LAutoviaTest
ΚουίζΜαθήματαΑντίληψη κινδύνουΠώς λειτουργείΤιμέςBlog
ΣύνδεσηΞεκινήστε δωρεάν
Key FindingsRoad Safety DataTheory Test FormatLicence ProcessFeesLicence CategoriesSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesImportant RulesRoad HazardsRegionsEmergency NumbersMisconceptionsRecent ChangesGlobal ComparisonFAQSourcesCite This Page
🇫🇷Complete Guide 2026Updated March 2026

French Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in France — Code de la route test format, auto-école costs, speed limits, traffic fines, and the permis à points system.

18
Regions
40
Test Questions
3,398
Road Deaths (2023)
87.5%
Pass Mark
18 RegionsFee BreakdownSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesLicence Categories
Copy

3,398

Road deaths in France (2023)

Down 2.9% from 2022 — ONISR / Sécurité Routière

Copy

4.8

Deaths per 100,000 population

~48 deaths per million — near EU average

Copy

54%

Theory test pass rate

Code de la route — épreuve théorique générale (ETG)

Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution

Key Findings

Theory TestSécurité Routière / ANTS

40 multiple-choice questions (Code de la route), 20 seconds per question, 35/40 to pass (87.5%), approximately 30 minutes. The épreuve théorique générale (ETG) costs €30 and is administered by authorized operators (La Poste, SGS, Pearson VUE, Bureau Veritas, Dekra).

Total CostSécurité Routière / ANTS

Approximately €1,500–2,000 total: auto-école enrolment €150–300, theory preparation €20–300, ETG exam €30, minimum 20 hours of practical lessons €900–1,575, licence issuance via ANTS €25. Costs vary significantly by region, with Paris being the most expensive.

Road DeathsONISR / Sécurité Routière

3,398 fatalities in 2023 (~4.8 per 100K), down 2.9% from 3,550 in 2022. The 2020 figure of 2,780 was anomalously low due to COVID-19 lockdowns. France records approximately 48 deaths per million inhabitants, near the EU average.

BAC LimitCode de la route / Sécurité Routière

0.5 g/L (0.05% BAC) general limit. 0.2 g/L for novice drivers (permis probatoire, first 3 years) and professional drivers. Exceeding 0.5–0.8 g/L: €135 fine + 6 points. Above 0.8 g/L: criminal offence, up to €4,500 fine + 6 points + licence suspension.

Fines & PointsCode de la route / ANTAI

France uses a 5-class fine system and a 12-point permis à points (you lose points for offences). Speeding under 5 km/h over: €68, 0 points. Red light: €135, 4 points. Phone use: €135, 3 points. Early payment within 15 days gives a 33% discount on most fines.

Global ContextWHO / ONISR / Sécurité Routière

France has a road death rate of ~4.8/100K, compared to Germany (3.4), Spain (3.8), UK (2.5), and USA (12.2). Licence cost (€1,500–2,000) is moderate by European standards. The permis à points system and widespread speed cameras contribute to road safety.

France Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)

According to ONISR and Sécurité Routière, road fatalities dropped sharply in 2020 due to COVID-19 lockdowns but rebounded in 2021–2022. The 2023 figure of 3,398 deaths represents a 2.9% improvement over 2022, while 2024 saw a slight increase to 3,432.

2019
3 244
2020
2 780
(COVID-19 lockdowns)
2021
3 219
2022
3 550
2023
3 398
2024
3 432

Year-over-year changes

2019→2020

-14.3%

2020→2021

+15.8%

2021→2022

+10.3%

2022→2023

-4.3%

2023→2024

+1.0%

Deaths per 100,000 Population

🇺🇸USA
12.2
🇫🇷France
4.9
🇩🇪Germany
3.4
🇪🇸Spain
3.8
🇬🇧UK
2.5

Source: ONISR, WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.

Table of Contents

Road Safety DataTheory Test FormatLicence ProcessFeesLicence CategoriesSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesImportant RulesRoad HazardsRegionsEmergency NumbersMisconceptionsRecent ChangesGlobal ComparisonFAQSourcesCite This Page
Code de la route

French Theory Test Format#

The computerized theory test (ETG) is administered by authorized operators at centres across France

The French driving theory test, known as the Code de la route or épreuve théorique générale (ETG), consists of 40 multiple-choice questions to be completed in approximately 30 minutes (20 seconds per question). To pass, you must answer at least 35 out of 40 questions correctly (87.5% pass mark). The test fee is €30, and it is administered by authorized operators including La Poste, SGS, Pearson VUE, Bureau Veritas, and Dekra. The ETG result is valid for 5 years or 5 attempts at the practical test. The overall pass rate is approximately 54%. Topics cover driver behaviour, interactions with other road users, traffic signs and signals, road conditions, vehicle mechanics, safety equipment, and environmental awareness.

