Why moving to France takes longer than people expect

Almost every expat we work with arrives in France with a version of the same plan: arrive, find a rental within a few weeks, get the admin sorted over the following month or two, and be fully settled by month three or four. It is a completely reasonable plan. It is also, almost without exception, wrong.

This is not because France is uniquely difficult, or because any single step in the process is unreasonable. It is because moving to France is not a list of tasks you can work through in parallel. It is a chain of dependencies, where one thing genuinely cannot happen until another thing is finished, and every delay in that chain creates more delay further down the line. Understanding this distinction, before you arrive rather than three months in, is the single biggest factor in whether your move feels manageable or overwhelming.

Table of Contents

Why Moving to France Takes Longer Than People Expect

France runs on sequential systems, not parallel ones

In many countries, you can move forward on several fronts simultaneously, open a bank account while your visa is processing, register for healthcare before you have permanent housing, sign up for utilities with a temporary address. France, by and large, does not work this way. The systems are connected, and each one tends to require proof that a previous one has already been completed.

Permanent address
Bank account
Utilities & services
Full healthcare registration

You generally need a permanent address before certain applications can progress. You need a bank account before some services will accept you. You need residency documents for others. Healthcare registration depends on having an address that satisfies the requirements of the system. None of these steps is complicated in isolation, the difficulty is that they are linked, and a delay anywhere in the chain ripples through everything that depends on it.

The delay is rarely one big problem. It is almost always a chain reaction, one slow step quietly pushing back everything that was waiting on it.

Finding a rental takes longer than almost anyone expects

This is the single biggest source of delay for most newcomers, and it is also the step everything else depends on. The common assumption is to arrive, spend a few weeks in an Airbnb, and quickly secure a long-term rental. In practice, this rarely goes that smoothly. Landlords want extensive documentation. Foreign income invites additional scrutiny because most rental insurance is built around French-source income. Competition in popular cities is intense, and agencies routinely ignore incomplete applications rather than following up.

  • Extensive documentation requirements: landlords expect a complete dossier, and incomplete applications are simply skipped over rather than queried
  • Foreign income scrutiny: GLI rental insurance is built around French tax documentation, which limits flexibility for many agencies working with international applicants
  • Intense competition: in popular cities, good listings can be gone within hours, leaving little room for a slow or incomplete response

Because this is the first dependency in the chain, a delay here delays almost everything that follows, the bank account, the address-dependent paperwork, and ultimately healthcare registration.

Temporary housing creates problems that are not obvious at first

Using an Airbnb or short-term rental as a bridge while you search for something permanent is a completely sensible approach, and many people do it successfully. The complication is that temporary accommodation is frequently not accepted in situations that specifically require proof of permanent residence. CPAM, the prefecture, and various administrative bodies are looking for a long-term lease or a property deed, not a booking confirmation.

This creates a genuinely strange situation: you are physically living in France, settling in, learning the area, but from an administrative perspective, you have not yet “arrived” in the way the system requires. Months can pass in this state, with the visible parts of your life moving forward while the paperwork remains stuck exactly where it started.

Why this matters more than people expect

The gap between feeling settled and being administratively settled is one of the most common sources of frustration in the first year. If your housing search takes six to nine months, which is not unusual in competitive cities, your CPAM application, and everything downstream of it, effectively cannot move forward until that is resolved. Planning your insurance and your expectations around this possibility, rather than around the best-case scenario, prevents a lot of unnecessary stress.

French healthcare is not immediate, even though it sounds like it should be

One of the most common surprises for newcomers is discovering that healthcare registration is not automatic, and that the often-cited “three months” figure refers only to when you become eligible to apply, not when you are actually covered. The realistic sequence looks like this: arrive, wait out the qualifying period, submit your application, wait for processing, potentially provide additional documents when requested, and wait again.

Even specialists who handle this process for a living routinely advise clients to expect a considerably longer timeline than most online forums suggest. The application itself is straightforward. The waiting period, shaped by processing volume and departmental variation, is where the real time goes.

Every department interprets the rules slightly differently

This is one of the more frustrating realities of French administration, and it catches almost everyone off guard at least once. There is a national system, with national rules. But there is also local interpretation, applied department by department, sometimes even office by office, or case officer by case officer. Different CPAM offices can request different supporting documents, process applications at noticeably different speeds, and apply procedures with varying degrees of strictness.

  • The same application can move at very different speeds in two different departments, with no clear pattern to predict which will be faster
  • Document requirements vary: what one office accepts without comment, another may flag and request additional proof for
  • There is no reliable way to anticipate this in advance: experience from one expat’s process, even in a similar situation, does not necessarily predict yours

This unpredictability is genuinely hard to plan for, and it is one of the reasons that comparing notes with other expats, while often well-intentioned, can give a misleading sense of how long things “should” take.

Processing times are slower than the task itself suggests

Many expats arrive from countries where digital systems provide near-instant feedback, submit a form, get a result. France is improving in this respect, but a significant number of procedures still rely on manual review, additional document requests, postal correspondence, and internal validation steps that simply take time to work through a system, regardless of how complete or accurate your original application was.

The gap between effort and outcome is the part people consistently underestimate. The application itself might take an hour to prepare. The waiting period that follows can take months, and there is very little you can do to accelerate it once it is submitted, beyond responding quickly to any requests for additional information.

