and, if approved, registration or publication by decree.

    French Citizenship Interview and Civic Integration Test

    The citizenship interview is designed to assess genuine integration into French society.

    Applicants are commonly asked about their work, family life, knowledge of France, future plans, and understanding of republican values such as secularism, equality, and civic responsibility.

    For decree-based naturalisation, the formal civic exam introduced in 2026 now sits alongside the interview stage.

    Strong preparation here can make the difference between approval and refusal.

    Processing Time for French Citizenship Applications

    A realistic timeframe for most applications is 12 to 18 months, although some prefectures may take longer.

    Cases involving foreign birth records, ancestry reconstruction, complex marriages abroad, or dual nationality issues often experience additional delay.

    Naturalisation by decree is only legally final once the approval is published in the Official Journal.

    Cost of Applying for French Citizenship

    The government fee structure changed in 2026.

    For nationality applications lodged before 1 May 2026, the fiscal stamp fee remains €55. From 1 May 2026, this rises to €255, affecting both decree-based and many declaration-based applications.

    Applicants should also budget for translations, apostilles, language testing fees, document retrieval costs, and legal support where needed.

    Can You Have Dual Citizenship in France?

    Yes. France fully allows dual and multiple nationalities.

    There is no requirement to renounce British citizenship when acquiring French nationality, which makes this route especially attractive for UK nationals seeking restored EU rights while retaining their British passport.

    The only caution is whether your original country places restrictions on multiple nationalities.

    Common Reasons French Citizenship Applications Are Refused

    Most refusals arise because of missing evidence rather than outright ineligibility.

    Common reasons include:

    • Insufficient residence history
    • Failure to meet the B2 language standard
    • Incomplete civil documents
    • Concerns about financial stability,
    • Criminal issues 
    • Inconsistencies in marriage evidence

    Where the refusal is discretionary, strong legal representations and carefully prepared supporting evidence can sometimes reverse the outcome.

    What Happens After You Become a French Citizen?

    Once approved, your nationality is formalised through the publication of a decree or the registration of a declaration.

    You can then apply for a French passport and national identity card, register to vote, and update family records so future children can inherit nationality more easily.

    For families with children born outside France, this final administrative stage is particularly important.

    How IAS Services Can Help With French Citizenship Applications

    French nationality law can become complex very quickly, particularly where applications involve UK-French families, descent claims, older civil records, or 2026 language rule changes.

    Immigration Advice Service supports clients with eligibility assessments, route selection, ancestry reviews, marriage-based declarations, preparation of naturalisation documents, refusal challenges, and strategic legal advice for complex cross-border cases.

    Whether you are applying through residence, ancestry, marriage, or an indirect investment-linked route, professional legal support can significantly improve the quality of your application.

    To speak with an experienced adviser about your French citizenship options, call IAS on +44 (0)333 414 9244 today.

    Our experts can help businesses and individuals with the permissions they need to work in France. Call or contact us online to get started.

    Table of Contents

    Table of Contents will appear here.
    Telephone Icon

    Get clear, professional guidance for your immigration case.

    Our Team

    John Cahill

    Partner & Immigration Lawyer

    Read more

    Shin Lim

    Immigration Caseworker

    Read more

    Han Wei

    Immigration Caseworker

    Read more

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Applicants should also prove financial stability, tax compliance, genuine integration into French society, good character, and that France is the centre of their personal and professional life.

    Jus sanguinis grants citizenship through a French parent, while jus soli can create citizenship rights through birth in France combined with later residence conditions.

     

    In some cases, descendants may qualify for reintegration or may already hold nationality automatically. This depends heavily on lineage records and whether nationality transmission was interrupted.

    Yes. Refugees and stateless persons may benefit from reduced residency requirements and specific exemptions, depending on their legal status in France.

    What our clients are saying

    We are the UK’s leading immigration specialists

    IAA Accredited UK Immigration lawyers

    We’ve had over 25,000 applications approved

    We are now open 7 days a week from 8.30am to 6pm.

    How our UK Immigration Lawyers can help

    At the Immigration Advice Service our lawyers specialise in a wide range of UK visas, nationality and asylum applications and have represented clients in various successful complex and high-profile cases.

    Get in Touch

    Head Office:

    Immigration Advice Service
    Ashwood House, Ellen Street
    Oldham, OL9 6QR, United Kingdom

    Head Office Phone:

    +44 (0)333 414 9244

    We have over 12 offices across the world, find a branch near you.

    Call us now at +44 (0)333 414 9244 or request a call back using the form below.

      Subscribe

      Newsletter sign up

        In the news

        Get in touch with our team

        Learn about our professional services and find out how we can help.

        x

        • Leading immigration specialists
        • Over 25,000 approvals
        • Accredited immigration lawyers
        • Open 7 days a week
        X
        Contact Us