Questions

40 MCQs

20 seconds per question

Duration

~30 Min

20 sec per question

Pass Mark

35/40

87.5% correct answers

Test Fee

€30

ETG exam fee

What the Theory Test Covers

Driver & Road
  • Driver behaviour & risk awareness
  • Traffic signs (signalisation) & signals
  • Speed limits & safe following distances
  • Priorité à droite & right-of-way rules
  • Road types (autoroute, nationale, départementale)
Vehicle & Safety
  • Vehicle mechanics & dashboard indicators
  • Tire condition & braking systems
  • Contrôle technique requirements
  • Safety equipment (gilet jaune, triangle)
  • Environmental awareness & Crit'Air zones
Other Users & Situations
  • Sharing the road with cyclists & pedestrians
  • Driving in adverse conditions (rain, fog, ice)
  • BAC limits & drug-impaired driving
  • Tunnel & railway crossing rules
  • First aid basics (PAS: Protéger, Alerter, Secourir)
Sécurité Routière — Code de la routePractice Theory Questions Free
Step by Step

How to Get Your French Driving Licence#

From auto-école to permis de conduire — the complete 5-step process

1

Enrol at an Auto-école & Get NEPH Number

Register at a licensed driving school (auto-école) or online platform

Enrolment fee €150–300. You receive a NEPH (Numéro d'Enregistrement Préfectoral Harmonisé) via ANTS — required for all exams.

2

Study & Pass the Code de la route (ETG)

Prepare for and pass the theory exam — 40 questions, 35/40 to pass

Study via auto-école or online platforms. ETG exam costs €30 at authorized centres (La Poste, SGS, etc.). Result valid 5 years.

3

Take Practical Driving Lessons

Complete a minimum of 20 hours of in-car instruction

20 hours minimum (13h on road + 7h simulated for manual). Automatic licence (BEA) requires 13 hours minimum. Costs €45–75 per hour.

4

Pass the Practical Driving Test

Demonstrate safe driving for 32 minutes with an examiner

The practical test lasts 32 minutes. You need a favourable opinion (avis favorable) with a minimum of 20/31 points and no eliminatory errors.

5

Receive Your Licence via ANTS

Apply online and receive your permis de conduire

Apply through ANTS (ants.gouv.fr). Processing fee €25. Licence arrives by post. You enter a 3-year probationary period (permis probatoire) starting with 6 points.

Cost Breakdown

French Driving Licence Fees#

Total cost typically €1,500–€2,000 — varies significantly by region and auto-école

Auto-école enrolment€150–300
Theory preparation (online/in-school)€20–300
ETG exam (Code de la route)€30
Practical test (state fee free; auto-école accompaniment ~€40–60)€40–60
Licence issuance via ANTS€25
ID photos (e-photo)€5–10
Total Typical (Permis B)€1,500–€2,000

Costs vary significantly by region. Paris and Île-de-France tend to be the most expensive. Some auto-écoles offer package deals. Additional costs apply if you fail and must retake tests. Conduite accompagnée (AAC) from age 15 can reduce overall costs through practice with a family member.

Categories

Licence Categories & Minimum Age

AM — Mopeds, small scooters (≤45 km/h)

14

years

A1 — Motorcycles up to 125cc / 11 kW

16

years

B1 — Heavy quadricycles

16

years

A2 — Motorcycles up to 35 kW

18

years

B — Cars up to 3,500 kg

17 since January 2024 (was 18)

17

years

A — Motorcycles unlimited

24 direct, or 20 + 2 years with A2

24

years

C — Trucks over 3,500 kg

21

years

D — Buses (8+ passengers)

24

years

Licence Validity Periods

B (Standard)

EU card format; driving right is permanent, document must be renewed

15 years
C / CE (Trucks)

Medical examination required for renewal

5 years
D / DE (Buses)

Medical examination required for renewal

5 years
Old pink licence (papier rose)

Must be exchanged for EU card format by 2033

Exchange by 2033

Permis Probatoire (Probationary Period)

  • 3-year probationary period for all new licence holders (2 years with conduite accompagnée)
  • Start with 6 points out of 12 — gain 2 points per year if no offence
  • Full 12 points after 3 clean years (or 2 with AAC)
  • Losing 3+ points in first year: mandatory stage de sensibilisation (€200–250, 2 days)
  • Losing all 6 points: licence invalidated, must restart from scratch

