France Living Cost Guide 2026

Complete breakdown of monthly expenses, salaries by profession, French tax system, healthcare, and PPP calculator. For expats and newcomers planning to move to France.

Last updated: June 28, 2026 | Next review: December 2026
Eiffel Tower, Paris - iconic French landmark

Monthly Living Expenses in France (Mid-size City)

For a couple (2 adults). All amounts in EUR. Based on INSEE, real 2026 data, and expat reports.

Important: These figures are monthly expenses (after-tax spending). To earn this take-home, you need a higher gross salary. French social charges (cotisations sociales) are among the highest in Europe -- about 22-25% of gross is deducted for employee contributions alone. See the Tax Structure tab for details.
~2,300
EUR/month (low)
Frugal couple in mid-size city
~3,600
EUR/month (high)
Comfortable lifestyle
~3,100
EUR avg gross needed
Gross salary to cover low-end expenses
~39,800
EUR avg annual salary
France-wide median gross
CategoryItemLow (EUR)High (EUR)Notes
Housing
Rent (T2 / 2-room apartment)7001,100Charges comprises (with charges); Paris significantly higher
Internet (box)3045Free, Orange, SFR, Bouygues; fiber widely available
Mobile phones (2 forfaits)2040Free Mobile 2 EUR plan or 19.99 EUR unlimited; very cheap
Electricity / Gas (EDF/Engie)80140Bouclier tarifaire (price shield) still partially active; nuclear energy base
Housing subtotal8301,325
Food & Groceries
Groceries (2 adults)450650Lidl, Aldi, Leclerc, Carrefour; marches (open markets) for fresh produce
Boulangerie / bakery3060Baguette tradition ~1.20 EUR; croissants, pain au chocolat
Food subtotal480710
Transport
Monthly transit pass (2 persons)80170Navigo 86.40 EUR in Paris; other cities 40-60 EUR each
Occasional car / taxi0150Blablacar, Bolt, Uber; autopartage in cities
Transport subtotal80320
Health Insurance
Securite Sociale (employee share)00Covered by cotisations sociales deducted from gross salary
Mutuelle complementaire (2 adults)60120Top-up private insurance; often employer-subsidized 50%
Health subtotal60120
Personal & Lifestyle
Clothes80180Soldes (sales) twice yearly; Kiabi, H&M, Zara
Personal care60100Pharmacies are the go-to for skincare; parapharmacies cheaper
Sport & leisure50130Gym 20-40 EUR/month; association sportive 100-300 EUR/year
Household supplies4070Cleaning products, small items
Personal subtotal230480
Insurance
Assurance habitation (home insurance)1530Mandatory for renters; covers fire, water damage, liability
Responsabilite civile (liability)00Usually included in assurance habitation
Insurance subtotal1530
TOTAL MONTHLY EXPENSES~1,695~2,985Realistic range: 2,300 - 3,600 with buffer

Salaries by Profession in France

Monthly gross salaries in EUR. Data from INSEE, APEC, Glassdoor 2026.

13th month: Many French employers pay a 13th month salary (treizieme mois) and sometimes a prime de vacances (holiday bonus). These vary by convention collective (industry agreement). The figures below show standard monthly gross.
Doctor (Medecin)
7,500 EUR
Pharmacist
6,000 EUR
Data Scientist
5,800 EUR
Software Engineer (Ingenieur)
5,500 EUR
Lawyer (Avocat)
5,500 EUR
Finance Manager
5,200 EUR
Marketing Manager
4,700 EUR
Teacher (Professeur certifie)
4,000 EUR
Architect
4,000 EUR
Accountant (Comptable)
3,800 EUR
Civil Servant (Fonctionnaire)
3,500 EUR
Nurse (Infirmier/e)
3,200 EUR
Police Officer (Gardien de la paix)
3,000 EUR
Electrician
2,800 EUR
Chef (Cuisinier)
2,600 EUR
Bus Driver (Conducteur)
2,500 EUR
Retail Worker (Vendeur)
2,000 EUR
SMIC (minimum wage 2026): France's statutory minimum wage (SMIC) is 11.88 EUR/hour brut, approximately 1,802 EUR/month gross for a 35-hour week. Revised annually on January 1st, indexed to inflation.

French Tax System (Systeme Fiscal)

France uses prelevement a la source (withholding at source) since 2019, plus the unique parts fiscales (household quotient) system. Updated for 2026.

