Do you want to work for yourself in France — as a freelancer, self-employed professional, or business owner — without needing an employer to sponsor your visa? The Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa is your answer. It is one of the most flexible long-stay visas France offers, and if you follow the process correctly, it can become your pathway all the way to a French passport.
This is also the closest option France has to a digital nomad visa. There is no official ‘digital nomad visa’ in France as such — but if you plan to stay 12 months or more and want the option to extend, this is the most compliant and renewable route available, far safer than stretching a visitor or tourist visa.
Important: do not confuse this visa with the Talent Passport — they are separate visas with different eligibility criteria. This guide covers the Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa only (article L.421-5 of the CESEDA).
The visa is one step. Housing, admin, and healthcare are the rest. France Formula covers the full move — not just the paperwork. Join the waitlist below.
Table of Contents
Who can apply? The eligibility requirements
Under article L.421-5 of the CESEDA, this visa is issued to any foreigner who exercises a non-salaried activity that is economically viable and provides sufficient means of existence. In practice, the French consulate will assess four key criteria:
| Requirement | What the consulate looks for |
| Economic viability | A business plan demonstrating your activity is viable and that it can generate sufficient income. The consulate wants to see real projections, not optimistic guesses. |
| Income threshold | Your projected income must reach at least the French minimum wage (SMIC). As of 1 January 2026: €1,823.03 gross/month (€21,876.36/year). This figure is updated annually — always verify the current SMIC on service-public.fr at the time of your application. |
| Legal compliance | Your activity must comply with French legislation. If your profession requires specific qualifications or authorisations in France, you must meet them before applying. |
| No sector restriction | The visa has no sector restriction. You can run a gîte, work as an online freelancer, open a bakery, consult, coach, create — any self-employed activity qualifies, provided the above conditions are met. |
Which legal business status can you use?
There is no restriction on the type of company structure. Your options include:
- Micro-entrepreneur (auto-entrepreneur): the simplest status, ideal for freelancers starting out. Revenue caps apply.
- Profession libérale: the classic self-employed status for independent professionals (consultants, coaches, therapists, architects, etc.)
- Any other company form (SASU, EURL, SAS, etc.): you can also join an existing company as a partner, whatever the company type.
All must be registered via Le Guichet Unique (formalites.entreprises.gouv.fr), the French one-stop platform for business registration. Both initial eligibility and permit renewal will require proof that the business continues to generate income above the SMIC threshold.
| Are you a digital nomad? France has no dedicated digital nomad visa. The Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa is your best legal option if you plan to stay more than 90 days and want a renewable permit. You will need to register a business structure in France and meet the SMIC income threshold — but this gives you full legal status, work rights, and a clear path to long-term residency. |
Outside of France: requesting the Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa
Choosing the right duration
When filling out the visa application on the France-Visas platform, you will choose among three durations:
- One year and beyond: renewable one-year visa — this is the option you need. It gives you access to a renewable permit and, eventually, a pluriannual card.
- 0–3 months: short-stay visa (non-renewable) for stays under 90 days. Not relevant here.
- 3–12 months: one-year non-renewable visa. Avoid this if you intend to stay longer.
How to prepare a successful application file
Check the consulate website or France-Visas platform for the official, up-to-date document list — it can vary by country and consulate. Come over-prepared: bring extra copies of everything, as the administration may ask for documents not on their published list.
The French consulate will want answers to the following questions through your documentation:
What are your revenue projections for the next 3 years?
- Who are you? (identity, background, qualifications)
- What will you do in France? (nature of your activity)
- Why are you moving there? (personal motivation)
- Why are you qualified to run this business? (professional background)
- What does your business plan say? (structure, services, market)
Your business plan
A 2 to 3-page business plan is the minimum. It should be concise and to the point, demonstrating that your activity is economically viable and will generate at least the SMIC income threshold. You may write a longer version, but make sure the key figures are immediately visible.
Beyond the official document list, consider adding:
- A one-page synthetic curriculum vitae (French format)
- Press articles or publications about your activity, if they exist
- Proof of previous business sold, if applicable
- Letters of intent from potential clients in France
- References or testimonials from existing clients
| Need help nailing your Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa application? The Dream to Reality guide walks you through every step of this visa — from building a business plan the consulate will accept, to the document checklist, the OFII process, and your first permit renewal. No guesswork. → Discover the Dream to Reality guide ↓↓↓ |
What about your family members?
There is no Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale — Family visa. Your family members have two options:
- Independent visa: your spouse meets the requirements for their own visa (visitor, self-employed, EU Blue Card, student, employee, etc.)
- Family reunion: available after you have resided legally in France for 18 months (article L.411-1 of the CESEDA). You must also prove sufficient income and adequate housing. Note: delays for family reunion can be very long — I would not rely on this as a primary plan.
Alternatively, if you meet the criteria, consider requesting a Talent Passport — Business Creator visa instead, which has its own family provisions.

The interview at the French Embassy or Consulate
This appointment is primarily a documentation review, not a formal interview. The consular officer will ask questions about your file and may request additional documents by email if anything is missing.
You will also pay the visa fee of €99 (2026 figure — payable in local currency; confirmed in your appointment confirmation email). Once your complete file is processed, the visa can be sent by postal mail within approximately 10 business days.
You will also receive a form called « demande d’attestation OFII ». Keep this document — you will need it in France to validate your visa.

Once you arrive in France
Scenario A: You have a Profession liberale VLS-TS
Validate your entry visa online within your first 3 months
In order to remain legally in France and start your activity in France you must validate your profession libéTo remain legally in France and start your activity, you must validate your visa online within 3 months of arrival. This converts your VLS-TS into a permit equivalent — meaning you do not need to apply for a separate residence permit during your first year.
You will need to provide via the online validation platform:
- Your visa information
- Your date of entry in France
- Your address of residence in France
- The « demande d’attestation OFII » form received from the French Consulate
- Your credit/debit card to pay the residence permit delivery tax (€200 for the Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa validation)
You will receive two emails: one with your login details and visa validation document (print and keep this — it is your tax proof of payment), and one confirming the information provided. After this, you wait to be called in for your OFII appointment by postal mail or email.
| ⚠ CAUTION: If you do not validate your visa within the 3-month time frame, you will no longer be staying legally in France and will not be able to leave the Schengen area and re-enter without a valid visa. |

The OFII integration pathway
OFII (Office Français de l’Immigration et de l’Intégration) manages the welcome and integration process for non-EU nationals arriving in France. Its role here is to:
- Provide civic and cultural training to facilitate integration
- Offer free French language classes where assessed as necessary
- Conduct a medical consultation
You will be asked to sign a CIR (Contrat d’Intégration Républicaine) — your commitment to complete the integration training assigned to you. Completing these steps is required to validate your visa as a residence permit.