Permis à Points System

  • 12 points maximum — you start with 12 (6 for new drivers)
  • Points are deducted for offences, not added
  • Loss of all points = licence invalidated (must wait 6 months + retake tests)
  • Voluntary awareness course: recover up to 4 points (once per year, €200–250)
  • Points automatically restored after 2–3 years without offence (depending on severity)
  • Maximum 8 points deducted for a single incident, regardless of number of offences
Speed Limits

Speed Limits in France#

As per the Code de la route — all speeds in km/h

France has a comprehensive speed limit system that varies by road type and conditions. The autoroute limit is 130 km/h, reduced to 110 km/h in rain and for novice drivers (permis probatoire). Since July 2018, secondary roads (routes départementales and nationales) have been limited to 80 km/h, reduced from 90 km/h — though some départements have restored the 90 km/h limit on certain roads since 2019. Urban areas are 50 km/h by default, with widespread 30 km/h zones (Zone 30) and 20 km/h shared zones (Zone de rencontre). Novice drivers have lower limits on all road types during their probationary period.

Speed limits in France by road type and driver category, in km/h. Source: Code de la route.
Road TypeStandardRainNoviceNote
Autoroute130110110Tolled motorways
Dual Carriageway (Voie express)110100100Separated carriageways
Secondary Road80808080 km/h since 2018 (some 90 restored)
Urban Area (Agglomération)505050Default in built-up areas
Zone 30303030Residential areas, near schools
Zone de rencontre202020Shared pedestrian/vehicle zones

Autoroute

130

Std

110

Rain

110

Nov.

Tolled motorways

Dual Carriageway (Voie express)

110

Std

100

Rain

100

Nov.

Separated carriageways

Secondary Road

80

Std

80

Rain

80

Nov.

80 km/h since 2018 (some 90 restored)

Urban Area (Agglomération)

50

Std

50

Rain

50

Nov.

Default in built-up areas

Zone 30

30

Std

30

Rain

30

Nov.

Residential areas, near schools

Zone de rencontre

20

Std

20

Rain

20

Nov.

Shared pedestrian/vehicle zones

Novice limits apply during the 3-year permis probatoire (2 years with conduite accompagnée). In rain, limits are reduced by 10–20 km/h on open roads. In fog with visibility under 50m, all roads are limited to 50 km/h.

Amendes

Traffic Fines & Penalties#

France uses a 5-class fine system with early payment discounts — plus the permis à points deduction system

France operates a 5-class contravention system alongside the permis à points. Most traffic fines qualify for a 33% early payment discount if paid within 15 days (or 30 days for online payment). Speeding less than 5 km/h over the limit incurs a €68 fine with no point deduction. Running a red light costs €135 plus 4 points. Phone use while driving: €135 plus 3 points. DUI between 0.5–0.8 g/L: €135 plus 6 points. DUI above 0.8 g/L is a criminal offence carrying up to €4,500, 6 points, licence suspension, and potential imprisonment. Since December 2025, exceeding the speed limit by 50+ km/h is classified as a criminal offence (délit routier).

Traffic fines and penalties in France. Amounts show standard (forfaitaire) fines in Euros.
ViolationFinePoints LostAdditional
Speeding under 5 km/h over€680
Speeding 5–20 km/h over€68–1351
Speeding 20–30 km/h over€1352
Speeding 30–40 km/h over€1353Licence suspension possible
Speeding 40–50 km/h over€1354Licence suspension, vehicle retention
Speeding 50+ km/h over€1,5006Criminal offence since Dec 2025
Red light / stop sign€1354
Phone use while driving€1353Vehicle retention possible since 2022
No seatbelt€1353
DUI 0.5–0.8 g/L (1st offence)€1356Licence suspension
DUI above 0.8 g/LUp to €4,5006Criminal offence, imprisonment possible
No Crit'Air vignette in ZFE€680

Speeding under 5 km/h over

€68

Speeding 5–20 km/h over

€68–1351 pts

Speeding 20–30 km/h over

€1352 pts

Speeding 30–40 km/h over

€1353 pts

Speeding 40–50 km/h over

€1354 pts

Speeding 50+ km/h over

€1,5006 pts

Red light / stop sign

€1354 pts

Phone use while driving

€1353 pts

No seatbelt

€1353 pts

DUI 0.5–0.8 g/L (1st offence)

€1356 pts

DUI above 0.8 g/L

Up to €4,5006 pts

No Crit'Air vignette in ZFE

€68

Standard (forfaitaire) fines shown. Early payment within 15 days gives a 33% discount (minorée). Late payment after 45 days increases the fine (majorée). Criminal offences (DUI >0.8 g/L, speeding 50+ km/h since Dec 2025) are prosecuted in court with higher penalties.

