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## Summary
France's Long-Stay Visitor Visa (*Visa de Long Séjour valant Titre de Séjour — Visiteur*, or VLS-TS Visiteur) is the classic passive-income residency route for non-EU nationals who want to live in France without working. It's the French analogue to Spain's Non-Lucrative Visa, Italy's Elective Residence Visa, and Portugal's D7 — built for retirees, investors, trust beneficiaries, and anyone living off savings or passive income.
The Visitor Visa is governed by Articles L421-1 and R421-2 of the Code de l'entrée et du séjour des étrangers et du droit d'asile (CESEDA). It's one of the oldest and most-used long-stay visas in the French system — widely used by international retirees drawn to France's healthcare system, cultural infrastructure, and regional quality of life.
The core restriction: no work allowed. The defining feature of the Visitor Visa — and the biggest gotcha for applicants — is the formal declaration you must sign at the consulate: an *attestation sur l'honneur* (sworn statement) promising not to engage in any professional activity in France. French authorities interpret this strictly:
- Remote work for any foreign employer is not permitted on the Visitor Visa
- Freelance/consulting for any clients is similarly prohibited
- Managing an active business — even remotely — is disallowed
- Passive income (rent from foreign property, dividends, pension payments) is fine
- If you want to work remotely, France's Talent – Qualified Employee or the newer Entrepreneur routes are the right options
Income threshold: ~€1,800/month (tied to SMIC). France sets the minimum passive income at approximately the SMIC (*Salaire Minimum Interprofessionnel de Croissance* — French minimum wage). For 2026:
- Main applicant: ~€1,800/month (~€21,600/year)
- Spouse/partner: add ~€700–1,000/month
- Each dependent child: add ~€300–500/month
In practice, consulates expect more. The SMIC is the statutory floor, but French consulates generally look favorably on applicants showing €2,500–3,500+/month and a savings cushion of at least €30,000. Paris and other major cities have higher cost-of-living expectations.
Acceptable income sources:
- Government/state pensions (e.g., U.S. Social Security, military, federal; or foreign equivalents)
- Retirement account distributions (e.g., 401(k), IRA, or foreign equivalents)
- Dividends, interest, and investment portfolio income
- Rental property income (any country)
- Trust distributions
- Royalties from intellectual property
- Personal savings (lump-sum documentation)
The permit structure:
- Initial visa: 1 year (as a VLS-TS — the long-stay visa equivalent to a residence permit)
- First renewal: 1 year (often requires an in-person prefecture appointment)
- Second renewal: 2 years (a multi-year Carte de Séjour)
- Further renewals: up to 4 years at a time
- After 5 years: Eligible for the Carte de Résident (10-year permanent permit)
Presence requirement. The Visitor Visa requires actual residence in France — generally at least 183 days per calendar year. This is the same threshold that triggers French tax residency.
Tax considerations. Becoming a French tax resident (residency defined as having either a primary home, center of economic interests, or 183+ days in France) triggers worldwide income taxation. Relevant reliefs:
- Standard progressive rates: 11%–45% on income
- Bilateral tax treaties — France's treaty network (including the U.S.-France treaty) eliminates most double taxation on foreign pensions, Social Security/equivalent benefits, and investment income
- No special retirement tax regime — unlike Portugal's NHR or Greece's €7,000 pension flat tax, France has no headline retiree tax benefit
- Social contributions (CSG/CRDS) — normally 9.1% + 0.5% on investment income. For U.S. citizens specifically: Social Security benefits and U.S. retirement account distributions are typically exempt from CSG/CRDS under a French administrative interpretation of the U.S.-France totalization agreement (a significant practical benefit; check whether your country's totalization agreement provides similar relief)
- Wealth tax (IFI) — France taxes wealth on real estate (not other assets) for residents with IFI-reportable property above €1.3 million. Most retirees don't trigger this
French healthcare — a major draw. Within 3 months of establishing French residency, Visitor Visa holders can enroll in PUMa (*Protection Universelle Maladie*) — France's universal healthcare system. Annual contributions are income-based (~6.5% of income above a threshold) but coverage is comprehensive. For the first 3 months of French residence, private international insurance is required at the consular application stage.