Your first OFII appointment (CIR — half day)
Bring the following documents:
- Passport
- Copy of your appointment convocation
- Proof of address in France (energy bill under 3 months)
- Confirmation of your visa validation
You will take a French language assessment test (bring your French diploma such as DELF if you have one — it may exempt you from the test). A one-on-one session with an official clerk will determine how many French classes you are assigned: 50h, 100h or up to 200h depending on your level. You will also sign your CIR and schedule your civics training days.
Keep all attestations from your training sessions. You will need them to renew your residence permit.
Your second OFII appointment: medical examination
This appointment is for prevention purposes and includes a chest X-ray (tuberculosis screening) and a general check-up. It applies to Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa holders unless you were previously registered with the French Assurance Maladie.

Scenario B: You have a simple VLS ” Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale “ (not VLS-TS)
In some cases, the consulate issues a simple Long Stay Visa (VLS) rather than a VLS-TS. If your visa reads « carte de séjour à solliciter dans les 2 mois suivant l’arrivée », you must go to your local Prefecture within 2 months of arrival to request your one-year permit.
At the Prefecture, you will pay €200 + €25 stamp duty for the card issuance, in fiscal stamps (timbres fiscaux). Bring the full document list below:
- Valid passport (with at least 3 months validity beyond the visa expiry date)
- Your long-stay visa or current residence permit
- Proof of marital status and nationality: passport pages, birth certificate with filiation, spouse’s permit and marriage certificate if applicable
- Proof of address dated within the last 6 months (or lease contract under 3 months)
- Three recent passport photos (ANTS requirements)
- Cerfa n°13473*01 — independent professional temporary residence permit application form
- Criminal records extract from your home country
- Evidence of ability to carry out your planned activity
- Proof of financial means corresponding to the gross annual SMIC
- Proof of stamp duty payment
- All business-related documents submitted for the initial visa request

After the first year: your residency pathway
Your first residence permit request
Two months before the expiry of your VLS-TS or one-year permit, submit a residence permit request at your local Prefecture. Do not wait until the card expires. Once your complete file is submitted, you will receive a récépissé authorising you to work and travel while you wait for the card.
If you continue to meet the eligibility conditions — economically viable activity, income above the SMIC, and comprehensive healthcare coverage — you will be granted a pluriannual permit of 2 to 4 years.
YOUR RESIDENCY TIMELINE
Year 1 — VLS-TS: Validate online within 3 months of arrival. Complete OFII process.
Before year 1 ends — First renewal: Apply at Prefecture 2 months before expiry. Get a 2–4 year pluriannual card.
After 5 years of continuous residence — Long-Term Resident card: Apply for the 10-year “résident de longue durée-UE” card (art. L.433-7 of the CESEDA). Subject to integration conditions (see below).
After 5 years of residence — French citizenship: If you meet all conditions, you can apply for naturalisation in parallel with your 10-year card request.
The 10-year long-term resident card
After 5 years of continuous legal residence in France, you can apply for the 10-year “résident de longue durée-UE” card (article L.433-7 of the CESEDA). To be eligible you must:
- Continue to meet the conditions for the Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale status
- Prove sufficient and stable resources
- Have comprehensive healthcare coverage
You will also need to demonstrate a B1 level of French (or pass the civic examination under article L.413-3 of the CESEDA). This requirement was raised by the Loi n°2024-42 of 26 January 2024 — B1 means being able to understand clear conversations, produce a simple and coherent speech on everyday topics, and briefly explain an idea. This condition does not apply to those aged over 65.
This 10-year card is renewable indefinitely and authorises the holder to exercise any professional activity.
A pathway to French citizenship
This visa is one of the pathways to French citizenship (articles 21-24 of the French Civil Code). The minimum residency requirement for a naturalisation request is 5 years of legal residence in France under this status.
You can initiate the naturalisation process in parallel with your 10-year card request. Be ready for a lengthy procedure — up to 18 months depending on your region. You will need a B1 French level diploma and an “assimilation interview” in French to demonstrate your integration into French society.
Obtaining your 10-year card before starting the naturalisation process is strongly recommended — it gives you legal security while the lengthy naturalisation process unfolds.
Is the Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa right for you?
This visa requires effort: a solid business plan, proof of economic viability, and the discipline to renew your permit on time. But in return, you get full freedom to work without a sponsor, access to the French social system, and a clear route to permanent residency and citizenship.
Every self-employed person takes risks to succeed. The business plan you build for this visa is also an opportunity to plan your French business properly. It is not just bureaucracy — it is your foundation for success in France.
| Ready to start your Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale visa application? The Dream to Reality guide covers everything: the business plan structure the consulate expects, the full document checklist, the OFII steps, and how to handle your first renewal. Written for exactly your situation. → Discover the Dream to Reality guide |
Legal references (CESEDA updated 1 January 2026, edition 18 March 2026):
- Art. L.421-5: Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale one-year card
- Art. L.421-6: Pluriannual Entrepreneur / Profession Libérale card (change of status route)
- Art. L.413-7: Integration condition for carte de résident (language requirement — updated 2024)
- Art. L.433-7: Pathway to carte de résident / résident de longue durée-UE
- Art. L.411-1: Family reunion — 18-month residence condition
- Art. 21-24 of the French Civil Code: French naturalisation
Document prepared by Expat in France — based on CESEDA updated 1 January 2026 (edition 18 March 2026). Always verify current SMIC and official document lists on service-public.fr and france-visas.gouv.fr before applying.
*** This post contains affiliate links. If you finalise a service through those links, I may receive a small commission, at no cost to you. This is a great way to support my blog if you’re planning to take this service anyway. Thank you for your support as blogging is not free 😉 ***




67 Comments
Anna
Mlle Guiga – would it be acceptable to show a business plan for the profession liberale visa where I was working remotely full-time for a U.S.-based company that pays me an annual salary? Or would I have to become a consultant paid by the hour?
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi Anna,
If you are a salaried employee this is not a self-employment situation.
