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Inspiring Life & Travel in France

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Inspiring Life & Travel in France

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Moving to France: The Visa

Looks like lots of folks are thinking about getting a visa for moving to France. This post was #1 among blog followers in 2018. Bonne chance!

Yes, it’s that time of year again. Time to renew the French Expat Visa. It’s a gift from France that keeps on giving.

Wish I could say that everything about living in France is excellent. But when it comes to dealing with French bureaucracy, frankly, it can be a nightmare.

As an American expat, I’m required to renew my long-stay visa yearly. It allows me to stay in France for 12 months. When renewing a visa, you must make an appointment at the local Prefector. You must make the appointment online no earlier than two months before your visa expires. You can’t submit documents online. Most aggravating, the information you must provide is the same as you gave them the previous year. You can’t just update it. You have to start all over again.

Here’s the list of items I have to produce this year. Mind you, not all regions of France have the exact requirements. Wherever you are, however, materials except for your passport must be translated into French — including bank statements and proof of revenue.

  • Current carte de séjour
  • Passport
  • Birth certificate and translation
  • Proof of address (less than 3 months old)
  • 3 ID photos
  • Proof of revenue (proof that you have at least 1149 EUR per month)
  • A written statement (in French) that you will not work in France

Once your card is ready to pick up, you pay €269 in fiscal stamps. 

Renewing a French Expat Visa

Renewing my visa last year was a real pain. It was to expire in August. So I went to the website of the Prefecture in Nimes in June, two months in advance, as instructed, to set up an appointment.

“No appointments available. Try again,” it said in French, of course.

Moving to France Visa

I tried the website again the next day. Same response. And the next day. And the day after that. The same screen appeared each time. “No appointment available. Try again.”

By the end of July, with no appointment, I began worrying. I was told by others they were having the same problem.

“No need going to Nimes in person to ask for an appointment,” they said. Online only.

French expat visaOh, what to do? Visions of gendarmes at my door were running through my head. Worse yet, what if I finally got an appointment, and it was in September?! I had plans to be in the Dordogne! How could I be in two places at one time? All those non-refundable reservations! Panic!

I started asking around for help. That’s when I heard about a company that helps expats cut through French red tape. Renestance. They literally came to my rescue.

The Renestance office is in Montpelier.  They can help expats wherever they live in France. Jennifer, whom I got to know quite well, lives in Nimes. We met more than once. She could quickly go with me to the Prefecture in Nimes. Whenever we could get an appointment.

Renestance had the same problem with the Nimes website with all their clients. Nevertheless, we persisted.

Renewing a French Expat Visa…finally

Finally, I had an appointment after sending a registered letter to the Prefecture explaining my carte de séjour had expired. November 29th at noon. By then, I’d spent a vacation in the Dordogne agonizing that I might miss an appointment date. And I’d canceled my plans to spend the holidays with my family in the States. Oh, the frustration!

During all the waiting, Renestance was busy working on my case. They were online multiple times daily and night, checking to see if the website accepted appointments. They were managing the translation of my documents. Most of all, they were dealing with me!

For example, the “original copy” of the birth certificate I ordered from the courthouse in North Carolina, where I was born, the one my son hand-carried to France when he visited, was lost. Bless his heart, my dear son went to the county courthouse in person, picked up another “original” birth certificate for me, and sent it by FedEx to France.

By the time November 29th rolled around, everything was ready for the appointment in Nimes. Jennifer met me at the train station, guided me to the Prefector’s office, which had moved sometime over the past year, and walked me through the process. Which, by the way, would have been impossible for me without speaking the language. Yes, American Jennifer speaks perfect French. It was another three months before I had a new carte de séjour, but I had a signed government document that served the purpose.

So now, when anyone asks me if anyone in France can help Americans or other English-speaking expats through the French bureaucracy, the answer is “Yes!” Renestance. They help with visas, driver’s licenses, and relocation issues. Jennifer is helping me again this year. She’s already made an appointment at the Prefecture on March 5th. It’s all under control.

Thank you, Renestance!

Day trip from Uzes to the Cevennes

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