Optimising for speed instead of compliance backfires almost every time

This is perhaps the most important pattern to understand, because it is entirely within your control. Faced with a slow, document-heavy system, the natural instinct is to look for shortcuts, travel insurance instead of properly compliant residency insurance, temporary accommodation instead of committing to the longer rental search, incomplete documentation submitted in the hope it will be accepted, workarounds suggested in Facebook groups by people who got lucky once.

These shortcuts often appear to work, at least initially. The problem is that they tend to create larger delays later, an application rejected for non-compliant insurance, a CPAM file stalled because the address on record was never accepted, months lost re-doing something that needed to be done properly from the start. The fastest route through French administration is, with remarkable consistency, the fully compliant route. It rarely feels that way at the outset, which is exactly why so many people choose the shortcut anyway.

France prioritises stability over convenience

Underneath all of the specific delays sits a single explanation that makes the whole system make more sense. France is not designed to optimise for your immediate convenience. It is designed to produce stable, well-documented, long-term outcomes, in renting, in healthcare, in banking, in residency, in employment, in administration generally. The system moves slowly because it values verification over speed.

The genuinely encouraging part of this is what happens once you are inside the system. Tenancy protections in France are some of the strongest in Europe. Healthcare, once you are enrolled, is comprehensive and remarkably affordable. Residency, once established, is stable and predictable. Getting into the system is the hard part. Being in it is, for most people, considerably easier than what they left behind.

The reframe that changes everything

The system is not slow because it is broken. It is slow because it is thorough, and thoroughness, once you are through the other side of it, is what gives you a tenancy that cannot be cancelled on a landlord’s whim, healthcare that costs a fraction of what you are used to, and a residency status that is not easily disrupted. The frustration is real in year one. The stability it buys you is real from year two onwards.

Most people build a timeline against the wrong baseline

The deepest issue is not really that France is slow. It is that most people compare their actual experience against an unrealistic expectation they built before they ever arrived.

✕ The expectation

Month 1 Arrive
Month 2 Find rental
Month 3 Join healthcare
Month 4 Everything sorted

✓ The realistic timeline

Mo 1–3 Arrival and housing search
Mo 3–6 Administrative setup begins
Mo 6–12 Healthcare, banking, licences fully settle
Year 2 Most people report finally feeling established

This is precisely why so many experienced expats say, almost as a throwaway line, that they did not truly feel established until their second year. It is not a sign that something went wrong. It is simply the realistic shape of the process when you account for every dependency rather than just the headline steps.

The real reason some people settle more smoothly than others

Moving to France is not difficult because any individual step is impossible. It takes longer than expected because every step depends on another, and every delay creates a ripple effect through everything still waiting behind it. Once you see the process this way, the frustration tends to drop considerably, not because anything moves faster, but because you stop measuring your experience against a timeline that was never realistic to begin with.

The people who settle most successfully are not necessarily the most organised, the most fluent in French, or the most knowledgeable about the system going in. They are, overwhelmingly, the people who arrived expecting the process to take longer than they hoped, and who built their financial and emotional planning around that expectation rather than around the best case.

  • Budget your insurance and finances for 12 months, not 3: this single adjustment removes most of the panic that builds when month 4 arrives and nothing feels finished
  • Start the rental search before you arrive if at all possible: the earliest dependency in the chain is the one most worth protecting against delay
  • Choose compliance over shortcuts every time: the fastest route through French administration is consistently the fully compliant one, even when it does not feel that way at the time
  • Expect year two, not month four, to be when things feel settled: this is the realistic baseline, not a sign that anything has gone wrong

FAQs: Moving and settling in France

How long does it really take to feel settled after moving to France?
Most realistic accounts put it at around two years, not the three to four months many people initially plan for. The first year typically involves finding permanent housing, working through healthcare and administrative registration, and resolving the various dependencies that connect these processes. By the second year, most of the foundational paperwork is complete and daily life feels considerably more settled.
Why does everything in France seem to depend on something else?
French administrative systems are largely sequential rather than parallel. A permanent address is often required before certain applications can proceed, a bank account may be required for some services, and residency documentation is required for others. This interconnected structure means a delay in one area, most commonly housing, tends to delay everything that depends on it.
Is it faster to use shortcuts like Airbnb addresses or travel insurance?
It can appear faster initially, but shortcuts frequently create larger delays later. Temporary accommodation is often not accepted as proof of address for processes that require permanent residency, and non-compliant insurance can stall a healthcare application entirely. The fully compliant route is, with remarkable consistency, the genuinely fastest path through the system, even though it rarely feels that way at the outset.
Why do some expats finish their paperwork faster than others?
Processing speed varies significantly by department and even by individual case officer, which means two people in similar situations can have noticeably different experiences. The factors within your control are starting key processes, especially housing, as early as possible, submitting fully complete documentation from the outset, and choosing compliant options over shortcuts that may need to be redone later.
Should I plan my finances for a 3-month or a 12-month settling-in period?
Twelve months is the realistic planning horizon for most administrative processes, including healthcare registration, even though some steps technically become available after three months. Budgeting insurance, savings, and expectations around a 12-month timeline, rather than the optimistic 3-month figure often quoted online, removes most of the financial and emotional stress that builds when the shorter timeline does not materialise.

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Alexandra Lhomond Small
Written by
Alexandra Lhomond Small
Marketing Manager · Ibanista

Originally from the south of France, Alexandra brings first-hand experience of expat life on both sides of the Channel. She leads content strategy at Ibanista, helping expats navigate their move with clarity and confidence.

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