The only thing you could do would be to explain that since you have experience in the same field this will help to launch your business. But it is very different to be a salaried employee than having to sell your services and find clients. Your business plan will need to show, among other things, that you can do the job (the service that you offer), and that you can sell it.
I hope this helps,
Best
Mary Frances Pearson
May I have the contact information for MADEMOISELLE GUIGA. She sounds like an expert in French visas for USA citizens. I need professional advice. Many thanks
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Mary Frances,
Thank you for your note.
You can contact me at [email protected]
I’ll be happy to help.
Best,
Joaquin Cardoner
Hi Guiga,
Thanks so much for the in-depth summary here, and for your ongoing activity in the comments section. I have three questions that stem from not understanding if the approach to the profession liberale visa is different for someone who plans to incorporate a business in france vs just operate as an individual freelancer. My case is the latter. Please allow me to share context first.
I am a freelance Film + Commercial Producer / Production Manager based in Toronto – and would love to move to Paris to work in the same capacity.
I am hired on a project to project basis by different Production Companies to execute commercial films/videos. I make more than the French minimum wage per year, and can prove it with past invoices and pay stubs. My girlfriend lives in Paris and can provide a letter stating that she will host me at her home in Paris, we will live together. I can also provide a bank statement showing enough savings to sustain myself for a year in France.
In addition, I have relationships with 2-3 production companies in Paris who are willing to write letters of intention of hiring me on a project-to-project basis.
1. I understand I can apply to the visa as a freelancer. But the checklist doesn’t have a freelance specific section; but more so for starting a business/incorporating in France. If I apply for this visa do I NEED to incorporate in france, or is it ok to assume I’ll be working as an individual freelancer and not incorporate?
2. In addition to the letters of intent on company letterhead – do I need to ask them for the 3 other administrative documents (tax and incorporation) as well, or not necessary/only if I’m joining a company, as per the visa wizard? Again ~ the freelancer angle is lost as the instructions progress.
3. From my Toronto-based clients. Would it help to proivide letters of recommendation + statements saying that they will continue to hire me for projects where I can produce from a remote location i.e. Paris? As support for the income portion of my application? Or is this messy?
My short films and commercials have played at festivals around the world, and won a couple of prizes – I will be sure to include all this as well to strenghten my application.
Any other advice is hugely welcome. I am trying to get this all wrapped up this week to submit by Friday.
Thank you dearly,
Joaquin
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Joaquim,
It sounds like you have a good visa application file going for you! Well done.
The entrepreneur/Profession liberale visa applies to people either working as freelancers or creating their company in France as well as incorporating an existing company in France as a partner (not an employee meaning with a French work contract in that case a salaried visa will apply).
1. I’m not entirely sure what you mean by “incorporated” in France. In any case, you will need to register either as a micro-entrepreneur (the easy self-employed tax regime) or as a French registered company (such as an enterprise individuelle) to be able to pay social contributions in France.
2 – It depends if you’ll join the company as a partner of the company, if so, they need to prove that the company is economically viable. So any official documents and contracts proving it should be provided.
3- Yes, it would help. It won’t be messy if you present it nicely with numbered annexes.
I hope this helps. If you need more detailed and personalised feedback/information, I also offer a clarity call.
Best in your new venture!
Guiga
Joaquin Cardoner
Thank you!
I’m feeling confident 🙂
One more quick question-
I’ve learned that freelance workers in the French film industry sign up for Intermittents du Spectacle ( https://www.enspectacle.fr/qui-sommes-nous/ ) – where all taxes, benefits and payroll goes through. I’d be working as a CDD for each of these production companies on a job-to-job basis, and once I accumulate 500hrs of work I’d be automatically enrolled into the Intermittents du Spectacle program for the next year, and so on..
Should my cover letter mention this plan? Should I be careful with overstating details and try to keep things more big picture success plan for my freelancing ventures here?
Thanks SO MUCH.
Yassin
Hi,, thanks for this article and your responses.
I just want to clarify my situation and if iam eligibile for this type or not.
Iam a customer service representative working remotely from home ((salary vary from 500 to 800 euro less than SMIC but can prove savings around 20.000 euros).
I have two minor kids one 3 yrs and one 3 months , so what kind of visas i will apply for them?
Am I eligible to this kind or a visitor visa will be better for me and kids!
What about the possibilities of change of status from freelancer to Salarie ou chercheur scientifique.
Ur help would be sooo appreciated.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Yassin,
There is little chance the Entrepreneur/Profession liberale visa will be granted if you are not generating the French SMIC from your business. It may be granted but it will not be renewed since your savings will go away and you won’t be making the minimum amount needed to live in France. You need to show in your business plan that you will reach the required turnover by the end of year one to have an Entrepreneur/Profession liberale permit granted.
The visitor visa doesn’t authorise you to work from France as you will not be compliant from a tax perspective.
Then a change of status is possible as long as you meet the requirements of the status you are requesting.
Best to you,
Yassin
Thanks for ur response .
I got your point but only about minor kids ! Can i be a master student or autopreneur and i apply for them as dependents or minor visitors depending. On my savings and proving being in charge of their expenses during my study .
Courtney
Thank you so much for this article! I am a freelancer with clients here in the US but would love to move to France since I don’t have ties to a physical work location. However, I am a confused by some of the points made. Mainly, do I need to have an entire years minimum wage salary in my savings account? Or, can I prove that I exceed the French minimum wage with my clients? I make about $6500 a month, but I don’t have much of a savings.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi Courtney,
French law doesn’t require to show savings for this visa. However, many consulates will require to see savings proof even though it is not a legal requirement. They may accept your file considering you can prove good earnings but only the consulate can really answer this based on your visa request file. Best,
Ray
Bonjour Guiga,
Wow 😍 I am very impressed with your detailed and useful information regarding Profession Liberale Visa. I am so glad that I found your site, as it’s a lot easier to follow as compared to the official France Visas website.
My husband and I have traveled around the world pre-pandemic and since the pandemic, we haven’t been outside of NZ. We’ve also been to France several times.
I have a few questions to ask and I hope that you will take the time to answer them, I would very much appreciate your time and effort.
1. I am an NZ citizen, and I have been self-employed for the past 6 years. My source of income is through my online business Website content that allows me to generate incomes from ad networks, and affiliate products as well as a YouTube channel. I also earn at least equivalent to the minimum legal wage in France and/or above the minimum wage in France. My estimated revenue in the next 3 to 5 years is expected to increase. My first question is, can my self-employment status be accepted or considered under a Profession Liberal visa? Of course, I will be able to provide all the relevant documents such as proof of income.