Path to French citizenship. France permits dual citizenship (including U.S./French). Naturalization requires:
- 5 years of legal residence in France (with a Visitor or other long-stay visa)
- B1 French language test
- Integration interview (*entretien d'assimilation*) — French history, culture, values
- Income self-sufficiency and clean criminal record
- Tax compliance throughout residence period
Visitor Visa time counts fully toward the 5-year clock.
## Eligibility
- Demonstrable passive income of at least ~€1,800/month (SMIC-based), scaled up for family members
- No work of any kind in France, including remote work for non-French employers or clients
- Savings cushion — consulates typically look for ~€30,000+ on deposit
- Private health insurance with full coverage valid in France (until PUMa enrollment after 3 months)
- Proof of accommodation in France (12-month lease or property deed)
- Clean criminal record from your country of citizenship and any other country of residence in the past 5 years
- Signed attestation of no intent to work in France
- Dual citizenship is permitted (including U.S./French)
## What This Route Allows
This route can allow you to live in France if you can support yourself through retirement income, passive income, savings, or other accepted funds. It is generally designed for people who will not rely on local employment.
## What This Route Is Not
This is not a work visa. These routes usually focus on proving stable support from outside local employment and may restrict work in the country.
## Next Steps
1. Assess income fit — gather pension award letters, Social Security statements, 401(k)/IRA statements, rental income ledgers, 12+ months of bank statements showing consistent deposits
2. Obtain health insurance — a Schengen-compliant international plan (Cigna Global, Allianz Care, IMG) valid in France
3. Secure French accommodation — a 12-month lease or property deed. Short-term Airbnb bookings don't satisfy French consulates
4. Gather supporting documents — passport, police clearance from your country of citizenship (e.g., U.S. FBI check), apostilled; marriage/birth certificates; financial statements; signed declaration of no work
5. Apostille each civil record under the 1961 Hague Convention (or use your country's legalization procedure) and obtain certified French translations from a sworn translator (*traducteur assermenté*)
6. File the Visitor Visa application through the France-Visas online portal, followed by an appointment at VFS Global with jurisdiction over your country/state of residence
7. Enter France within the visa validity
8. Validate the long-stay visa (VLS-TS) online within 3 months of arrival at [administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr](https://administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr/)
9. Enroll in PUMa (French universal healthcare) after 3 months of French residence — required by law
10. Register for a French social security number (*numéro de sécurité sociale*) and obtain a carte Vitale
11. Register for French taxes — obtain a *numéro fiscal* via your local *Service des Impôts des Particuliers*; file your first French tax return by May of the year after you become resident
12. Renew the Visitor permit as needed, then apply for multi-year cards when eligible
13. After 5 years of legal residence, apply for the Carte de Résident (10-year permit) or French citizenship — both routes permitted after 5 years
## Sources
- [France-Visas — Visitor Visa (Long-Stay)](https://france-visas.gouv.fr/en/)
- [Service Public — Visitor Visa (VLS-TS Visiteur)](https://www.service-public.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/F16162)
- [CESEDA Articles L421-1 / R421-2 — Long-stay Visitor Visa framework](https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/codes/id/LEGITEXT000006070158/)
- [Welcome to France — Long-stay Visitor Visa guide](https://www.welcometofrance.com/en/)
- [Ameli.fr — PUMa (Protection Universelle Maladie)](https://www.ameli.fr/)
- [Impots.gouv.fr — French tax residency and filing](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 classic route for retirees, investors, and anyone financially independent who wants to live in France without working. You'll sign a formal statement promising not to work — including no remote work for foreign employers.