France 2026: What Has Changed for Those Who Want to Live or Become a French Citizen

France 2026: What Has Changed for Those Who Want to Live or Become a French Citizen
April 22, 2026
6
 min read

Anyone who follows the European immigration landscape knows that France has never been exactly an open-door country. However, in recent months, the changes have gone beyond the usual — and they directly impact those planning to reside, work, or apply for French citizenship.

Since January 2026, France has begun requiring formal proof of both civic knowledge and French language proficiency for non-European nationals applying for residence permits or naturalization. In practice, simply attending a language course is no longer sufficient: applicants must now present an officially recognized certificate — level A2 for multi-year residence permits, B1 for permanent residence, and B2 for naturalization.

But language is only part of the story. A circular published in May 2025 reinforced that naturalization is not an automatic right, even for those who meet all legal requirements. In practice, what the government evaluates is the applicant’s level of integration into French society — which goes far beyond length of residence or employment status.

Economic criteria have also been tightened: for citizenship applications outside of marriage, applicants are now required to demonstrate stable employment and a minimum income equivalent to the French minimum wage. Individuals with a history of irregular status or failure to comply with removal orders are automatically excluded from the process.

And the changes do not stop there. Access to social benefits now requires five years of continuous residence, the waiting period for family reunification has increased from 18 to 24 months, and children of foreign nationals born in France no longer automatically acquire citizenship upon reaching adulthood.

The landscape is more restrictive, but not insurmountable. Those who prepare in advance and understand the rules of the game are far more likely to build a strong and successful application. That is exactly why we exist.

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Laura De ALCÂNTARA
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