2. My husband is not self-employed. He works for a company but works from home so technically he is able to live anywhere in the world. If I apply for a Profession Liberale visa will I be able to include him as my spouse? How does that work?
3. I have been checking the official France Visas website under Visa Wizard to check the relevant visa we would need to apply. The one we found for a New Zealand passport under Plans: Business and then Purpose: Liberal or independent profession, which I’m assuming it’s the same as the Profession Liberale visa. Is this correct? https://france-visas.gouv.fr/en/web/france-visas/ai-je-besoin-d-un-visa?p_p_id=NeedVisaApplication_WAR_fvfoportalvisasportlet&p_p_lifecycle=0&_NeedVisaApplication_WAR_fvfoportalvisasportlet_implicitModel=true
4. However, under the Liberal or Independent Profession visa on France Official Visas website does not say anything Self-Employment under Purpose of Travel Stay. Please read below from France visa’s website:
“Reminder of your application
* Nationality : New Zealand Age : 40 Place of submission of application : New Zealand Type of visa requested : Long-stay (> 90 days) Destination : France Travel document : Ordinary passport Issued by : New Zealand Plans : Business Purpose : Liberal or independent profession
Supporting documents required
The supporting documents to be provided are as follows:
* Pre-requisites
* A travel document, issued less than 10 years ago, containing at least two blank pages, with a period of validity at least 3 months longer than the date on which you intend to leave the Schengen Area or, in the case of a long stay, at least three months longer than the expiry date of the visa requested. Be sure to transmit (scan) ALL PAGES of your travel document containing visas, entry and exit stamps or any other inscription.
* ID photograph.
* If you are not a national of your country of residence: proof that you are legally resident in that country (e.g. residence permit).
* Purpose of travel/stay
* Authorization corresponding to the exercise of your profession. If subject to an “Ordre” : Authorization from the “Ordre professionnel”. In case of medical/paramedical profession : Proof of registration with “Conseil de l’Ordre” or, if applicable, authorization to practice from the Ministry of Health.
* If the activity is not subject to a specific authorization : Signed document specifying your professional project in France and any document justifying your professional capacity (diplomas, qualifications, professional experience, etc.).
* Funds
* Documents proving the capacity of the activity to provide a level of sufficient resources at least equivalent to the minimum legal wage in France, corresponding to full-time work.
* In case of continuation of an existing professional activity, any document proving the activity is effective must be provided in addition.
Applicable price
The amount to be paid is : 99 euros (€), or about 168.60 NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR. This amount is for informational purposes only and must be paid in the currency specified by the Consulate / Embassy. Certain individual cases may give rise to different prices, in accordance with applicable regulations. The amount indicated in local currency is subject to exchange rate fluctuations and is susceptible to change.
5. I’ve also heard from others that they were able to apply their visa via •Plans : Talent Passport – International talents, Purpose : Artistic and cultural profession / Talent as self-employed. So upon checking this option I found the written Self-employment. “If you are self-employed person : Documents justifying his status as an artist or author of a literary or artistic work, and his project in France.” So can you please help me clarify if the the Talent Passport Artistic and Cultural Profession visa would also be applicable for my self-employment status?
6. I’m very confused whether to apply under the Plans : Business, Purpose : Liberal or independent profession OR Plans : Talent Passport – International talents, Purpose : Artistic and cultural profession / Talent as self-employed. I really hope you can help me clarify this so I don’t end up wasting money for visa applications for myself and my husband.
7. Also, will you recommend that we hire a French immigration visa lawyer for our visa applications?
I am sorry for the very long questions, but I would very much appreciate if you could answer them. I look forward to reading your answering. Have a great day.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Ray,
These are really many questions…
For such personalised and extensive questions I offer a 1:1 clarity call.
https://expat-in-france.com/one-to-one-consult/
I’m sure a self-employed I’m sure you understand.
You can reach me via email if you wish to schedule a call: [email protected]
Best to you both,
Guiga
Catherine
Hi Guiga. Thank you for this very well written article. It has been most helpful.
I came to France as a student 4 years and 3 months ago. After school, I applied for the proffesion liberale residents permit and received it. It is now up for renewal and I would very much like to have it renewed for 4 years.
What are the things that you would advise that I do to maximise my chances of that happening? I have been told that it also entails one having earned a certain level of income in the preceding year (around 23,000€, I think). Can you confirm that this is true and if it is not, what is a more accurate figure to aim at?
Thank you as I await your response.
Hopefully, it comes before my prefecture appointment in a week’s time.
Thanks in advance!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Catherine,
The only criterion for the issuance of an “entrepreneur – liberal profession” permit is to prove the economic viability of the project and the fact that you earn more than the French minimum wage each month (SMIC).
From a strictly legal point of view, it is therefore not even necessary to justify much more than the SMIC.
However, some Prefectures ask for more, even if this is not in line with the law. So if you earn at least the SMIC and your renewal is being rejected, you can start proceedings with the assistance of an immigration lawyer.
I hope this answers your question.
All the best to you,
Ghazal
Hello,
Thank you for all the information you provided. I’m living in France since 2015 as a student. Now I’m holding an APS visa which will expire in 12th of March 2022. I have already got my Siret number and now I want to renew my carte de sejour and get a freelancer card. I have tried through several websites to get an appointment but I couldn’t. I live in Paris and I would appreciate your help. How can I get an appointment to change and renew my APS carte de sejour and get a freelancer one? Thank you in advance and have a great day!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Ghazal,
It is indeed a challenge to get an appointment with the Prefectures… You will have to keep trying online to book an appointment. You can try connecting at midnight several days of the week. Sunday nights are often a good day as they often open new slots.
Be aware that the APS jeune diplomé (now called “recherche d’emploi / création d’entreprise”) is only valid for 12 months and cannot be renewed. This means that you need to request directly the permit entrepreneur – profesional liberale. For the Prefecture this is not a renewal but a change of status (important to know when making the appointment)
More information about the “recherche d’emploi / création d’entreprise” here:
https://expat-in-france.com/stay-in-france-after-studies/
Good luck to you.
