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    Paris: Departure / Passport and Visa

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    Departure


    Passport and Visa

    2/01/2007

    Short stay visas are valid for a maximum of three months and may allow one or several entries into France, however this may vary depending your particular situation.

    Without a long-stay visa you cannot apply for a temporary carte de séjour. There are 4 categories of carte de séjour: visitor, student, private/family life and employee.

    Long-stay visas are issued by the French Embassy in your own country before coming to France. Long-stay visas are valid for between 3 and 6 months.

    If you come to France on a short-stay (tourist – up to 3 months) visa, you cannot change this to a long-stay visa whilst in France.

    Administrative formalities

    To get a visa, you must fill in forms at the French Embassy or Consulate in your home country.

    You will need the following documents:

    - A valid passport,
    - Proof of income (the candidate must still earn in excess of 3,835 EUROS/ month)
    - For those with study grants, a written confirmation of the amount of the grant and the period of time it covers
    - For people wishing to work in France or those on work placements, an official acceptance letter from the employer
    - Proof of social security cover
    - Proof that you have somewhere to stay in France
    - For students, proof that they are entitled to enrol at university or another institution of higher education
    - Proof that you can return to your country at the end of your stay (e.g. return plane ticket)

    For further information, contact the "Service des étrangers en France" (a French Foreign Office department).

    Do not mix consulate and embassy. The embassy is the representation of the State in a foreign country and is in charge of all the relations with the government of the country where located. The consul protects and administrates the community coming from his country. However, you must usually live for 6 months in the country before you have to register. You will find all the information by asking the Consulate.

    In the 27 countries of the European community, a valid National Identity Card or Passport is enough. You don’t have to fill any other form in. In many cases, your new company will do the formalities for you.

    The 27 countries of the European Union are: Germany, France, The United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Italy, Finland, Ireland, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Sweden, Czech Republic, Estonia, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Malta, Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania.

    The resident card

    If you intend to live in France permanently, or to work there for more than three months, one of the first things you must do after your arrival is to apply for a Carte de Séjour. La Carte de Séjour, the résident card , created in 1984, permits its holders to live and work in France. It is valid for 10 years and is automatically renewable.

    There are three different categories of Carte de Séjour available, according to your work situation: Actif (if you are working you need to show a work contract); Non-Actif (for retired people or those who choose not to work you need to show proof of substantial revenue); and Etudiant (for students you must provide a certificate proving that you are enrolled at an educational establishment in France).

    For EU citizens:
    Citizens from the European Union, or from a country part of the European Economic Space, or with specific agreement with the EU are no longer required to get a resident card when they wish to settle in France.

    NON-EU Residents:
    Non-EU citizens must firstly find a job, obtain a work permit and a visa de long sejour (which allows you to live in France without working or being schooled, but requires a financial guarantee, proof of medical insurance and police clearance), go to France and finally apply for a carte de sejour.
    You can apply for a Carte de Séjour Temporaire, which lasts one year. The ten-year permit, available after 3 temporary ones, which includes the work permit, costs about 40 euros+50 euros.

    You must make your application within the first three months of arriving in France (without a Carte de Séjour you cannot obtain any form of state benefit to which you may be entitled, such as child benefit, if you have children, or housing benefit, for example).
    You should apply direct to the Service des Etrangers at the Préfecture of the département or the Town Hall in which you live; it is a good idea to go in person, as any potential difficulties can be explained on the spot, and as long as you have all the requisite pieces of paper (see below) you should only have to make one trip. It is also not a bad idea to have prepared photocopies of all your documents before you go. Subsequent renewals of the Carte de Séjour can be made through your local Mairie (Town Hall).

    You will need:

    • three passport-type photographs taken against a light background;
    • a valid passport;
    • a birth certificate and marriage certificate, if applicable;
    • copy of Contract of Employment with relevant signatures, if applicable;
    • you should be able to produce either an EDF (electricity) bill in your name or, if you have bought a house in France, a copy of the deed of sale (acte de vente). If you are renting, a receipt for rent paid (quittance de loyer) will do;
    • a document proving that you have a social security;

    However, for absolutely up-to-date information on procedure, please contact the Service des Etrangers at your local Préfecture or ring the special service for foreigners at the Préfecture de Police in Paris, tel. 01 53 71 51 68. They claim to speak every language in the world. (Embassies do not deal with Carte de Séjour applications)

    All those documents (except the Passport and its photocopy) must be in French. If the original is not in French, you must get a translation.

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     Comment


     Sharon ALLAN -  09/02/2003
    Carte de Séjour
    The ease with which you get your Carte de Séjour depends very much on where you plan to live. I live on the outskirts of Grenoble, and, not having to go to the central préfecture but the local mairie, my experience of queues and endless interviews were practically non-existant.
    I still had to have the usuals - 4 photocopies each of every printed page of my passport, my tenency agreement, my birth certificate and proof of social security/health insurance, and 3 passport photos.
    However, as I was applying for a non-actif status (ie not a student, and non-working), my French partner signed an "attestation" indicating that we were living together, and it was his social security number that I was on.
    It seems that, even though EU citizens should have the right to live here in any case, we all have to get a Carte de Séjour in order to do so.

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