Marrying a French Citizen: A Complete Guide for Americans

So you’ve fallen for a Frenchman (or Frenchwoman). Félicitations! Now comes the part no one in your love story warned you about: the paperwork.

I’ve been exactly where you are. I met my husband Thomas on a dance floor at a wedding in England, spent two years in a long-distance relationship across 4,500 miles, and eventually made the leap — selling my things, leaving my job, and boarding a one-way flight to Paris with my life packed into 2.5 suitcases. The love story was Hollywood-worthy. The French administration process that made it possible? A little less so.

But I did it. Every step of it. And I documented the whole thing so you don’t have to figure it out alone.

This page is your roadmap, from the very first piece of paperwork before the wedding all the way to the day you sing La Marseillaise at your naturalisation ceremony. In order. The way it actually works.

Before the Paperwork: Our Story, Made for Hollywood

Every process starts somewhere. Mine started on a dance floor at a wedding in Warwickshire. If you want to understand why I went through all of this, and why I'd do it all over again, start here.

Before the Wedding

Step 2: The French Spouse Visa (VPF)

Once you're married, the next goal is getting yourself legally to France. This post covers the big picture of the visa vie privée et familiale, what it is, how I navigated it, and what the process looked like start to finish. Spoiler: it took about seven months and a lot of patience.

Step 3: Transcription de l'Acte de Mariage

If you got married outside of France, your marriage needs to be officially registered in the French civil records before you can do much else. This is done through the French consulate in the US, and it's a prerequisite for the VLS-TS validation. Here's exactly how I did it.

Applying for your VLS-TS

With your marriage transcribed and your dossier in order, the next step is applying for your long-stay visa, the VLS-TS (visa de long séjour valant titre de séjour), as a conjoint de Français. This post walks through exactly what I submitted, where I submitted it, and what to expect before you can finally book that one-way ticket.

After You Land

Validating Your Visa Upon Arrival

You're in France, félicitations! But before anything else, your VLS-TS needs to be validated within the first three months of arrival. This kicks off your official residency clock and triggers the OFII integration process. Here's exactly how I did it and what to expect when the OFII convocation eventually lands in your inbox.

OFII Convocation + Signing Your CIR

Your first OFII appointment is a half-day affair: a French language test, a personal interview with an OFII agent, and signing your Contrat d'Intégration Républicaine (CIR), your formal agreement with the French state to integrate into French society. It sounds intimidating. It really isn't. Come over-prepared and bring your whole binder.

OFII Medical Exam

Scheduled alongside your CIR appointment, the medical exam is a straightforward check-up: an eye exam, a general health review, and a chat with a doctor about your medical history. The whole thing takes about 30 minutes. Bring your medical records if you have a complex history, translated if possible.

OFII Civics Training (Jours Civiques)

Four days of civics classes covering the principles and values of France, how French society works, healthcare, housing, work, and family life. It's more interesting than it sounds, and your lunch is provided. Bring a notebook. You'll thank me later.

Renewing and Building Your Status in France

Titre de Séjour Renewal

At the end of your first year, it's time to renew. This post walks through the renewal process step by step: the online application, the documents, and the inevitable moments of wondering if you've entered the right number in the right field.

Picking Up Your Carte de Séjour

The moment your card is ready, you'll get a notification to come collect it. Here's what to bring to your pickup appointment and what that small piece of plastic actually means once it's finally in your hands.

Preparing for the Long Haul

Taking the TCF IRN Language Test

To apply for your 10-year card, and eventually for nationality, you'll need to prove your French language level. The TCF IRN is the exam designed specifically for residency and integration purposes. I took mine in preparation for the 10-year card, and it ended up covering the language requirement for nationality too. Two birds, one exam.

The Examen Civique

As of January 2026, a new civic exam is required as part of the path to a carte de séjour pluriannuelle and French nationality. This post covers who is affected, what the exam includes, and how to prepare for it.

Applying for Your 10-Year Carte de Résident

After a minimum of three years of marriage to a French national, you can request the 10-year carte de résident at your next renewal. This is the big one, ten years of residency rights in a single card, and the last step before nationality. Here's the full dossier breakdown and what I included in my application.

Applying for French Nationality by Marriage

After years of renewals, OFII appointments, language tests, and enough paperwork to fill a filing cabinet, you reach the final step: nationalité par déclaration. This is the post I wish had existed when I started. Everything you need to know about the application, the documents, and yes, the ceremony where you finally sing La Marseillaise.

Ready to start your own French adventure?

The process is long, we’re talking years, not months, and the French administration has a genuine gift for making straightforward things complicated. But it is absolutely doable, and every single step is documented right here from someone who has lived it.

If you have questions along the way, drop them in the comments on any of the posts above, or reach out through the contact page. And if the terminology is already making your head spin, bookmark the French Visa Terminology Guide before you dive in, it will save you a lot of Googling.

Bonne chance. You’ve got this!