Charles Bulbrook
Hi there,
I have run a chalet holiday business for 12 years but I live in the UK. Obviously pre-brexit I could come and go as I pleased to run my business in france but now i need a work permit and a VISA however, no one seems to know which VISA is appropriate for someone in my position. I had my VISA appointment last week in london as a ICT seconded employee but that’s now been reclassified by the French consulate to a self-employed/Profession liberale VISA and I’ve had to also re-submit my work permit in line with this. However, reading more into this VISa it also doesn;t seem appropriate as I do not want to take up french residency, I just want to be able to go back and forth as required to run my business/liasie with guest and staff/ conclude contracts etc. but I need more than 90 days in 180. Do you agree that this VISA is the right one for me and how do I ensure I am granted the VLS and NOT the VLS-TS which requires the Validation and all the other faff that goes with it? I would just need the 12 month permit that I can then renew 2 months from the end but then do I still need the medical etc.? Its so confusing and the consulate are taking days and days to respond to my questions! Thank you so much in advance for any clarification.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Charles,
If you need to stay longer than 90 days in a period of 180, you are residing in France (from an immigration perspective – and maybe also from a tax perspective but this is another topic you need to see with a tax accountant). And since you are residing in France you require a residence permit. There is no third option between the 90-days short stay and the residence permit with all the validation and OFII process.
Also, the only difference between a VLS and VLS-TS is that with the VLS-TS you request the residence permit by the end of the first 12 months visa. A VLS-TS is renewed into a resident permit and not another VLS-TS.
FYI – a visa authorises to enter a country and a residence permit authorises to remain in the country (more than 90 days). The VLS-TS is just an exemption to request the actual card permit when you first arrive.
If the business is yours (vs being salaried), yes the profession liberale visa applies to your situation.
I hope this clarifies.
All the best to you,
kamesh
can i convert my visit visa into self employement residence permit once i am in france,is it possible?
maria
bonjour , tout d abord je vous remercie pour tout ces informations enrechissantes , et ce superbe article qui est redigee d une maniere tres professionel !
je voulais juste me renseigner , je suis entraine de preparer les documents necessaire pour le visa entrepreneur /professions liberale , un des documents (spécifiques relatifs à l’exercice d’une activité en nom propre ) à présenter : ”un justificatif de l’engagement de cautionnement pris par un établissement de crédit ou une entreprise d’assurance agréée pour se porter caution et ayant leur siège en France , ou une attestation de solde créditeur d’un compte au nom du demandeur ouvert auprès Dun établissement de crédit ayant son siège social en France” . si je ne trompe pas , vu que je suis de nationalité russe , et je suis résidente en russie , je dois donc présenter une attestation émanant du mon banque qui certifie que j’ai en possession dans mon compte bancaire une somme de 19 074 € , qui couvrira mes dépenses durant ma présence en France ? si vous pouvez me renseigner sur ce point la?
et en ce qui concerne La présentation sur papier libre du projet accompagne d’un budget prévisionnel pluriannuel,Peut-elle être en anglais ? et juste 1 a 2 pages ?
Le formulaire CERFA ou je peux le trouver ?
desole pour la frequence de mes questions !
Merci beaucoup !!!!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Bonjour Maria,
Bravo pour votre message en français!
Oui, c’est tout à fait ça pour le relevé de compte bancaire.
Votre business plan doit généralement être présenté dans la langue du pays où vous êtes (russe) ou en français. Je ne pense pas qu’ils accepteront un document en anglais, mais il faut vérifier avec le consulat de France en Russie.
Etant donné que vous parlez déjà bien français, cela serait une bonne idée de faire le document en français.
Il vous sera utile pour votre demande de titre de séjour l’année d’après pour la Préfecture.
Je recommande au moins 3 pages pour le projet. Pensez au type de business plan que vous montreriez à votre banquier pour avoir un prêt bancaire. Une personne qui ne connait pas votre projet doit comprendre facilement votre vision, mission, objectifs et organisation…
Le lien du CERFA est fourni dans l’article de blog.
Bon courage!
Deep Agarwal
Hi
My son is currently in France on a VLS-TS visa which is valid till end of January 2022. He has completed his studies and has received a CDI and would like to convert his visa to a Work Permit. Can you please advise if this is possible and how?
He did not apply for a Social Scurity when he arrived but did validate his visa within 3 months of hs arrival.
Regards
Deep
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi there,
Congratulations to your son!
The process will depend a lot on the salary level your son is paid. The salary will determine the type of work visa and if his employer will need to request work authorisation from the DIRECCTE (the local entity of the French ministry of labour).
I have done a visa summarizing the 6 types of work visas, this may help: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Frp7Df_T0N4&t=2s
All the best!
Annya S
Hi,
I arrived to Paris with this profession liberale visa on Octoeber 1st and I also validaed my entry the same day.
How long does it take to be called in for an appointment with OFII? When should I receive this letter ( I am in the 6eme arr. of paris)?
Should I have received somethibg by now?
Do I have to wait for this initial OFII visit before I apply for the carte de sejour and carte vitale?
I intend to start a SASU as my business structure. Do I have to wait for all the above to get started or can I jut go ahead and startany of thee before the OFII visit?
Thank you so much
Annya
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Annya,
You will need to be a bit patient, two weeks is very short for the French administration timeline…
However, I cannot tell you when you will receive your appointment. If you haven’t received anything within the next month, you can reach out to OFII.
For the Profession liberal status, the carte de séjour is requested by the end of your first year (within two months before the expiry of your VLS-TS).
You can apply to French healthcare once you have created your SASU, already with your VLS-TS. You don’t need an OFII document for that.
You will find more information about the healthcare registration here with the form in English too:
https://expat-in-france.com/how-to-benefit-from-french-healthcare/
All the best,
Nasi
Hello,
Thanks for the information.
I have some questions, I got my master’s degree in France and I have a temporary residency in France for 3 months later.
Now I am in France and also I started to work as a researcher with a research office in one university in Europe but from distance(online). Now I would like to renew my residency as a freelancer and stay in France, But I am a little confused that which one of the mentions ways is better for me. My salary is a bit less than SMIC but I have a contract with them for a year.
I really appreciate your help to know your ideas about my situation.
Regards,
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Nasi,
I’m not sure I understand your situation.
Are you a researcher (employed by a French university?) or a freelance?
You are saying that you currently do not live in France but you want to renew your permit. Is your current student visa still valid? If it is not, we are not talking about renewal but a brand new request, or you may have the possibility to request a return visa (visa de retour).
