Last updated: July 6, 2026
If you need to know how to change a child’s surname in France after marriage, the process has become significantly more accessible since the landmark Loi n° 2022-301 of 2 March 2022 introduced a simplified procedure handled directly at the mairie (registry office). This guide walks through every step, from eligibility and parental consent thresholds to the joint declaration procedure, required documents (including apostille and translation for cross-border families), realistic timelines, and what to do once the new surname is recorded.
Whether both parents share parental authority, one parent has remarried and wants the child to carry a hyphenated name, or the family holds dual nationality with documents issued abroad, the rules in force in 2026 provide a clear pathway that avoids costly court proceedings in most cases.
Before gathering documents, confirm that each of the following conditions applies to your situation. If any item raises doubt, a consultation with a family lawyer in France is advisable.
French law provides three distinct routes for changing a child’s surname. Understanding how to change your name in France, and specifically a minor’s name, starts with identifying which procedure fits the family’s circumstances.
Introduced by Loi n° 2022-301, this route allows parents to add or substitute the other parent’s surname through a simple joint declaration at the mairie. It applies when both parents agree, both hold parental authority, and the desired name falls within the options permitted by filiation (the parent’s own birth surname or a combination of both parents’ names). The registrar records the change directly in the civil register, and no ministerial or judicial approval is required.
Adults may apply to the Ministry of Justice for a surname change by decree where they can demonstrate a légitime intérêt (legitimate interest), for example, to drop a name that is ridiculous, infamous, or carries foreign-language difficulties. This decree-based change can extend to minor children under certain conditions, but the procedure is substantially longer and more formal than the simplified mairie route.
Where parents disagree, where the child aged 13 or older withholds consent, or where the situation involves a contested foreign name-change order, the matter must be brought before the juge aux affaires familiales (family-affairs judge). This is the most time-consuming route and ordinarily requires legal representation.
| Procedure | Who Can Apply | Typical Timeline / Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Simplified mairie procedure | Both parents exercising parental authority (child under 13, or child 13+ with written consent) | Several weeks to 1–2 months; entry recorded directly in the civil register |
| Ministerial decree | Adults (or parents on behalf of children) demonstrating a legitimate interest | Several months; published by decree; may extend to children under specific conditions |
| Judicial route (tribunal) | Cases involving parental disagreement, contested consent, or complex cross-border disputes | Months to over a year; court decision required, legal representation strongly recommended |
The most common scenario that prompts parents to change a child’s surname in France after marriage is the desire for the child to carry the married couple’s shared family name, or a double-barrelled combination. The simplified procedure for the change of surname makes this straightforward when both parents agree.
Both parents must be exercising parental authority. In most cases following marriage, this condition is met automatically: if filiation is established with respect to both parents, parental authority is held jointly under French law. If one parent has been deprived of parental authority by a court order, only the remaining authority-holder can apply, and the simplified route may not be available, potentially requiring judicial proceedings instead.
It is important to distinguish a nom d’usage from a legal surname change. A nom d’usage is an everyday-use name, for instance, a married person may use their spouse’s surname socially and on certain administrative documents, but their legal birth surname on the civil register remains unchanged. If parents simply want a child to be known informally by a different name, a nom d’usage can be added to certain documents without formal proceedings. However, to change the name on the birth certificate, official records, and passport, the full simplified procedure or decree route must be followed. This distinction matters greatly when you change name after marriage in France, because the nom d’usage does not alter the child’s legal identity.
The joint declaration is submitted at the mairie of either the child’s place of birth or the family’s place of residence. The practical steps are as follows:
The registrar adds a marginal note (mention marginale) to the child’s birth certificate. This annotation records the new surname, the date of the declaration, and the identity of both declaring parents. From that point forward, all new copies of the birth certificate will show the updated surname. The original birth entry is not erased; it is supplemented by the notation.
The 2022 reform established clear age-based consent thresholds that remain in force in 2026. Understanding these rules is essential for any parent considering how to change a child’s surname in France after marriage.
For children below the age of 13, both parents’ joint declaration is sufficient. The child does not need to give personal consent. Under Loi n° 2022-301 and the resulting Article 61-3-1 of the Code civil, when a parent changes their own surname via the simplified procedure, that change automatically extends to children under 13 without a separate application, provided both parents agree. In the “after marriage” context, this means the parents’ joint declaration alone covers younger children.
Once a child reaches 13, their personal written consent must accompany the declaration. The child signs a separate consent statement, which is attached to the parents’ declaration at the mairie. If the child refuses, the parents cannot override this refusal through the simplified procedure; they would need to seek a judicial order, and courts will consider the child’s best interests before compelling a change.
Judicial intervention becomes necessary in several scenarios beyond a child’s refusal:
Gathering the correct documents is often the most time-consuming part of the process. The requirements differ depending on whether all documents were issued in France or some originate from abroad.