Know These Rules Before Your Theory Test

Traffic fines, speed limits, and BAC rules are heavily tested in the Code de la route exam. Practice with real exam-style questions.

Start Practicing for Free
Key Rules

Important Driving Rules in France

Right-Hand Traffic

France drives on the right. Overtake on the left only. On multi-lane roads, stay in the rightmost lane except when overtaking.

BAC Limits: 0.5 g/L / 0.2 g/L

General limit 0.5 g/L. Novice drivers (permis probatoire) and professional drivers: 0.2 g/L. Above 0.8 g/L is a criminal offence with imprisonment possible.

Mandatory Insurance

Third-party liability insurance (assurance au tiers) is compulsory. Driving without insurance is a criminal offence: €3,750 fine + vehicle confiscation possible. Insurance vignette must be displayed.

Contrôle Technique

Mandatory vehicle inspection every 2 years (first inspection at 4 years). Vehicles failing the inspection have 2 months for repairs. Since 2024, motorcycles also require a contrôle technique.

Crit'Air & ZFE Zones

Crit'Air vignettes classify vehicles by emissions. Required in all 43 ZFE (Zones à Faibles Émissions) cities. Driving without the correct vignette: €68 fine. Older, more polluting vehicles are progressively banned.

Phone Use Prohibited

Using a handheld phone while driving is prohibited: €135 + 3 points. Since 2022, police can retain the vehicle. Bluetooth hands-free is permitted but earbuds/headphones are not.

Child Seats (Under 10)

Children under 10 must use an appropriate child restraint system in the rear. Children under 135 cm must use a booster seat. Violation: €135 + 3 points.

Gilet Jaune & Triangle

Every vehicle must carry a reflective vest (gilet jaune) and a warning triangle (triangle de signalisation). The vest must be accessible from inside the vehicle. Fine: €135 if missing.

Priorité à Droite

At unmarked intersections, vehicles coming from the right have priority. This is the default rule in France and catches many foreign drivers off guard. Does not apply at modern roundabouts (but does at old rond-points).

Stay Safe

Common Road Hazards in France

3,398 road fatalities in 2023 — know these hazards to stay safe on French roads

Heavy Rain & Aquaplaning

Sudden downpours, especially in the south, cause aquaplaning and reduced visibility — speed limits drop by 10–20 km/h in rain

Mountain Fog & Ice

Alpine and Pyrenean passes experience sudden fog, black ice, and snow — winter tires or chains mandatory in mountain zones

Mistral Wind

Powerful northerly wind in the Rhône Valley and Provence — can gust over 100 km/h, affecting vehicle stability on exposed roads

Cyclists

France has a strong cycling culture especially in rural areas — maintain at least 1m in urban areas and 1.5m outside built-up areas when overtaking

Agricultural Machinery

Slow-moving tractors and farm equipment on secondary roads, especially in rural regions — limited visibility around bends

Tourist Congestion

Severe congestion during summer holidays (grands départs) on major routes, particularly the A6, A7, and A10 autoroutes

All Regions

France's 18 Regions

13 metropolitan regions plus 5 overseas regions (régions d'outre-mer)

France's 18 administrative regions with capitals and approximate populations.
RegionCapitalPopulationType
Auvergne-Rhône-AlpesLyon8.1MMetropolitan
Bourgogne-Franche-ComtéDijon2.8MMetropolitan
BretagneRennes3.4MMetropolitan
Centre-Val de LoireOrléans2.6MMetropolitan
CorseAjaccio0.3MMetropolitan
Grand EstStrasbourg5.6MMetropolitan
Hauts-de-FranceLille6.0MMetropolitan
Île-de-FranceParis12.3MMetropolitan
NormandieRouen3.3MMetropolitan
Nouvelle-AquitaineBordeaux6.0MMetropolitan
OccitanieToulouse5.9MMetropolitan
Pays de la LoireNantes3.8MMetropolitan
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'AzurMarseille5.1MMetropolitan
GuadeloupeBasse-Terre0.4MOverseas
GuyaneCayenne0.3MOverseas
La RéunionSaint-Denis0.9MOverseas
MartiniqueFort-de-France0.4MOverseas
MayotteMamoudzou0.3MOverseas
M

Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes

Lyon · 8.1M

M

Bourgogne-Franche-Comté

Dijon · 2.8M

M

Bretagne

Rennes · 3.4M

M

Centre-Val de Loire

Orléans · 2.6M

M

Corse

Ajaccio · 0.3M

M

Grand Est

Strasbourg · 5.6M

M

Hauts-de-France

Lille · 6.0M

M

Île-de-France

Paris · 12.3M

M

Normandie

Rouen · 3.3M

M

Nouvelle-Aquitaine

Bordeaux · 6.0M

M

Occitanie

Toulouse · 5.9M

M

Pays de la Loire

Nantes · 3.8M

M

Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur

Marseille · 5.1M

O

Guadeloupe

Basse-Terre · 0.4M

O

Guyane

Cayenne · 0.3M

O

La Réunion

Saint-Denis · 0.9M

O

Martinique

Fort-de-France · 0.4M

O

Mayotte

Mamoudzou · 0.3M

While driving laws are national (Code de la route), some speed limit variations exist — certain départements have restored the 90 km/h limit on secondary roads since 2019. Licence issuance is handled centrally by ANTS.

Emergency

Emergency Numbers

All toll-free, available 24/7. {number} is the EU-wide emergency number.

15

SAMU (Medical Emergency)

17

Police

18

Pompiers (Fire & Rescue)

112

EU Emergency Number

114

Deaf & Hard of Hearing

115

Homeless Emergency (SAMU social)

Myth vs Fact

Common Misconceptions About Driving in France#

Myth: Priorité à droite applies everywhere, including roundabouts

Fact: Priorité à droite only applies at unmarked junctions without signs or road markings. Modern roundabouts (ronds-points with 'Cédez le passage' signs) give priority to vehicles already in the roundabout. However, some old-style rond-points (notably Place de l'Étoile in Paris) still use priorité à droite — vehicles entering have priority.

Myth: French motorways are free to use

Fact: Nearly all French autoroutes are tolled (péage), operated by private companies (Vinci, Sanef, APRR). A Paris-to-Lyon journey costs approximately €35 in tolls. Only some urban motorways and a few sections in Brittany and parts of northern France are toll-free.

Myth: You must carry a breathalyzer (éthylotest) in your car

Fact: While a 2012 law technically requires carrying an unused breathalyzer, the penalty clause was never implemented. There is no fine for not having one. The law remains on the books but is universally considered unenforced and unenforceable.

Myth: Crit'Air vignettes are only needed in Paris

Fact: As of 2025, 43 French cities have established ZFE (Zones à Faibles Émissions) requiring Crit'Air vignettes. Major cities include Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse, Strasbourg, Grenoble, Nice, and many others. The list continues to grow.

Myth: Turning right on a red light is allowed in France

Fact: Right on red is never permitted in France. Running a red light carries a €135 fine and 4 points. Some junctions have a flashing amber arrow allowing right turns, but this is a separate signal — not the same as turning on red.

Myth: Roundabouts always use priorité à droite

Fact: Modern roundabouts (ronds-points) give priority to vehicles already circulating — entering vehicles must yield ('Cédez le passage'). This is the standard for the vast majority of French roundabouts. Only a few old-style rond-points (carrefours à sens giratoire without yield signs) still use priorité à droite for entering traffic.

Timeline

Recent Changes to French Driving Laws#

Key regulatory updates affecting drivers in France

2025

Speeding 50+ km/h becomes criminal offence

Since December 2025, exceeding the speed limit by 50 km/h or more is classified as a délit routier (criminal road traffic offence), not just a contravention. 43 cities now have ZFE zones. AI-powered cameras being deployed for phone use and seatbelt detection.

2024

Permis B age lowered to 17

Since January 2024, the minimum age for the permis B (car licence) was lowered from 18 to 17 years. Motorcycles now require a contrôle technique. Speeding under 5 km/h over no longer costs points.

2022

Phone retention power for police

Police can now retain a driver's vehicle immediately when caught using a handheld phone while driving, in addition to the €135 fine and 3-point deduction.

2019

Départements can restore 90 km/h

Following the controversial 2018 reduction to 80 km/h on secondary roads, départements were given the option to restore the 90 km/h limit on selected roads after conducting a safety study.

2018

80 km/h on secondary roads

Speed limit on two-lane secondary roads (without a central reservation) was reduced from 90 km/h to 80 km/h nationwide. This controversial measure was credited with saving an estimated 349 lives in its first year.