Income Tax Brackets (Impot sur le Revenu) - Per Part Fiscale

Annual Taxable Income per Part (EUR)Tax RateNotes
0 - 11,2940%Tax-free allowance
11,295 - 28,79711%First taxable bracket
28,798 - 82,34130%Middle bracket
82,342 - 177,10641%High earner bracket
177,107+45%Top marginal rate
Parts fiscales explained: France taxes by household (foyer fiscal), not individual. Single = 1 part. Married couple = 2 parts. Each child adds 0.5 parts (third child onward = 1 part). Income is divided by number of parts, taxed per bracket, then multiplied back. This benefits families significantly.

Social Contributions (Cotisations Sociales - Employee Share)

ContributionEmployee RateEmployer RateNotes
CSG (Contribution Sociale Generalisee)9.2%-On 98.25% of gross; 6.8% deductible from taxable income
CRDS (Contribution au Remboursement de la Dette Sociale)0.5%-On 98.25% of gross; non-deductible
Pension vieillesse (capped)6.9%8.55%On salary up to plafond Securite Sociale (3,864 EUR/month)
Pension vieillesse (uncapped)0.4%2.02%On full salary
Retraite complementaire (AGIRC-ARRCO)3.15%4.72%Tranche 1 (up to plafond); higher above
Chomage (unemployment)0%4.05%Employee share eliminated in 2018; employer-only
Assurance maladie (health)0%7.0%Employer-only since 2018; covers Securite Sociale
Total employee cotisations~22-25%~42-45%Employer cost is ~1.45x gross salary (super-brut)

Net Salary Calculator

Quick Reference: Net Pay by Gross

Monthly GrossAnnual GrossCotisations + TaxNet MonthlyEffective Rate
2,50030,000~700~1,80028.0%
3,50042,000~1,100~2,40031.4%
5,00060,000~1,800~3,20036.0%
7,00084,000~2,800~4,20040.0%
10,000120,000~4,200~5,80042.0%

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Calculator

Compare how far your French salary goes in other countries. Based on World Bank/OECD 2025-2026 PPP indices. France = 100.

CountryCurrencyPPP IndexRegion3,000 EUR buys equiv. of
How to read: France = 100. If India has a PPP index of 24, your 3,000 EUR in France has the same purchasing power as 3,000 x (24/100) = 720 EUR in India. You'd need ~76% less money in India for the same standard of living.

Cost of Living by City

Comparing major French cities. Paris = most expensive baseline. Data: INSEE, Numbeo, SeLoger 2026.

CityAvg Rent T2 (EUR)Monthly Pass (EUR)Meal Out (EUR)Coffee (EUR)Livability Note
Paris1,200-1,80086.4015-303.50Most expensive; world-class culture, museums, cuisine
Lyon700-1,1006912-222.50Gastronomic capital; bouchons lyonnais; excellent quality of life
Marseille600-9505112-202.30Mediterranean vibe; bouillabaisse; improving infrastructure
Toulouse600-9005211-192.30La Ville Rose; Airbus HQ; aerospace hub; sunny
Bordeaux650-1,0005112-222.50Wine capital; elegant architecture; 2h TGV to Paris
Nice750-1,2004914-253.00Cote d'Azur; expensive but beach lifestyle; salade nicoise
Strasbourg550-8504611-182.20EU Parliament; Franco-German culture; choucroute, flammekueche
Nantes600-9005011-192.20Green city; near Atlantic coast; fast-growing tech scene
Paris vs. province: Living in Paris costs 30-50% more than other major cities. However, Paris salaries are typically 15-25% higher. Many French people choose "province" cities like Lyon, Nantes, or Bordeaux for better quality of life at lower cost.

French Healthcare System (Securite Sociale)

France's healthcare is consistently ranked among the best in the world. It uses a two-tier system: Securite Sociale (base) + mutuelle (complementary).