If you are a freelance and have more than one client, you can request the Profession liberale visa and have the micro-entrepreneur status to pay the social security contributions to France. By the end of the first year under the Prefession liberale you will need to prove that you reach the SMIC to receive the multi-year permit, otherwise, depending on your income level the renewal may either be rejected or given just for one year until you reach a stable income.
All the best to you
Beth
I am hoping to retire from my university teaching job in a few years, and move to France. My main source of income will be my pension + American social security, but I would like to continue my research and writing (to publish articles and books that I will be paid for). Will it work to apply for the profession liberale visa, with this retirement income as my baseline support? (It will be well above the SMIC). My business plan won’t be very typical, I’m afraid!
I’ve been giving some thought to certifying in a TESOL course as well, in order to do private English lessons. Would one application cover both these possibilities?
Thanks for your very helpful article!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Beth,
It sounds like a great project that you have!
Under the Profession Liberale, everything that you invoice should be directly linked to your company mission. Here it looks that you will have two unlinked missions (English classes and research work).
I’m afraid your visa won’t cover both possibilities.
All the best in your project
monica
Hi Guiga,
Great information! However, I have a question and I hope you can help. I’m looking to move to France next year. I’m retired and have a pension and savings, so finances aren’t a problem. However, I am setting up an online photo store, and I may sell a few stories to online sites. My income will be minimal, it’s more for self-motivation and maybe a bit of fun money. I’ve done extensive research and don’t know how I could do this. Would I really need to do all the requirements for profession liberale visa – degrees, business plans & budgets etc.? It’s seems to be excessive for the little project/hobby I would like to do. I think I would fit into the category of “micro-entrepreneur” but do I have to be a resident to do that? Can I get a VLS-TS and then just sign up as a micro-entrepreneur? Or, maybe I just have to give up my dream?
Any advice you can give me would be greatly appreciated! (By the way, this is a wonderful website you have here.)
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Monica,
Yes, you will need a profession liberale visa even if you invoice just a few euros/dollars a month. So indeed it is a lot of work for a hobby, I agree. Or you can do your hobby and keep it to yourself or offer it to friends…
The visitor visa doesn’t allow work at all.
The VLS-TS is just for the first year, then at the end of the 1st year you request a permit. There is no possibility to stay on a VLS-TS.
Yes, you can create your micro-entrepreneur status under a VLS-TS, once you are in France.
I hope this answers your questions.
Ganesh Muthu
Hi Guiga can be tell more about the micro entrepreneur and how u can obtain the temporary visa using the micro entrepreneur status. I’m planning to a start a cyber Secuirty services company with a online website but initially I need some time to design my website and employee few people. Till then I’m planning to be on the micro entrepreneur status.. Is it possible for me to get a temporary visa for Atleast 1 year so that I can study about the France and learn more things on how I can promote my business, where I can find employee for my company.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Ganesh,
Yes, you can request the Profession liberale visa and create your micro-entrepreneur status once in France. Actually, the large majority of people requesting this visa have micro-entrepreneur status at first. If your initial plan is to be self-employed this is the visa you need (vs the student visa). You will have more information about the micro-entrepreneur status by downloading the booklet from this page too. All the best to you.
Kay J.
Hello Guiga,
Thank you for this article! it really helped a lot with the doubts I had and is more detailed than any other blogs I’ve read so far!
My name is Kay and I’m an Indian who graduated with masters in fashion design from Paris and am now looking to set up a freelance career here in fashion. Unfortunately, I don’t already have a client list, potential clients or receipts of past work as I am just thinking of starting up and I have to apply to renew my visa immediately as well. However, I do have enough savings to last me the entire year which I can show in the form of a letter from the bank. Do you think I would still have a chance of getting the freelance visa under these circumstances? Or are my chances on the lower side?
Hope to hear from you soon!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Kay, Congrats for the master’s degree !
This master actually allow you to request the visa “recherche d’emploi, création d’entreprise”, (that you may have heard of under the name APS graduate or jeune diplomé in France).
This is a one year visa that allows you to work or start a business. You will find more information here: https://expat-in-france.com/stay-in-france-after-studies
This will give you the time to meet the criteria to request the Profession liberal, have a few clients and start to make a small earning.
Also, some people choose to get a loan (bank or personal) to show some savings on a bank statement for their visa file application.
I hope this helps,
Best of luck in your new venture!
Ken
Bonjour Guiga,
Thank you for your helpful article and the resources provided.
I am still a bit confused. I and my business partner wanna expand our business in France and want to apply for the passeport talent création d’entreprise.
We both are the founders of the current company outside of France and will also be the founders of the future company in France. Therefore, we will, inevitably, have the same set of business plans and financial projections. Therefore, would it be a problem when we submit our applications?
And do we need to have the new company set up in France first before submitting the applications?
Thank you in advance.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Ken,
This is not a problem to have the same set of papers.
You will only be able to set up the French company once you reside in France. what you need to include in the your visa application file is an explanation of the type of company.
I always recommend having a chat with a French chartered accountant before submitting the visa file.
All the best in your new venture,
jay
hi MADEMOISELLE GUIGA,
This is very great article of yours.
I would like to apply for passport de talent for opening business in france. Do you think it a good idea to work with immigration lawyer?
Many thanks
jay
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Jay,
The Passeport Talent Entrepreneur is a great visa!
You will find more information about the Passeport Talent entrepreneur here: https://expat-in-france.com/france-entrepreneur-visas/
Not all immigration lawyers are familiar with Entrepreneurs visas. But having a professional helping puts you on the best track.
They could review your file and advise to improve it but there is never a guarantee of success (and I wouldn’t trust a professional that give this guarantee.
I can also assist with visa application files reviews. You will find more information on my coaching service here: https://expat-in-france.com/one-to-one-consult/
All the best in this entrepreneurial project!
Elaine
I’m in a bit of a complicated situation here.
Currently on the Travail-Vacances visa valid for 1 year expiring this October, non-renewable, and I’m hoping to change my status to Profession Liberale within France. Normally my current visa type does not allow me to do the switch within France, and I would have to return to my home country, Australia, to do the paperwork. But at the moment, it’s almost impossible to go there with a lot of border restrictions, airport closesed, flight cancellations and financially unfeasible.