Global Context

How France Compares Globally#

France's driving regulations compared to other major countries — data compiled from official government sources

Comparison of driving regulations between France, Germany, Spain, UK, and USA including BAC limits, minimum age, speed limits, licence costs, and road fatality statistics.
ParameterFranceGermanySpainUKUSA
BAC Limit0.05%0.05%0.05%0.08%0.08%
Min. Age (Car)1718181716
Driving SideRightRightRightLeftRight
Highway Speed130 km/hNo limit*120 km/h112 km/h120 km/h
Test Questions4030305020–50
Licence Cost€1,500–2,000€2,000–3,500€700–1,200£1,000–1,500$30–90
Road Deaths/yr3,3982,7701,7901,69540,990
Deaths/100K~4.9~3.4~3.8~2.5~12.2
BAC Limit0.05%

Same as Germany (0.05%) and Spain (0.05%). Stricter than USA/UK (0.08%). Novice drivers: 0.02%.

Min. Age (Car)17 years

Lowered from 18 to 17 in January 2024. Same as UK (17). USA allows from 16, Germany from 18 (17 with BF17).

Highway Speed130 km/h

Standard autoroute limit. Reduced to 110 in rain and for novice drivers. Germany has no general Autobahn limit.

Licence Cost€1,500–2,000

Moderate by European standards. Germany costs €2,000–3,500. USA costs $30–90. UK costs £1,000–1,500.

Road Deaths3,398/yr

~4.9 per 100K. Higher than Germany (3.4) and UK (2.5), similar to Spain (3.8). USA is 2.5x worse at 12.2/100K.

Road deaths: France 3,398 (ONISR 2023), Germany 2,770 (Destatis 2024), Spain 1,790 (DGT 2023), UK 1,695 (DfT 2023), USA 40,990 (NHTSA 2023). BAC limits: France/Germany/Spain 0.05%, UK 0.08% (England/Wales; Scotland 0.05%), USA 0.08%.

Fact-Checked

Sources & Methodology

Primary Sources

  • Code de la route — French Government (Légifrance)
  • Sécurité Routière — Official road safety data and statistics — Délégation à la Sécurité Routière
  • ONISR — Observatoire National road safety statistics — Observatoire National Interministériel de la Sécurité Routière
  • ANTS — Licence issuance and administration — Agence Nationale des Titres Sécurisés
  • ANTAI — Fine processing and enforcement data — Agence Nationale de Traitement Automatisé des Infractions
  • Service-Public.fr — Official administrative guide — Direction de l'information légale et administrative

Verification Methodology

Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:

  1. Primary data collected from official French legislation (Légifrance) and government portals
  2. Cross-verified against ONISR publications, Sécurité Routière data, and ANTS regulations
  3. Regional variations noted where applicable (auto-école costs, 80/90 km/h variations by département)
  4. Page reviewed and fact-checked on {date}

