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France’s immigration landscape shifted decisively on 1 January 2026, when new France immigration 2026 language requirements and a mandatory civic exam took effect for virtually every non-EU national seeking long-term residence or citizenship. Two decrees published in July 2025 and an implementing order issued in October 2025 replaced what had been largely discretionary integration checks with binding legal thresholds, higher CEFR language levels and a formal examen civique that must be passed before an application can even be filed. The reforms touch first-time multi-year residence permits, 10-year cartes de résident, and naturalisation alike, creating immediate compliance obligations for applicants, their employers, and the immigration advisers who guide them.
This guide sets out who is affected, what the new rules require in practice, which exemptions apply, and how employers and individuals should respond.
The current reforms trace back to the loi pour contrôler l’immigration, améliorer l’intégration (Law No. 2024-42 of 26 January 2024), commonly known as the 2024 Immigration Law. That statute empowered the government to raise language thresholds and introduce the civic exam by decree. Two implementing decrees were published in July 2025, setting out the new CEFR levels for each permit category and defining the civic exam’s scope. An October 2025 ministerial order (arrêté) then specified the exam format, pass mark, and recognised testing bodies. On 1 January 2026, these instruments came into force simultaneously, transforming what had been stricter administrative practice into binding legal requirements backed by clear, published thresholds.
| Date | Instrument / Event | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 26 January 2024 | Law No. 2024-42 (Immigration & Integration) | Statutory basis for higher language thresholds and civic exam |
| July 2025 | Two implementing decrees published | Set CEFR levels (A2 / B1 / B2) and civic exam obligation per permit type |
| October 2025 | Ministerial order (arrêté) | Defined exam format, pass threshold, recognised tests and test centres |
| 1 January 2026 | Entry into force | All applications filed from this date must meet new requirements |
The 2026 changes affect nearly every non-EU national whose immigration pathway involves a multi-year permit, a long-term resident card, or citizenship acquisition. Understanding the French language requirement for each titre de séjour category is essential for proper planning.
Any adult foreigner applying for the first time for a four-year multi-year residence permit must now demonstrate French at CEFR level A2 and pass the civic exam. The success certificate from the civic exam and the language certificate must both be included in the application file. This requirement applies regardless of the underlying permit ground, whether family, employment, or personal ties to France.
Applicants for a first carte de résident must prove French proficiency at CEFR level B1, one full level above the previous A2 threshold. They must also pass the civic exam and include the attestation in their dossier. This represents a meaningful increase in the integration standard for long-term settlement.
The naturalisation B2 requirement in 2026 is among the most significant changes. Candidates for French nationality must demonstrate CEFR B2 proficiency in both oral and written French, up from the previous B1 standard. At B2 level, an applicant is expected to understand complex material, engage in sustained argument, and communicate with nuance and precision. The civic exam is also mandatory for naturalisation applicants.
Standard work-visa holders transitioning to multi-year permits are subject to the same thresholds described above. However, certain Talent Passport (passeport talent) categories may benefit from specific exemptions, these are addressed in the exemptions section below.
| Permit Type | New Language Threshold (CEFR) from 01/01/2026 | Civic Exam Required? |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-year residence permit (1st pluriannuelle) | A2 | Yes, pass required before filing |
| Carte de résident (10-year) | B1 (previously A2) | Yes, attestation required in file |
| Naturalisation | B2 (previously B1) | Yes, as part of nationality file |
| Talent Passport (certain categories) | Potential exemption, verify on a case-by-case basis | Potential exemption, verify on a case-by-case basis |
The examen civique assesses a candidate’s knowledge of the principles and values of the French Republic, the organisational structure of the state, and the way French society functions. Topics include fundamental rights (liberty, equality, secularism), the branches of government, the electoral system, key public institutions, and everyday civic obligations. The exam is designed to ensure that applicants have engaged meaningfully with French republican values before securing long-term residence or citizenship.
The exam is conducted entirely in French. Candidates must achieve a minimum score of 80 % correct answers to pass. The test is administered as a multiple-choice questionnaire. Industry observers expect the format to comprise approximately 100 questions drawn from an officially published question bank, although the precise number may vary by session and testing body.
| Exam Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Language of exam | French |
| Format | Multiple-choice questionnaire (QCM) |
| Pass threshold | 80 % correct answers |
| Subject matter | Principles and values of the Republic; state organisation; French society |
| Evidence required | Success certificate (attestation de réussite) included in the immigration file |
The civic exam is administered by approved examination centres, including those accredited by France Éducation International (formerly CIEP) and the Alliance Française network. Candidates should register well in advance, early indications suggest wait times of several weeks at major metropolitan centres. The success certificate must be obtained before submitting the residence-permit or naturalisation application; it cannot be supplied after filing. Applicants are therefore advised to book their exam date at least two to three months ahead of their intended filing date to allow for potential retakes.