For mixed-nationality families, documents issued abroad require additional steps before they will be accepted by a French mairie. The type of authentication depends on the issuing country.
| Document | When Required | How to Authenticate |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign birth certificate (child or parent) | When the birth was registered outside France | Apostille (if the country is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention) or full legalisation via the relevant embassy/consulate, plus certified French translation by a sworn translator |
| Foreign marriage certificate | When the marriage was celebrated abroad | Same apostille/legalisation requirement, plus certified translation |
| Foreign court order (e.g., custody, name change) | When a foreign court has issued a relevant decision | Apostille or legalisation, certified translation, and potentially an exequatur (enforcement order) from a French court |
| Foreign identity documents | When a parent holds only foreign ID | Certified translation; apostille may be requested depending on the mairie |
The Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH) maintains the Apostille Convention, which simplifies authentication between member states by replacing full diplomatic legalisation with a single apostille certificate. If the issuing country is not a party to the Convention, full consular legalisation through the French embassy in that country is required instead. France Diplomatie provides country-specific guidance on whether apostille or legalisation applies.
The simplified mairie procedure is designed to be completed within several weeks. In practice, processing times vary by municipality, but most families can expect confirmation within one to two months from submission. There is a confirmation period during which the registrar verifies the file and records the marginal annotation on the birth certificate.
The simplified procedure for the change of surname at the mairie is free of charge, no administrative fees apply for the declaration itself. However, families should budget for incidental costs: obtaining certified translations (typically charged per page by a sworn translator), apostille fees in the originating country, and postage for requesting foreign documents. The ministerial decree route, by contrast, involves publication costs in the Journal officiel and can take several months. Judicial proceedings entail court fees and legal-representation costs.
Industry observers note that cross-border cases, where documents must be obtained from foreign registries, apostilled, and translated, frequently extend the total timeline to three to four months, owing to delays in overseas postal services and consular processing.
Once the mairie confirms the new surname and issues an updated birth certificate, several follow-up administrative steps are necessary to ensure the child’s records are consistent.
To change the name on a French passport or carte nationale d’identité, the parent submits a renewal or replacement application at the local mairie (for the ID card) or préfecture (for the passport), presenting the new birth certificate as the supporting civil-status document. If the family resides abroad, the application is filed at the nearest French consulate. Processing times for passport renewals vary but typically range from two to six weeks.
Notify the child’s school administration with a copy of the updated birth certificate so that enrolment records and report cards reflect the new surname. Contact the Caisse Primaire d’Assurance Maladie (CPAM) to update the child’s social-security and healthcare registration. Vehicle registration documents (carte grise) in the parents’ name should also be updated through the online ANTS platform if the surname change affects the registered keeper.
After the legal change is recorded, the new surname replaces the old one on all official documents. The previous surname can no longer be used as the legal name. A nom d’usage, which sits alongside the legal surname, remains a separate concept: it can be added or removed at the holder’s request on certain documents, but it never replaces the legal birth surname on the civil register.
Mixed-nationality families face additional layers of complexity when seeking to change a child’s surname in France after marriage. Early preparation of cross-border evidence is the key to avoiding delays.
If the child was born outside France, the birth must first be transcribed into the French civil register, either through the Service central d’état civil (SCEC) in Nantes or via the French consulate in the country of birth. Only once the French transcription exists can parents file a simplified surname-change declaration at a French mairie.
A surname change ordered by a foreign court or administrative authority is not automatically recognised in France. The foreign decision may need to undergo an exequatur procedure (enforcement recognition) before a French tribunal judiciaire. Within the European Union, certain regulations simplify mutual recognition, but each case must be assessed individually.
French nationals residing abroad can file civil-status applications through their local French consulate, which acts as a proxy mairie for many purposes. The consulate can process apostille verifications, accept translated documents, and forward files to the SCEC. France Diplomatie publishes detailed guidance on apostille and legalisation requirements by country, which is essential reading for any cross-border application.
While the simplified procedure handles most straightforward cases, certain situations demand professional legal advice:
For any of these scenarios, consulting a family lawyer in France ensures the correct procedure is followed and protects the interests of every family member.
Knowing how to change a child’s surname in France after marriage in 2026 comes down to choosing the right procedure, preparing the correct documents, and respecting the consent rules that apply to the child’s age. For most families, the simplified mairie procedure introduced by the 2022 reform offers a fast, cost-free route, provided both parents agree and the necessary civil-status certificates are in order. Cross-border families should allow extra time for apostille, legalisation, and certified translations of foreign documents. Where disagreements arise or adoption is involved, professional legal guidance is essential. A qualified family lawyer in France can review your specific circumstances, prepare the declaration, and ensure every step is handled correctly from the outset.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sylvie Mombellet at MS Avocat, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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