70%
Secu reimbursement
Securite Sociale covers 70% of most care; mutuelle covers the rest
1 EUR
Participation forfaitaire
Small co-pay per consultation (capped at 50 EUR/year)
Carte Vitale
Health card
Green smartcard for instant reimbursement at pharmacies & doctors
~30 EUR
Mutuelle/month
Average individual complementary insurance cost

How the System Works

FeatureSecurite Sociale (Base)Mutuelle (Complementary)
FundingCotisations sociales (payroll deductions)Monthly premium paid by individual/employer
Coverage70% of tarif de convention (standard rate)Covers remaining 30% + extras (dental, optical)
Mandatory?Yes, for all residentsYes, employers must provide mutuelle since 2016 (ANI law)
Employer contributionFully employer-funded (cotisations patronales)Minimum 50% of mutuelle premium
Self-employedCovered via URSSAF/SSIMust arrange own mutuelle
ReimbursementCarte Vitale (tiers payant at pharmacies)Automatic if linked to Carte Vitale

What's Covered

ServiceCost to PatientNotes
GP visit (Medecin generaliste)~7.50 EUR (30% of 26.50 tarif)With mutuelle: 0 EUR; medecin traitant (declared GP) gives best rate
Specialist visit (secteur 1)~7.50-15 EURSecteur 1 = conventional tarif; secteur 2 = depassements d'honoraires (extra fees)
Hospital stay20 EUR/day forfait hospitalierSecu covers 80%; mutuelle covers forfait and rest
Prescription drugs0-35% co-payDrugs rated by effectiveness: vignette blanche (65% covered), bleue (30%), orange (15%)
Dental - basic70% covered100% Sante reform: certain crowns, bridges, dentures fully covered since 2021
OpticalPartially covered100% Sante: fully covered glasses every 2 years (class A frames + lenses)
Mental health (MonPsy)Covered (8 sessions/year)MonPsy program: psychologist sessions reimbursed with GP referral
Maternity100% coveredAll prenatal, delivery, postnatal care covered; 16 weeks conge maternite
Emergency (SAMU 15)80% coveredCall 15 for SAMU or 112 for Euro emergency; urgences at hopitals
Carte Vitale tip: Get your Carte Vitale as soon as possible after arriving. Apply via your CPAM (Caisse Primaire d'Assurance Maladie) office. Without it, you pay upfront and submit feuilles de soins (paper forms) for reimbursement -- which takes weeks. With Carte Vitale, pharmacies apply tiers payant (direct billing) so you pay nothing or just the co-pay.

Housing in France (Logement)

The French rental market has strong tenant protections. Understanding the garant system and APL housing aid is essential.

Key Terms

French TermEnglishExplanation
Loyer charges comprises (CC)Rent including chargesYour actual monthly cost; includes building charges (water, garbage, common areas)
Depot de garantieSecurity depositMaximum 1 month rent (unfurnished) or 2 months (furnished); returned within 2 months
GarantGuarantorSomeone who guarantees your rent; must earn 3x the rent; often a parent or Visale
VisaleFree state guarantorAction Logement provides free garant for under-30s, new employees, precarious contracts
APL (Aide Personnalisee au Logement)Housing aidMonthly rent subsidy from CAF; based on income, rent, location; apply on caf.fr
Bail mobiliteMobility lease1-10 month furnished lease; no deposit required; for students, interns, temporary workers
Etat des lieuxInventory of fixturesDetailed inspection at move-in and move-out; protects your deposit
PreavisNotice period1 month (furnished/zone tendue) or 3 months (unfurnished, non-zone tendue)
Treve hivernaleWinter truceNov 1 - March 31: landlords CANNOT evict tenants, even for non-payment

Where to Search

PlatformTypeNotes
SeLoger.comAll typesLargest property platform in France; essential for searching
Leboncoin.frAll typesFrench classifieds; great for direct-from-owner (particulier a particulier)
PAP.frDirect from ownerNo agency fees; particulier a particulier only
Bien'iciAll typesAggregator; clean interface; includes agency and private listings
Appartager.comShared flats (colocation)Best for colocation (flatshares); popular with students
Documents you'll need (dossier de location): Piece d'identite (ID), 3 derniers bulletins de salaire (payslips), avis d'imposition (tax notice), contrat de travail (employment contract), justificatif de domicile (proof of address), and a garant with the same documents. Agencies charge frais d'agence (1 month rent typically). Use Visale if you qualify to avoid needing a personal garant.

Transport in France (Transports)

France has one of Europe's best rail networks (SNCF/TGV) and excellent urban transport in major cities.