If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a driving licence cost in France?
The total cost for a permis B (car licence) is typically €1,500–€2,000. This includes: auto-école enrolment €150–300, theory preparation €20–300, ETG exam €30, a minimum of 20 hours of practical lessons €900–1,575, licence issuance via ANTS €25, and ID photos €5–10. Costs vary significantly by region, with Paris being the most expensive.
What is the Code de la route exam format?
The épreuve théorique générale (ETG), commonly called the Code de la route exam, consists of 40 multiple-choice questions with 20 seconds to answer each. You need at least 35 correct answers out of 40 (87.5%) to pass. The exam costs €30 and is administered by authorized operators (La Poste, SGS, Pearson VUE, Bureau Veritas, Dekra). The result is valid for 5 years.
What are the speed limits in France?
Autoroute: 130 km/h (110 in rain, 110 for novice drivers). Dual carriageway: 110 km/h (100 in rain, 100 novice). Secondary roads: 80 km/h (some départements have restored 90). Urban: 50 km/h. Zone 30: 30 km/h. Zone de rencontre: 20 km/h. In fog with visibility under 50m, the limit is 50 km/h on all roads.
What is the BAC (blood alcohol) limit in France?
The general limit is 0.5 g/L (0.05% BAC). For novice drivers (permis probatoire, first 3 years) and professional drivers, the limit is 0.2 g/L. Between 0.5–0.8 g/L: €135 fine + 6 points. Above 0.8 g/L: criminal offence with up to €4,500 fine, 6 points, licence suspension, and possible imprisonment.
What is the permis probatoire?
All new licence holders enter a probationary period (permis probatoire): 3 years normally, or 2 years if you completed conduite accompagnée (AAC). You start with 6 points (out of 12) and gain 2 per clean year (3 with AAC). During this period, lower speed limits apply and the BAC limit is 0.2 g/L. Losing 3+ points in the first year requires a mandatory awareness course.
How does the permis à points system work?
France uses a 12-point licence system. New drivers start with 6 points and build up to 12 over 3 years (2 with AAC). Points are deducted for offences — the more serious the offence, the more points lost (1–6 per offence, max 8 per incident). Losing all points invalidates the licence. You can recover up to 4 points by attending a voluntary awareness course (once per year, €200–250). Points are automatically restored after 2–3 offence-free years.
What is conduite accompagnée (AAC)?
Conduite accompagnée (Apprentissage Anticipé de la Conduite) allows young people to start learning to drive from age 15. After completing initial auto-école training (20h minimum), the learner drives with an accompanying person (at least 5 years' licence, no serious offences) for at least 1 year and 3,000 km. Benefits: can take the practical test at 17, shorter probationary period (2 years instead of 3), and statistically lower accident rates.
Do I need a Crit'Air vignette?
If you plan to drive in any of France's 43 ZFE (Zones à Faibles Émissions) cities — including Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse, Strasbourg, and many others — you need a Crit'Air vignette. It costs €3.72 and classifies your vehicle by emissions (0 to 5, plus unclassified). Order it from certificat-air.gouv.fr. Driving in a ZFE without the correct vignette: €68 fine.
Are French motorways tolled?
Nearly all French autoroutes are tolled (péage), operated by private companies (Vinci Autoroutes, Sanef, APRR). You can pay by cash, card, or electronic tag (télépéage). A Paris–Lyon journey costs approximately €35, Paris–Marseille approximately €55. Some urban motorways and sections in Brittany are toll-free. The toll network covers about 9,000 km.
What equipment must I carry in my car in France?
Mandatory items: a reflective vest (gilet jaune) accessible from inside the vehicle and a warning triangle (triangle de signalisation). Fine: €135 if missing. While an éthylotest (breathalyzer) was technically made mandatory in 2012, there is no fine for not carrying one — the penalty clause was never enforced. Recommended but not mandatory: first aid kit, fire extinguisher, spare bulbs.
Can I drive in France with a foreign licence?
EU/EEA licences are valid indefinitely in France. Non-EU visitors can drive with their licence plus an International Driving Permit (IDP) for up to 1 year. After establishing residency, you generally have 1 year to exchange your licence. Some countries have bilateral agreements allowing direct exchange; others require passing the French theory and/or practical tests.
What is the contrôle technique?
The contrôle technique is a mandatory vehicle inspection. For private cars: first inspection at 4 years, then every 2 years. The inspector checks 133 points covering brakes, steering, lights, emissions, and safety. Vehicles failing critical items (défaillances critiques) cannot be driven until repaired. Since 2024, motorcycles and scooters over 125cc also require a contrôle technique. Cost: approximately €70–90.
What happens if I lose all my points?
If your permis à points reaches 0 points, your licence is invalidated. You must surrender it within 10 days. You must wait 6 months before reapplying (1 year for repeat offenders). You must pass a medical and psychological examination, pass the Code de la route (ETG) again, and for those who held their licence less than 3 years, also retake the practical test.
How do early payment discounts work for fines?
Most traffic fines (amendes forfaitaires) offer three tiers: minorée (reduced, pay within 15 days or 30 days online — 33% discount), forfaitaire (standard amount, pay within 45 days), and majorée (increased, after 45 days — typically 2.5x the standard). For example, a €135 forfaitaire fine becomes €90 if paid early or €375 if paid late.
Is the minimum driving age really 17 now?
Yes, since January 2024, the minimum age to obtain the permis B and drive solo was lowered from 18 to 17. With conduite accompagnée (AAC), supervised driving can begin from age 15. This change aligns France with several other European countries including the UK (17) and Germany (17 with BF17).

Cite This Page

Use the following citations when referencing this article in academic papers, journalism, or reports.

APA 7th Edition

AutoviaTest. (2026, March 23). France driving licence facts 2026 — Code de la route, auto-école, fees & speed limits. https://autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/france/facts

MLA 9th Edition

AutoviaTest. "France Driving Licence Facts 2026 — Code de la Route, Auto-école, Fees & Speed Limits." AutoviaTest, 23 Mar. 2026, autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/france/facts.

Chicago 17th Edition

AutoviaTest. "France Driving Licence Facts 2026 — Code de la Route, Auto-école, Fees & Speed Limits." Last modified March 23, 2026. https://autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/france/facts.

