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## Summary
France's Profession Libérale / Entrepreneur routes are the residency options for non-EU nationals who want to work in France as independent professionals, freelancers, or business founders. There are actually three related pathways in this space, which often confuse applicants — understanding which applies to your situation is the most important first step.
### The three French independent-work pathways
**1. Profession Libérale (*Visa Profession Libérale*)**
The traditional route for liberal professions — intellectual, artistic, professional, or technical work performed independently. Common applicants: consultants, designers, writers, journalists, architects (if licensed in France), engineers, software developers, specialized medical professionals, lawyers. Issued under CESEDA Article R431-16.
- No hard capital minimum — France evaluates viability holistically
- Expected income: ~€1,500+/month in projected revenue (SMIC-equivalent baseline)
- Savings cushion: €10,000–20,000 typical
- French clients or contracts strongly preferred (or documented cultural/institutional relationships for artists)
- 1-year initial visa, renewable; long-term residency after 5 years
**2. Entrepreneur (*Visa Entrepreneur / Profession Commerciale ou Artisanale*)**
For applicants registering a French company (SARL, SAS, EURL, SASU) or sole proprietorship in commercial/artisanal/industrial activities. Issued under CESEDA Article R431-17.
- **Business plan required** showing economic viability
- Capital requirement: generally €30,000+ recommended
- **Must actually operate** the business in France
- 1-year initial visa, renewable
**3. Talent — Company Founder (*Talent - Créateur d'Entreprise*, formerly Passeport Talent)**
The premium entrepreneur route for innovative startups and established founders. Covered in detail [here](/resources/pathways/fr_talent_passport).
- Investment: €30,000+ in the French business (lower than Italy or Spain equivalents)
- Master's degree or 5+ years of equivalent professional experience
- Business plan reviewed for economic or innovative contribution
- 4-year initial permit — significantly longer than Profession Libérale/Entrepreneur
- Family immediate work rights (Talent advantage)
This resource focuses on the Profession Libérale and standard Entrepreneur routes. For innovative high-growth startups, the Talent - Company Founder track is almost always the better option (longer permit, family work rights, simpler renewals).
### Why the Profession Libérale path appeals to non-EU professionals
Structural advantages:
- No hard capital minimum — unlike Italy's €50k Startup Visa or Germany's Freelancer requirement for demonstrated revenue
- Broad "liberal profession" definition — France recognizes creative, intellectual, and technical work historically
- Active expat community — particularly in Paris, Lyon, Bordeaux, Nice, and Marseille
- French cultural infrastructure — writers, artists, musicians, and designers benefit from robust grant programs, residencies, and cultural institutions
- Path to citizenship in 5 years with French language (dual citizenship permitted, including U.S./French)
### Profession Libérale — what the consulate looks for
Documentation package:
- Business plan or professional profile — overview of planned activity, target clients, revenue projections (typically 2–3 pages for liberal professions; 10–20 pages for commercial activities)
- Letters of intent or contracts — from French clients, collaborators, cultural institutions, or publishers
- Professional credentials — diplomas, certifications, portfolio, published work, CV
- Financial documentation — bank statements showing €10,000–20,000+ in savings
- Accommodation proof — French lease or property deed
- Insurance — professional liability insurance (*assurance responsabilité civile professionnelle*) for regulated professions; private health insurance pending PUMa enrollment
- Clean criminal record — police clearance from your country of citizenship (e.g., U.S. FBI check), apostilled
Regulated professions face extra requirements. French law regulates many liberal professions — including lawyers, architects, physicians, and dentists — through professional orders (*ordres professionnels*). For regulated professions, applicants must secure recognition from the relevant French order before or during the visa application. This can be a substantial additional process:
- Lawyers — CAPA certification or registration with a French bar
- Architects — recognition from the Ordre des Architectes
- Physicians/dentists — recognition from the Conseil de l'Ordre des Médecins/Dentistes
- Engineers — generally not regulated in France, though specific engineering boards exist
### Entrepreneur route — additional steps
Applicants pursuing the Entrepreneur/Commercial Activity track have additional registration requirements:
- French company registration (SARL, SAS, EURL, SASU are the common forms)
- RCS enrollment (*Registre du Commerce et des Sociétés*)
- Business plan with 3-year financial projections, market analysis, team
- French business address (can be a registered agent's address initially)
- Capital deposit in a French business bank account
Auto-entrepreneur (micro-entrepreneur) option. For very small independent activities, France's *micro-entrepreneur* status offers simplified tax and social contributions (a flat percentage of revenue). This is often used in conjunction with the Profession Libérale visa. Note: Visitor Visa holders cannot convert to auto-entrepreneur — the work restriction applies. You must arrive on Profession Libérale or another work-permitted visa.