I have previously lived in the UK for 5 consecutive years and applied for my French visa there. I don’t really have much connection to Australia apart from having my passport. I am also trying to contact the visa centre in London to see if I can apply for the new visa there instead. (although I no longer have a valid resident permit for UK, I am only able to be there as a visitor/tourist status)
I have been trying to get in touch with the prefecture for clarification but haven’t had luck to get a helpful answer yet. I was wondering if you have any tips regarding my situation?
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Elaine,
I understand. Unfortunately, I don’t have good news for you.
The Working-Holiday visa (WHV) is not renewed and the change of status is not authorised.
The fact that you were previously resident in the UK has no impact on your current situation. Having any type of UK visa will not allow you to reside in France. UK citizens now also need to have the appropriate visa (with the visa motive matching their situation) to be able to come to France since the Brexit.
Your only option will be to go back to Australia to request the relevant visa for France.
After the Prefecture might give you a recépissé of 3 months if you really cannot travel (and provide concrete proofs of it), but you will need to see with the Prefecture directly. It will be at the Prefecture’s discretion.
Good luck!
Anggie
Hi Guiga, thanks for your amazing article! It cleared a lot of questions for me. I’m currently preparing the long-stay visa for Profession libérale from my home country, so I’m not in France right now.
I’m a bit confused over the CFE registration. Shall I register the creation of activities before my visa application? Or after? Because CFE asks for my residential address but it seems not to include an address outside France.
Also, I have been doing freelance project management on the side (as I have a full-time job), so the freelance income doesn’t meet the French minimum wage. However, I’m confident that it would not be a problem once I go full-time freelance with my clients in hand. Would It be a problem for the application?
Thank you so much again!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Anggie,
Thanks for your feedback!
The company registration and the CFE are done once in France.
Regarding your second question, it is normal that you do not have income for a new business. The consulate only wants to see that you have a solid business plan with financial projection and that you will have income (French minimum wage) when you renew your visa after one year in France.
Good luck with your visa application preparation!
James Gabby
Hi Guiga,
I applied for a profession libérale visa last week and was immediately contacted via email with subject line “missing documents” asking to provide “Proof that you will get paid in France ( any paid contract or any future paid contract ?)”
The email of course says not to resond asking if you actually have to provide the documents, you have to, etc. I was under the impression, however, that I did not have to have actual future contracts in order. I do know a potential employer/acquaintance in France that is going to write a future contract for me, but my work is project based and its unlikely this contract would be year-long or particularly high-paying.
Do you have any insights? I provided all the other documentation suggested here. Is it advisable for the contract to state specific things in terms of wage or duration, in your opinion?
I just found this website and my documents are due in two days, so any quick responses would be much appreciated :).
Thanks,
James
James Gabby
I can also provide a contract saying that I will get paid by a US company that I currently work for doing consultation from abroad (which I do plan to do), but I’m not sure if this is applicable in this case?
Thank you
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello James,
I understand. I hope my response is not too late.
You need to provide letters of intention from the future client you are referring to, provisional contracts are also fine, as well as your US contract. It is recommended to indicate the wage and a possible duration. Tell your client that this letter is not a commitment just an intention. It doesn’t have the value of a contract.
By asking for these documents the consulate wants to make sure you are coming prepared and will have the opportunity to make an income by the visa renewal time.
I hope this helps.
Lekha R
Hi Guiga,
Thank you for the elaborate post! I plan to apply for a 6 month liberale visa. I am on a dutch permit at the moment so the application process is different. However, I can travel freely to France with my current permit. I am currently registered as a freelancer in the netherlands. Do you know if I can submit the application in France in that case? Does the consulate ask for bank or income tax statements in addition to the documents you stated above?
Thanks and kind regards,
Lekha
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Lekha,
If you are currently on a Dutch permit, you can travel for a duration of 90-days to France over a period of 180 days.
You will need to follow the process explained in this post but submit the French visa application to the French consulate in the Netherlands.
Yes, you will need to give proof of income and savings so this can be done with your bank statement and tax returns.
Best,
Muqadas
So much useful information, Thanks! I am looking to apply for this visa, I have a few questions. I am in France since 2018 on a student visa for my Master and have APS now, I registered as auto-entrepreneur for an e-commerce but looking to register as a Marketing Consultant Freelancer as I have a contract from a company based in New York, how can I modify my business from a trader to freelancer? Do I need to cease the business and re-register a new one as a freelancer? How will that impact my visa application?
Thanks in advance!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello,
You can work in France under the Profession Liberale permit but with a foreign company. From an immigration point of view, you do not necessarily need to close your US-based business to open a French one. From a tax perspective, you may want to consult an accountant to see what is preferable in your situation.
Within the 2 months before the expiration of your APS (now called Recherche d’emploi – création d’entreprise ;), you will need to submit a change of status to the Profession Liberal permit.
I hope this clarifies. All the best in your venture!
Mark
Hi there,
I’d like to apply for the VLS-TS Profession-Liberale visa,
but I dont see on the French Visa Website the option I am looking for.
I am a self employed freelancer paid by a UK firm.
I have been working for them for two years, I work from home.
I would like to re-locate to France and continue to work for the same company.
I meet the SMIC requirements.
Any advice would be much appreciated.
Thanks
Mark
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Mark,
To find the Entrepreneur visa option, you first need to select below Your Plans > Business and then below Main purpose of your Stay > Entrepreneur and Independent profession.
BEWARE – If you have the micro-entrepreneur business status, you CANNOT have a unique client. This would be considered as a “disguised” work contract and a way for the employer to avoid paying the relevant social charges.
You will need to have a minimum of 2 clients to be able to have the micro-entrepreneur status. It is important that you state clearly in your business plan that you will have several clients.
If the consulate has a doubt about this, they may reject your visa request.
Then if it is granted and you still have one client only, you and your employer (yes it will be considered as an employer and not a client since it is unique) will have problems with URSSAF.
I hope this will help you to set it up the right way.
Regards,
Helene
Hi! Thanks for this very useful article. When setting as a self employed business, must the clients be in France for it to count under this visa? My husband’s clients are often from around the world and one day we’d like to relocate to France permanently. His clients would likely continue to come from around the world. He works from home. Thanks!
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi Helen,
Thank you for your message. Yes, this visa is applicable with clients anywhere in the world.
However, you CANNOT have a unique client. This would be considered as a “disguised” work contract and a way for the employer to avoid paying the relevant social charges.