Ready to Pass Your French Theory Test?

Practice with 1,000+ official-style Code de la route questions, detailed explanations, and an AI driving coach. Available in 30+ languages.

Start Free PracticeFrance Practice Tests

More Country Driving Guides

🇩🇪

Germany Driving Licence Facts & Fahrschule Guide

TÜV/DEKRA test format, Fahrschule costs, Autobahn rules, speed limits, and the Flensburg points system.

🇫🇷

France Practice Tests

500+ practice questions for the Code de la route with detailed explanations.

PP

Pawan Priyadarshi

Founder & Chief Engineer

Last updated: March 23, 2026Reviewed by Pawan Priyadarshi

Data sourced from Code de la route, ONISR, Sécurité Routière, ANTS, and official French government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy.

Press Inquiries & Corrections

Journalists, researchers, and educators are welcome to cite this page. If you spot an error, please let us know so we can correct it immediately.

contact@autoviatest.com
LAutoviaTest

Ο παγκόσμιος συνεργάτης σας στην προετοιμασία εξετάσεων οδήγησης. Περάστε τις εξετάσεις με σιγουριά.

Ακολουθήστε μας στο YouTubeΑκολουθήστε μας στο InstagramΑκολουθήστε μας στο TikTok

Εκπαιδευτικό υλικό

  • Κουίζ εξάσκησης
  • Μαθήματα
  • Τεστ εξάσκησης
  • Τιμές
  • Blog

Για σχολές

  • Για σχολές οδηγών
  • Σύνδεση σχολής
  • Επικοινωνία

Πόροι

  • Εξετάσεις οδήγησης
  • Οδηγοί εξετάσεων
  • Οδική ασφάλεια
  • Οδική ασφάλεια για επιχειρήσεις
  • Πρωτόκολλο Πιστοποίησης Οδικής Ασφάλειας (RSCP)
  • Οδικά σήματα
  • Συχνές ερωτήσεις
  • Διεθνής οδηγός οδήγησης
  • Οδήγηση στην Ευρώπη
  • Οδήγηση στις Ηνωμένες Πολιτείες
  • Στοιχεία οδήγησης στην Ινδία
  • Οδηγός διπλώματος για εκπατρισμένους
  • Αναφορές κυκλοφοριακής νομοθεσίας
  • Σχολές οδηγών
  • Αλλαγές κανόνων 2026

Τύποι διπλωμάτων

  • Δίπλωμα αυτοκινήτου (B)
  • Δίπλωμα μοτοσικλέτας (A)
  • Δίπλωμα φορτηγού (C)
  • Δίπλωμα λεωφορείου (D)
  • Δίπλωμα μοτοποδηλάτου (AM)
  • Δείτε όλους τους τύπους διπλωμάτων →

Οδηγοί πόλεων

  • Βαρκελώνη
  • Παρίσι
  • Ρώμη
  • Λονδίνο
  • Μπανγκόκ
  • Τόκιο
  • Δείτε όλους τους οδηγούς πόλεων →

Δημοφιλείς πόλεις

  • Μαδρίτη
  • Βαρκελώνη
  • Παρίσι
  • Βερολίνο
  • Ρώμη
  • Λονδίνο
  • Δείτε όλες τις πόλεις →

Αντίληψη κινδύνου

  • Ισπανία
  • Γαλλία
  • Γερμανία
  • Ιταλία
  • Ολλανδία
  • Πορτογαλία
  • Ηνωμένο Βασίλειο
  • Πολωνία
  • Ελβετία
  • Δανία
  • Σουηδία

Νομικά

  • Πολιτική απορρήτου
  • Όροι χρήσης
  • Πολιτική cookies
  • Συντακτικές οδηγίες
  • Επικοινωνία

Ευεξία

  • Μειώστε το στρες, τη νευρικότητα και το άγχος σας με το Manifested

Το AutoviaTest είναι μια ανεξάρτητη εκπαιδευτική πλατφόρμα. Το περιεχόμενό μας βασίζεται στους επίσημους κανονισμούς οδήγησης και επαληθεύεται με κυβερνητικές πηγές σε κάθε χώρα. Τα υλικά εξάσκησης έχουν σχεδιαστεί για να σας βοηθήσουν να προετοιμαστείτε για την επίσημη εξέταση οδήγησης. Για τις πιο ενημερωμένες απαιτήσεις, απευθυνθείτε πάντα στην τοπική αρχή κυκλοφορίας.

© 2026 AutoviaTest. Με επιφύλαξη παντός δικαιώματος.