86.40
EUR/month Navigo
All Paris metro, RER, bus, tram -- unlimited zones
320 km/h
TGV top speed
Paris-Lyon in 2h, Paris-Marseille in 3h15
~1.80
EUR/litre essence
SP95; diesel ~1.70 EUR; fluctuates with oil prices
50%
Employer transport subsidy
Mandatory: employer reimburses 50% of transit pass
Transport TypeCostDetails
Navigo (Paris all zones)86.40 EUR/monthMetro, RER, bus, tram, Transilien; employer pays 50% = 43.20 EUR for you
Paris metro single ticket (t+)2.15 EURCarnet of 10 on Navigo Easy; valid for metro, bus, tram (not RER outside Paris)
Velib (Paris bike-share)37.60 EUR/yearV-Libre: 30min free per ride; electric bikes extra; 20,000+ bikes available
TGV Paris-Lyon25-120 EUR2 hours; book early on SNCF Connect (Ouigo from 10 EUR)
TGV Paris-Marseille35-150 EUR3h15; Ouigo budget option from 19 EUR
Carte Avantage (SNCF)49 EUR/year30% off all TGV/Intercites; great for frequent travelers
Autoroute tolls (peages)VariesParis-Lyon ~35 EUR; Paris-Nice ~80 EUR; Liber-t tag for automatic payment
Car insurance (assurance auto)50-100 EUR/monthAssurance au tiers (third-party) mandatory; tous risques optional
Controle technique~80 EURVehicle inspection every 2 years (4 years for new cars); mandatory
Pro tip: Book TGV tickets 3-4 months in advance on sncf-connect.com for the cheapest fares. Use Ouigo (SNCF's budget service) for trips from 10 EUR. The Carte Avantage (49 EUR/year) gives 30% off all long-distance trains and guaranteed max prices. Your employer MUST reimburse 50% of your Navigo or transit pass -- this is law (Code du travail).

Working in France (Travailler en France)

France has some of the strongest worker protections in the world. The 35-hour week, RTT days, and CDI contracts define French work culture.

35h
Legal work week
35 heures; overtime (heures supplementaires) paid 25-50% extra
5 weeks
Conges payes
25 business days minimum paid vacation; + RTT days
RTT
Extra rest days
Reduction du Temps de Travail; 8-12 extra days if working 39h
CDI
The golden contract
Contrat a Duree Indeterminee; open-ended, very hard to fire
TopicDetailsNotes
CDI (open-ended contract)Contrat a Duree Indeterminee; the standard employment contractVery strong protections; dismissal requires real cause and process; banks require CDI for mortgages
CDD (fixed-term contract)Contrat a Duree Determinee; max 18 months (renewable once)10% prime de precarite at end; cannot replace permanent position long-term
Periode d'essaiTrial period: 2 months (workers), 3 months (supervisors), 4 months (cadres)Renewable once; either party can terminate with short notice
35-hour weekLegal working time; loi Aubry (2000)Cadres (managers) often on forfait jours (218 days/year) instead of hourly
RTT daysReduction du Temps de Travail; extra days off if working more than 35hIf your contract is 39h/week, you get ~8-12 RTT days on top of 25 vacation days
Conges payes25 days (5 weeks) paid vacation minimumAccrued at 2.08 days/month worked; many conventions add extra days
Arret maladie (sick leave)3-day carence (waiting period), then CPAM pays 50% of salaryMany conventions collectives cover 100% from day 1; medecin delivers arret de travail
CSE (Comite Social et Economique)Works council mandatory in companies with 11+ employeesProvides avantages: CE discounts on cinema, vacation, gifts, events; very French institution
Conge maternite16 weeks (6 before + 10 after birth); 100% salary26 weeks from 3rd child; conge paternite: 28 days
Droit a la deconnexionRight to disconnect (law since 2017)Employers cannot expect email/calls outside work hours; 50+ employee companies must have charter
Tickets restaurantMeal vouchers; employer pays 50-60% of face value~9-11 EUR/day; usable at restaurants and supermarkets; Edenred, Swile, Sodexo

Work Culture Tips

French work culture essentials: (1) Pause dejeuner -- lunch is sacred; 1-2 hours is normal; eating at your desk is frowned upon. (2) Vouvoiement -- use "vous" (formal you) with colleagues until invited to "tutoyer" (use "tu"). (3) Greves (strikes) -- expect them; transport strikes are a national tradition; check RATP/SNCF alerts. (4) Conges d'ete -- many businesses slow down or close in August; French people take their vacation seriously. (5) Apero -- after-work drinks are important for networking; "on prend un verre?" is the French equivalent of grabbing a coffee.

French Phrases, Culture & Everyday Life

France has a rich administrative culture. Knowing these phrases and customs will help you navigate daily life.