The new CEFR thresholds represent a structured escalation: the higher the immigration benefit sought, the higher the language level required. Below is a detailed breakdown of the France immigration 2026 language requirements by category, together with guidance on accepted proofs and preparation.
| Permit / Application Type | Previous Threshold | New Threshold (from 01/01/2026) | Skills Tested |
|---|---|---|---|
| First multi-year residence permit | A1 (oral only in practice) | A2 (oral and written) | Basic everyday communication, simple texts |
| Carte de résident (10-year) | A2 | B1 | Independent user; can deal with most situations |
| Naturalisation (citizenship) | B1 | B2 | Complex material; nuanced argumentation |
Prefectures and nationality services accept a defined list of certificates. The three principal instruments are:
All certificates must clearly state the CEFR level achieved. Applicants should confirm with their local prefecture that their chosen test format is accepted before registering.
Under the previous regime, many prefectures accepted oral-only evidence, particularly at lower CEFR levels. The 2026 reforms now require proof of both oral and written proficiency for all categories. This is a notable change for multi-year permit applicants, where A2-level written competence was not always formally demanded. Applicants who previously relied on oral assessments alone must ensure their new certificate covers all four skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing.
Holders of a passeport talent (Talent Passport) may benefit from dispensations, particularly those on employer-sponsored missions or intra-company transfers. The scope of the exemption depends on the specific Talent Passport sub-category. Employers sponsoring Talent Passport holders should prepare a formal attestation confirming the employment relationship and the basis for the exemption claim, and retain this document for the duration of the permit. Given case-by-case assessment by prefectures, early legal advice is strongly recommended.
Exemptions are not automatic. Applicants must include supporting documentation in their file, such as proof of age (identity document), a medical certificate, an OFPRA attestation, or an employer declaration, and the prefecture retains discretion to request further evidence. Filing without proper documentation of the exemption risks refusal.
Employers sponsoring foreign workers carry a direct compliance interest in the 2026 changes. Failure to account for the new requirements can delay permit renewals, disrupt project timelines, and, in serious cases, expose the company to sanctions for employing workers without valid authorisation.
Before making a conditional offer to a non-EU national, employers should verify the candidate’s current French-language level and civic-exam status. Where a permit renewal or upgrade is anticipated during the employment relationship, the offer letter or employment contract should include a clause specifying the employee’s obligation to obtain the necessary language certificate and civic-exam attestation within a defined timeline.
HR teams must integrate language and civic-exam milestones into their renewal tracking systems. The civic exam certificate must be obtained before the application is filed, not concurrently. Early indications suggest that prefectures are refusing to accept incomplete dossiers. A practical buffer of 90 days before the permit expiry date is advisable.
A software engineer on a Talent Passport (highly skilled employee sub-category) with a permit expiring in June 2026 begins the renewal process in March 2026. The employer prepares an attestation confirming the employment relationship and the exemption basis. The employee gathers updated payslips, tax notices, and the employer declaration. Because the Talent Passport sub-category may qualify for a language/civic-exam exemption, the employee’s counsel files a request for dispensation alongside the renewal dossier. Processing typically takes four to eight weeks once the file is complete.
A spouse of a French national, holding a multi-year titre de séjour for three years, applies for a first carte de résident in September 2026. The required steps are: (1) register for and pass the TCF IRN at B1 level, obtaining the certificate by June 2026; (2) register for and pass the civic exam, obtaining the attestation by July 2026; (3) compile the full dossier, identity documents, proof of community of life, tax returns, language certificate, and civic-exam attestation; (4) file the application online or at the prefecture. With both certificates in hand, the total preparation timeline from initial test registration to filing is approximately four to five months.
A long-term resident who previously obtained a B1 DELF certificate must now demonstrate B2 proficiency for naturalisation. The applicant enrols in an intensive French course (approximately 100 hours at a language school), then sits the DELF B2 examination. Because DELF diplomas are valid for life, this single investment eliminates future re-testing. The applicant simultaneously registers for the civic exam. Once both certificates are obtained, the naturalisation file is compiled and submitted to the prefecture. The likely practical effect of the higher threshold is a longer preparation period, industry observers expect most applicants will need three to six months of dedicated study to move from B1 to B2.
A refusal may be challenged through a recours gracieux (informal appeal to the decision-making authority) or a recours contentieux (formal challenge before the administrative tribunal). The recours gracieux must generally be filed within two months of notification of the refusal. Where the administration does not respond within two months, the silence is treated as a rejection, and the applicant may then bring the matter before the tribunal. Strict time limits apply, and legal representation is strongly advised at the contentious stage.
Professional legal advice should be sought as early as possible, ideally before filing the initial application, if there is any doubt about exemption eligibility, the sufficiency of language evidence, or the interpretation of the new requirements as applied to a specific permit category. Early intervention can prevent refusals that are costly and time-consuming to reverse on appeal.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Virginie Le Baler, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The France immigration 2026 language requirements and the new civic exam represent a fundamental shift in how integration is measured and enforced. Whether you are an individual applicant planning a permit renewal, an employer managing a team of sponsored workers, or an immigration adviser updating your compliance playbook, the time to act is now. Register for language testing and civic-exam sessions early, audit your documentation against the new thresholds, and seek specialist legal advice where exemptions or complex cases are involved.
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