French citizenship still takes 5 years. The language bar just got serious.
Last verified: 8 July 2026While Portugal doubled its citizenship wait to 10 years in May 2026, France kept its 5-year clock. What changed instead: from 1 January 2026, naturalisation needs B2 French — a genuinely demanding level — plus a new civic exam. Here's the whole ladder, from first visa to French passport.
- 5 years of habitual residence for naturalisation by decree — unchanged in 2026
- B2 French written and oral required since 1 Jan 2026 (was B1)
- 40 questions, 80% to pass — the new civic exam, for applications filed after 31 Dec 2025
- Year 5: alternative or stepping stone — the 10-year carte de résident (B1 French + civic exam, €350 card fee)
- 1 year at a time: visitor status renews annually until year 5
- Dual citizenship allowed by France, the US, and Canada
The ladder, step by step
| Stage | When | Language | What you get |
|---|---|---|---|
| VLS-TS visitor visa | Year 0 | None required | 12 months' residence (validate online within 3 months, €300) |
| Carte de séjour "visiteur" | Yearly renewals | None required | 1-year card, renewable; no work in France |
| Carte de résident (10-year) | Year 5 | B1 + civic exam (since 1 Jan 2026) | 10-year renewable card; work allowed; EU long-term-resident options |
| Citizenship | Year 5 | B2 + civic exam (since 1 Jan 2026) | French and EU citizenship; passport; vote |
The 5-year residence requirement, precisely
Naturalisation by decree requires 5 years of habitual, lawful residence in France before you file. Time on visitor status counts. The clock runs from residence, not from any particular card. It drops to 2 years for people who completed two years of French higher education. You must also show France is the centre of your material and family life, stable resources, and "assimilation" — which is where the language and civic tests come in.
What changed on 1 January 2026
France's 2024 immigration law (Law 2024-42 of 26 January 2024) staged its integration measures to bite from 2026. For applications filed after 31 December 2025:
- Language: B2 (upper-intermediate), written and oral, proven by a recognised test (TCF/TEF) or French diploma, less than 2 years old at filing. This is a real hurdle — B2 means following native-speed conversation and writing structured argument. Budget serious study time; starting from zero at 60, plan on years, not months.
- Civic exam: a 40-question multiple-choice test on French history, institutions, and values, taken at an accredited centre. Pass mark 32/40 (80%). It replaces part of the old prefecture interview — an assimilation interview remains.
- The same law raised the bar below: B1 for the 10-year resident card, A2 for multi-year cards, with the civic exam required for resident cards too.
The 10-year carte de résident at year 5
After 5 years' regular residence you can apply for the carte de résident: a 10-year, renewable card that ends the annual renewal treadmill and lifts the visitor work ban. Conditions: stable and sufficient resources, integration, B1 French, the civic exam, and a signed and honoured integration contract where applicable. The card fee is €350 (since May 2026). Prefectures refuse a substantial share of applications — incomplete files and language shortfalls are the usual reasons — so treat the file like a visa application, not a formality.
The naturalisation process
- Gather proof: 5 years of residence (cards, tax returns — you'll need French tax filings for the full period), resources, address history.
- Pass the language test (B2, TCF/TEF or diploma) and the civic exam at accredited centres.
- File online via the NATALI/ANEF platform to your regional naturalisation platform. Stamp duty €255 (raised from €55 on 1 May 2026 under the 2026 Finance Law — the rate at time of stamp purchase applies, so buy it before filing if you're close to a rate change).
- Assimilation interview at the préfecture.
- Wait. Decisions commonly take 12–24 months after filing. Approval comes by decree published in the Journal Officiel.
What citizenship means for Americans and Canadians
- Dual citizenship is fine on all sides. France doesn't ask you to renounce; neither the US nor Canada strips citizenship for naturalising elsewhere.
- US tax doesn't end. US citizens keep filing US returns for life unless they renounce — a separate, serious decision with an exit-tax regime. French citizenship changes none of that.
- An EU passport gives you the right to live anywhere in the EU — useful if your France plan is really a Europe plan.
- Compare the neighbourhood: Portugal now takes 10 years (changed May 2026) with A2 language. France: 5 years, B2. Faster clock, harder test. Pick your struggle.
Sources
- Service-Public — French language requirement for nationality (B2 since 1 Jan 2026): service-public.gouv.fr
- Service-Public — the civic exam for naturalisation (40 questions, 80%): service-public.gouv.fr and news item A18713
- Interior Ministry (DGEF) — access to French nationality: immigration.interieur.gouv.fr
- Service-Public — carte de résident 10 ans (conditions incl. B1): service-public.gouv.fr
- Law 2024-42 of 26 January 2024 (immigration/integration) — Légifrance: legifrance.gouv.fr
- Carte de séjour "visiteur" (annual renewal): service-public.gouv.fr
- Card fee (€350 since May 2026) per 2026 fee schedule; corroborated by FrenchEntrée fee round-up (2026). Re-verified quarterly.
- Naturalisation stamp duty (€255 since 1 May 2026, up from €55) — 2026 Finance Law, Art. 128: service-public.gouv.fr (A18881)