Essential French Phrases

FrenchEnglishPronunciation
BonjourHello / Good daybohn-ZHOOR
Merci beaucoupThank you very muchmair-SEE boh-KOO
S'il vous plaitPlease (formal)seel voo PLEH
Excusez-moiExcuse meex-koo-ZAY mwah
Parlez-vous anglais?Do you speak English?par-LAY voo ahn-GLEH
Je ne comprends pasI don't understandzhuh nuh kohm-PRAHN pah
Ou est...?Where is...?oo eh
Combien ca coute?How much does it cost?kohm-BYEHN sah KOOT
Au revoirGoodbyeoh ruh-VWAHR
VoilaThere it is / Here you govwah-LAH

Administrative Culture (Bureaucratie)

French TermEnglishWhy It Matters
PrefectureGovernment officeWhere you get titre de sejour (residence permit); non-EU citizens; book on ANEF online
MairieTown hall / City hallFor administrative tasks, marriage, local permits, elections registration
CAF (Caisse d'Allocations Familiales)Family benefits officeApply for APL housing aid, prime d'activite, allocations familiales on caf.fr
CPAMHealth insurance officeCaisse Primaire d'Assurance Maladie; register here for Securite Sociale
Impots.gouv.frTax authority websiteFile taxes online annually (May-June); declaration de revenus
Titre de sejourResidence permitFor non-EU citizens; apply via ANEF portal; appointments at prefecture
Numero de Securite SocialeSocial security number15-digit number; needed for everything; apply via CPAM or employer
AttestationCertificate/proofFrance runs on attestations; you'll need them for everything (work, housing, insurance)

Cultural Customs

Things to know: (1) La bise -- cheek kisses for greeting; number varies by region (1-4); ask locally or follow their lead. (2) Boulangerie -- daily visit for fresh baguette is a way of life; always say "bonjour" when entering any shop. (3) Apero (aperitif) -- pre-dinner drinks with snacks (olives, saucisson, chips); deeply social; "l'heure de l'apero" is sacred. (4) Sunday closing -- most shops closed on Sundays; some boulangeries and supermarkets open mornings only. (5) Pharmacie (green cross) -- pharmacists are your first healthcare stop; they can advise, sell medications, and are highly trusted. (6) Greeting etiquette -- ALWAYS say "bonjour" when entering a shop, doctor's office, or even an elevator; not doing so is considered very rude.
Food culture: Lunch is the main meal (12h-14h); dinner is lighter and later (20h-21h). The French eat in courses: entree (starter), plat (main), fromage (cheese), dessert. Wine with meals is standard. Tipping: service is included (service compris) by law, but rounding up or leaving 1-2 EUR for good service is appreciated. "L'addition, s'il vous plait" = the bill, please.

Minimum Earnings to Survive in France

What gross salary do you need? Here's the realistic breakdown for 2026.

~35,000
EUR/year gross (single)
Comfortable living in mid-size city
~50,000
EUR/year gross (couple)
Two adults in mid-size city
~2,300
EUR/month net minimum
Bare minimum for couple (frugal)
~3,200
EUR/month recommended
Comfortable net for couple with buffer
LifestyleMonthly Expenses (EUR)Gross Salary Needed (EUR)Net After TaxBuffer
Survival mode
Colocation room, very frugal
1,1001,8021,400+300
Basic single
Own flat outside Paris
1,6002,8001,900+300
Couple (mid-size city)
2 adults, comfortable
2,6004,2002,900+300
Couple (Paris)
2 adults, good lifestyle
3,6006,0003,900+300
Family with child
2 adults + 1 child, large city
4,0006,8004,300+300
Newcomer checklist (first 2 weeks): (1) Open a bank account (BNP Paribas, Societe Generale, Boursorama, or N26). (2) Get your numero de Securite Sociale via employer or CPAM. (3) Apply for Carte Vitale at your CPAM. (4) If renting: apply for APL on caf.fr (housing aid). (5) Get a French SIM (Free Mobile 2 EUR plan is unbeatable). (6) Buy a Navigo Easy or monthly pass. (7) Register at the Prefecture for titre de sejour (non-EU). (8) Apply for Visale (free guarantor) if under 30 or new employee.
Data note: All figures updated June 2026. Rents, salaries, and tax brackets change annually. Always verify current rates with official sources (impots.gouv.fr, INSEE, ameli.fr, SNCF) before making financial decisions.