I will soon write another post detailing the different visas when having a company in France. The Profession Liberale is one of them, and great for a start, but depending on the turnover and the company types, it may not be the best fit. Stay tuned for more information.
I hope this answers your questions.
All the best,
Harry Barnes
Great article. With so much change it is hard to know what is best in terms of Visa.
We are a family of 4. Myself, my partner, 14 year old son and 67 year old mother.
We have bought a house in France and this completed on 25th January 2021. Given the completion date and the fact we are still in the UK, we are not covered by the withdrawal agreement in terms of residency before 31st December 2020 and are currently waiting for travel restrictions to ease before we can travel/move to France. We will run our own business in France so I think we should be looking at a Profession Liberale Visa ? Is this the VLS/TS.
I did register as an auto-entrepeneur and received a SIRET number and I thought Social Security number. However on applying for l’assurance Maladie I’m told the social security number is wrong. I have now raised this with ameli.fr.
Sorry this is a bit long winded but I’m getting very confused as to what steps to take and in what order ? I assume first step would be the long-term visa VLS/TS ? And do we all need this ?
Many thanks.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Harry,
Thank you for your nice feedback.
Yes, the VLS-TS Profession Liberale is what you will apply for if you plan to relocate to France for more than one year and open your business in France.
Regarding your mother, depending on her situation, the visitor visa may apply but she will need to prove her level of income and how she will sustain herself in France.
When you apply for a SIRET you are provided with a “fake” Social Security Number. You still need to apply for the Social security number (SSN) directly to CPAM (Assurance Maladie). You will find the process in this article with the application form in English if that helps.
https://expat-in-france.com/how-to-benefit-from-french-healthcare/
One SSN should be applied for per adult of the family with one application form each. You can send all the files together. I recommend you to send it by recorded mail and keep copies. Your underaged children will depend on one either one of you. You will also find the application forms fort hem in the other post I linked.
Indeed, the first step is the visa request and then, once in France, the SSN application. You need to reside in France to apply for an SSN.
I hope this clarifies.
Good luck with this big step! All the best!
Camden
Hi Guiga, I’m so glad you made this post! I’m currently looking into work opportunities for next year and I think it would probably be easier to apply for this visa and become a Freelance English teacher than finding a private/internationally school that would hire me and sponsor a visa! Do you know if it’s possible to apply for this visa in France and do a “changement de statut” or do you think I would need to go back to the US. FYI I am an American on a travailleur temporaire visa that expires in September when my current CDD ends.
Best,
Camden
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi Camden!
It is a great plan I think!
Yes, you can request a “changement de status” directly at your local Prefecture in France without having to go back to the USA. Once you have a Long-Stay permit, you can do a change of status from France within two months before the expiry of the current permit.
It is better not to wait the last minute and submit your “changement de status” request between 2 months and 6 weeks before the expiration of your current Travailleur temporary permit.
You will go from one PERMIT to another without having to go through the VISA request at the consulate in your home country.
If you currently have private students, you can already plan to ask them for letters of interest.
Do not hesitate to ask if you have any other questions!
I hope this helped!
Guiga
Dennis Moser
Very helpful and really appreciate the links to the resources. But I still have some questions.
How do I know if I have a VLS-TS or simply a VLS? I applied for “greater than 12 months” as I’m planning to permanently move to France. The visa I received is marked “Type D” with the Remarks being “ENT/PROF.LIB”, so I know it’s the Profession Liberale visa. But they also included a slip of paper telling me I must register and validate within 3 months, with email address, visa info, date I entered France, home address and credit card details for payment.
I’m confused, as the steps to validate them are different.
BACKGROUND: US citizen, currently legally resident in Germany, retired (70 years old) and receiving US Social Security, and working part-time as freelance English teacher online, which I will continue in France.
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Dennis,
Thank you for your comment. Congratulations on receiving the Profession Libérale visa!
The mentions on the visa can vary from one consulate to another so it is difficult to give a straight forward answer. But it sounds like you have been giving a VLS-TS.
Is there a CESEDA article number mentioned on your visa or also the mention “carte de séjour à solliciter dans les 2 mois suivant l’arrivée”? If it is mentionned “carte de séjour à solliciter dans les 2 mois suivant l’arrivée” it means you have a VLS.
As you have been given the form mentioning that you should validate your visa within 3 months following your entry into France, I would say it is a VLS-TS and you should connect to the given website to validate your visa. You will receive 2 emails as explained above.
In your situation, as you will not have a stamp in your passport proving your entry into France (I assume you will travel directly from Germany?), I advise you to either:
– At the French airport, you should request a “déclaration d’entrée sur le territoire français” as you didn’t automatically go through customs. You can either do it at the customs desk at the airport
– At the Police station within the first 3 days following your arrival request a “déclaration d’entrée sur le territoire français”.
You should also keep any other proofs to your travel to France (travel ticket or if coming by car, the toll fees ticked, gas payments…). The French administration will want proof of your entry date. The more the better.
I hope this helps.
Have a good arrival in France and don’t hesitate to tell me if you have other questions.
Guiga
Dennis Moser
Hi Guiga,
Yes, that helps a lot — and since I’ll be arriving from Germany by train, so I’ll probably just head to the closest police station and get my passport stamped.
As for the paperwork, I guess 2 1/2 years in Germany has trained me… 🙂
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hi Dennis,
I’m happy I could help! Have a good settling-in (again?) into French life!
Take care!
Ofa Toutai-Smith
Bonjour Guiga,
Thank you for this article, very helpful.
I currently I’ve in France I have been here since June 2018. My husband plays rugby here so he’s on a Employee Visa I am on a visitor visa, is it possible for me to apply for this Visa? And can I apply for it while I am living here? Or do I have to go back to NZ? Thank you
Mademoiselle Guiga
Hello Ofa,
Many thanks for this nice comment and for reaching out.
Yes, you can apply for this permit from France. You will need to go to your local Prefecture and make a change status request (demande de changement de status). The list of documents to prepare is the same + any other documents the Prefecture may decide to request.
You will not need to go back to NZ to request the Profession Libérale visa from the French Consulate there.
Just a clarification to avoid misunderstandings with the Prefecture, the “visa” is only requested abroad to enter France. Once in France, you request a residence “permit” at the Prefecture. No (entry) visas are delivered within France.
The change request should be done two months before the expiration of your current visitor residence permit.
I hope this helps. All the best in your new business adventure!
Lara Tabatabai
super article full of must-have information to settle in france 🙂