### The permit structure
- Initial visa: 1 year (as a VLS-TS)
- First renewal: 1 year (prefecture appointment, review of actual business activity and tax returns)
- Subsequent renewals: up to 4 years once the business is established
- 5-year mark: Carte de Résident (10-year permanent permit) eligibility
- Family reunification: spouse and children can join after 18 months of regular Profession Libérale residence
### Tax considerations
French tax residents (183+ days or primary home in France) pay income tax on worldwide income at progressive rates (11%–45%). Self-employed professionals additionally owe:
- Social contributions (URSSAF) — approximately 45% of net income for BNC/BIC regimes, or flat percentages under micro-entrepreneur (~22% of gross revenue for services)
- CFE (Cotisation Foncière des Entreprises) — minor local business tax, €200–1,500/year typically
- VAT (TVA) — applies if annual revenue exceeds €37,500 (services) or €101,000 (goods), with small-business exemptions below
Bilateral tax treaties (including the U.S.-France tax treaty) prevent most double taxation. No Beckham-Law-style special regime for Profession Libérale — you're taxed as a standard French self-employed resident. The impatriate regime (Art. 155B CGI) is theoretically available but typically applies to employees on the Talent visa, not self-employed liberal professions.
### Path to French citizenship
France permits dual citizenship (including U.S./French). After 5 years of legal residence on the Profession Libérale or Entrepreneur visa:
- B1 French language test
- Integration interview — French history, culture, values
- Tax compliance throughout residence
- Income self-sufficiency
Profession Libérale time counts fully toward the 5-year clock.
## Eligibility
- Qualified as a liberal profession (regulated or unregulated) OR registered as a French business (Entrepreneur track)
- Professional credentials — degree, certifications, portfolio, or 5+ years of relevant experience
- French clients, contracts, or commitments — at least credible prospects
- Business plan or activity description — showing economic or cultural contribution to France
- Sufficient income and savings — ~€1,500+/month projected revenue, €10,000–20,000 savings cushion
- Regulated profession recognition if applicable (bar admission, medical board, architectural order)
- Private health insurance valid in France (until PUMa enrollment)
- Clean criminal record from your country of citizenship and any other country of residence in the past 5 years
- Dual citizenship is permitted (including U.S./French)
## What This Route Allows
This route can allow you to live in France if you meet the pathway's requirements and the application is approved. The exact rights, renewal options, and family benefits depend on the country's rules for this route.
## What This Route Is Not
This is not a guarantee of approval. Immigration authorities can still review documents, admissibility, background, funds, and whether the facts match the pathway rules.
## Next Steps
1. Determine your specific track — Profession Libérale, Entrepreneur/Commercial, or Talent Founder. If it's an innovative high-growth business, use the Talent resource instead
2. Check if your profession is regulated in France — if yes, start the recognition process with the relevant French *ordre* early
3. Build the application case:
- Profession Libérale: professional profile, portfolio, letters of intent from French clients/collaborators, income projections
- Entrepreneur: business plan, French company registration plan, capital documentation
4. Prepare financial documentation — bank statements, savings proof, professional income history
5. Secure French accommodation — 12-month lease or property deed
6. Obtain private health insurance valid in France until PUMa enrollment
7. Apostille civil records under the 1961 Hague Convention (or use your country's legalization procedure) and obtain certified French translations from a sworn translator
8. File the visa application through France-Visas online with appointment at VFS Global for your country/state of residence
9. Enter France and validate the VLS-TS online within 3 months at [administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr](https://administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr/)
10. Register your activity with URSSAF (social security for self-employed), INSEE (for SIRET number), and if applicable, RCS
11. Enroll in PUMa after 3 months of residence
12. File first French tax return by May of the year after becoming a tax resident
13. Renew the permit annually with evidence of actual business activity (tax returns, revenue proof, client contracts)
14. After 5 years of legal residence, apply for the Carte de Résident (10-year) or French citizenship
## Sources
- [France-Visas — Profession Libérale Visa](https://france-visas.gouv.fr/en/)
- [Service Public — Entrepreneur/liberal profession residence card](https://www.service-public.gouv.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/F35795?lang=en)
- [France-Visas — Self-employed person or liberal activity](https://france-visas.gouv.fr/activite-non-salariee-ou-liberale)
- [CESEDA Articles R431-16 / R431-17 — Independent profession and entrepreneur visas](https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/codes/id/LEGITEXT000006070158/)
- [URSSAF — Social contributions for independent professionals](https://www.urssaf.fr/portail/)
- [Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie (CCI France)](https://www.cci.fr/)
- [Welcome to France — Professional mobility](https://www.welcometofrance.com/en/)
- [Impots.gouv.fr — Self-employed tax regimes (BNC/BIC/micro-entrepreneur)](https://www.impots.gouv.fr/portail/)
- [Embassy of France in Washington, D.C.](https://franceintheus.org/)
- [Apostille Convention (HCCH) — U.S. competent authorities](https://www.hcch.net/en/instruments/conventions/authorities1/?cid=41)
France's route for freelancers, independent professionals, and small-business founders — consultants, designers, writers, architects, tech specialists, and similar liberal professions. French consulates evaluate your income, clients, and contribution to France rather than a fixed capital floor.