Digital Nomad Life in France
(Visa, Cost of Living, Cities & Tax Explained)
If you’re researching digital nomad France, you’re probably asking one of two things:
Can I legally stay longer than 90 days? And is France actually practical for remote work?
After crossing from the UK into France and spending extended time working remotely across Rouen, Rennes, Nantes, La Rochelle, Bordeaux, Anglet and Biarritz, I’ve seen both sides:
France can be elegant and energising, but it also has structure. Bureaucracy. Rules.
This guide breaks down what you actually need to know before choosing France as a remote base.
Table of Contents
Can You Live in France as a Digital Nomad?
France Long-Stay Visa Options (VLS-TS Overview)
90-Day Schengen Rule Explained
Cost of Living in France (City Comparison)
Best Cities in France for Remote Work
WiFi, SIM & eSIM Reality
Taxes in France (High-Level Overview)
Is France Good for Long-Term Remote Living?
Can You Live in France as a Digital Nomad?
Short answer: Yes, but not automatically.
France does not currently offer a specific “digital nomad visa” like Croatia or Portugal.
If you’re a UK citizen (post-Brexit), you can:
Stay up to 90 days within any 180-day period in the Schengen Area
Work remotely for non-French clients during that time
However: If you want to stay longer than 90 days, you’ll need a long-stay visa.
France Long-Stay Visa Options (VLS-TS Overview)
France’s relevant route is the: VLS-TS (Visa de Long Séjour valant Titre de Séjour)
This is a long-stay visa valid for 4–12 months depending on category. There is no dedicated France digital nomad visa, but remote workers typically apply under:
Visitor visa (if not working for a French employer)
Profession libérale (self-employed category)
Entrepreneur visa (if forming a business in France)
You must show:
Proof of income
Accommodation
Health insurance
Financial self-sufficiency
Important: France expects you to register and validate the visa upon arrival. It is structured. It is admin-heavy, but it is possible.
90-Day Schengen Rule Explained
If you don’t have a long-stay visa: You can stay in France for 90 days in any rolling 180-day period.
This applies across all Schengen countries, not just France.
Example: If you spend 90 days in France, you must then leave Schengen for 90 days before returning. This rule catches many remote workers off guard.
France is beautiful, but it is still legally structured.
Cost of Living in France (City Comparison)
France varies dramatically depending on region.
Here’s a realistic comparison for one person:
Paris
Rent: €1,500–€2,500+
Coffee: €4–€6
Coworking: €300–€500/month
High energy. High cost.
Biarritz
Rent: €1,200–€2,000 (seasonal spikes)
Coastal premium pricing
Surf town elegance
Strong lifestyle, moderate infrastructure
Bordeaux
Rent: €1,000–€1,600
Great wine culture, strong café scene
Balanced cost vs lifestyle
Smaller Cities / South of France
Rent: €700–€1,200
Slower pace
Fewer coworking options
More residential feel
France is not Southeast Asia cheap, but it offers quality infrastructure, public transport, healthcare and stability.
Best Cities in France for Remote Work
If you’re researching digital nomad cities France, here’s what actually works:
Paris
For:
Networking
International energy
Coworking density
Startup ecosystem
Bordeaux
For:
Balanced lifestyle
Walkability
Wine + culture
Good café work options
Biarritz / Anglet
For:
Coastal living
Surf culture
Relaxed but social environment
Strong café scene
Lyon
For:
Food culture
Strong local economy
More affordable than Paris
Montpellier / Nice
For:
Mediterranean climate
Student energy
Warmer winters
France works best when you choose lifestyle first, not hype.
WiFi, SIM & eSIM Reality
France has excellent connectivity.
Fibre broadband widely available
4G/5G strong in cities
Public WiFi common but not always stable for calls
For mobile data:
Orange
SFR
Bouygues
If you’re travelling short-term, an international eSIM works well. Search terms like “nomad France eSIM” usually point to providers such as Airalo or Holafly.
For long stays, local SIMs are better value.
Taxes in France (High-Level Overview)
This is where many digital nomads hesitate. France has relatively high income tax and social contributions.
If you:
Stay under 183 days and remain tax resident elsewhere → usually taxed in home country.
Become French tax resident → subject to French tax system.
France digital nomad tax implications depend on:
Duration of stay
Where income is sourced
Whether you register as self-employed in France
Always consult a tax advisor before staying long term. France rewards compliance.
Is France Good for Long-Term Remote Living?
Yes, if you value:
Stability
Healthcare system
Infrastructure
Culture + food
Strong public transport
Less ideal if you want:
Low-cost tropical living
Minimal bureaucracy
Ultra-flexible visa rules
France is refined. Structured. Reliable. It works exceptionally well for remote workers who want Europe without chaos.
Final Thought
France isn’t the easiest digital nomad country in Europe, but it is one of the most rewarding.
You get:
Atlantic coastlines
Elegant cities
Deep food culture
Walkable towns
Strong public systems
It requires more planning than Portugal or Croatia, but if you’re willing to work within the structure, France can be an exceptional long-term base.
To compare remote life across borders, read my digital nomad guides to Spain, Morocco and the UK.