For many people, moving to France is about more than changing country, it’s about changing pace of life. Whether you’re planning to retire under the Mediterranean sun or run a charming gîte in the countryside, the dream is the same: a calmer, more meaningful way of living.
But three questions always come up, and getting them wrong can turn that dream into years of administrative stress. We are answering them clearly.
Which visa do I need if I want to retire in France?
For retirees, France has a very clear legal pathway: the long-stay visitor visa (Visa Long Séjour Visiteur).
This visa is designed for people who want to live in France without working. It is the correct choice if you are moving on the basis of pensions, investments, rental income or savings. It allows you to live in France legally for one year, after which you convert it into a renewable residence permit.
What matters most for this visa is not your age, but your financial independence. You must be able to show that you can support yourself financially. There is no fixed amount written into law, but in practice authorities expect income at least equivalent to the French minimum wage (as of January 2026, around 1,443 € per person).
This visa also requires medical insurance, because you are entering France as a non-working resident. That does not mean you will be excluded from French healthcare forever, but it does mean you must arrive covered.
For most retirees, the visitor visa is not a restriction. On the contrary, it is a recognition that you are bringing stable income, paying taxes and contributing to the local economy without competing on the French labour market. France is remarkably open to this kind of resident.
Which visa do I need if I want to run a gîte?
This is where things become more subtle, and where many people accidentally fall into legal trouble.
France allows people on a visitor visa to earn limited passive income, including from property. If you own a holiday rental or gîte and earn a modest amount from it, this is often tolerated. In practice, the accepted threshold is around 23,000 € per year. Below this level, rental income is generally treated as secondary income rather than a business. This means many retirees can legally rent out a small gîte while keeping their visitor status.
However, the moment the gîte becomes more than a side activity, if it is marketed aggressively, becomes your main income, or involves staff or multiple properties, it is no longer considered passive income. At that point, French law sees you as running a business.
That is when you need a business or entrepreneur visa, not a visitor visa. This distinction matters enormously. Someone who runs a full-time gîte on a visitor visa may seem fine for years, only to be blocked when they try to renew their residence permit or apply for permanent residency. The French administration rarely looks backwards, it looks at what you are doing today.
The good news is that France does offer visas for gîte owners and entrepreneurs. They require a business plan, proof of viability, and registration with the French system.
If I’m eligible for an S1, do I still need health insurance?
This is one of the biggest misunderstandings in expat life.
If you are a UK or EU pensioner with an S1 form, you will be entitled to French public healthcare, paid for by your home country. This is an enormous benefit, and one of the reasons France is so attractive to retirees.
But the S1 does not work instantly. You must first arrive in France, register with the local health authority (CPAM), submit your S1, and wait for your French health number and Carte Vitale. During that period, you are not yet insured.
That is why private medical insurance is required for your visa, and why it is essential in the first months. Without it, medical bills would be your responsibility.
Once your S1 is activated, you are part of the French healthcare system. At that point, most people take out a mutuelle (top-up insurance), which is a French top-up policy that covers what the public system does not. Almost every French resident has one, because it reduces out-of-pocket costs and gives access to better dental, optical and hospital cover.
So no, you do not need long-term private insurance if you have an S1. But you do need insurance to bridge the gap, and you will almost certainly want a mutuelle once you are inside the system.
The French approach: strict on paper, welcoming in reality
France has a reputation for bureaucracy, but its philosophy is actually simple. If you are financially independent, respect the system and contribute to the country, France welcomes you.
Getting the visa and healthcare right at the beginning is not about red tape. It is about protecting your future in France.
Need personalised help? Fab Expat provides expert advice and consultation services to help you secure your French residency with ease. Join our free webinars or book a one-on-one consultation today!