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Living overseas

Carte d'Identité

14 replies

flyingcloud · 07/11/2009 07:19

Hi there,
Can anyone tell me how I get a French carte d'identité?
I've looked into getting a carte de séjour but by local prefecture told me I didn't need one and didn't seem willing to humour my request for one.
I am an EU citizen, married to a French citizen.
TIA.

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nighbynight · 07/11/2009 08:06

? I had a carte de séjour, and I am an EU citizen (but not married to a frenchman).
I would start at the mairie, tbh, rather than the prefecture.

riviera.angloinfo.com/countries/france/residency.asp
There is some info in english here.

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flyingcloud · 07/11/2009 10:36

Thanks - I did originally go the the Mairie and they told me to call the Prefecture.

I will look at angloinfo again.

Thank you.

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BriocheDoree · 07/11/2009 14:07

Out of interest, why do you want one? the only people I know that have them are ones who came over here before 1990-whenever-it-was that the rules changed. EU citizens don't need them and you just have to provide your passport as identity. I know other people who've tried to get them from the prefecture here (I mean, they are sort of useful things to have as they fit into your wallet) but they've failed because they are no longer a requirement. Must admit that I haven't tried...

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frakkinaround · 07/11/2009 14:25

I think only French citizens can get the carte d'identite so unless you apply for French citizenship (and meet the requirements of being married for 5+ years and living in France for 3+ years) I don't think you can get one.

They wouldn't give me a carte de sejour when I was living in Paris and I just figured my passport and a RIB was enough in the end. When I get hold of my British national ID card that'll solve all the problems .

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nighbynight · 07/11/2009 21:37

I got a carte d'identite in 2003 without any problems. Maybe it depends where you are how they interpret the requirement.

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nighbynight · 07/11/2009 21:38

sorry carte de séjour, of course, not identité.

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AuldAlliance · 09/11/2009 12:55

I have a carte de séjour because I don't fancy carting around my passport all the time and paying a fortune if it gets lost/stolen.

You don't need one but I can't see that they could refuse to give you one.

I have renewed the address on mine twice in the last four years and no one looked askance at me.

Try the website of your mairie; or maybe have a look on www.service-public.fr in the étrrangers section.

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flyingcloud · 09/11/2009 17:56

Thanks - I'm in the process of getting my passport renewed at the moment and it turns out I can't take domestic flights in France without one. Air France for one won't accept foreign driving licenses for id for internal travel. You can also travel between France and England with just a carte d'identite, or so all my French friends tell me.

I will call the prefecture again about a carte de sejour.

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Bonsoir · 09/11/2009 17:59

You can travel internally on your passport.

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Bonsoir · 09/11/2009 18:00

Oh sorry - I see what you mean, you haven't got a passport right now. Except that passport renewal is very quick at consulates - it'll be back sooner than you can get a carte de séjour, that's for sure!

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Othersideofthechannel · 10/11/2009 06:40

I renewed my passport via the British consulate by post and second what BonsoirAnna says.

Hardest thing was finding a British professional in France who had known me for over two years to identify my photo. (Although I suppose you could post your ID photos back to the UK for someone to sign.)

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flyingcloud · 10/11/2009 14:23

Thank you for all the replies.

It's actually the Irish consulate and they are taking their time (minimum of three weeks) I will take advantage of being grounded for another week and just hope that they get a move on even though I have paid an extra ?50 for an express service and provided evidence of impending foreign travel.

The problem was I had it witnessed (and photos signed) in the local mairie, by someone who assured me that they were adjoint to the maire, and could sign it, but the consulate disputed it and sent it back to me to have it signed by another professional. Luckily, unlike English passports, they don't insist that it is someone who knows you personally, just someone who is confident that you are who you say you are usually verified by another form of id. However apparantly French passport renewal is a whole lot easier and when I asked my GP to sign for me, they refused as they thought I was up to some funny business as they had never seen such rigmarole for a simple passport renewal. The receptionist was unbelievably rude to me! Eventually they agreed, after I cried (! Pathetic, I know, although I am 27 weeks pregnant and I have quite a bit of travel to do in the next three weeks that I am desperate to get out of the way) and I waited a couple of hours in the surgery as they wouldn't humour me with an appt.

I just thought I would avoid the rigmarole in the future by trying to Frenchyify myself a bit more with a carte d'identité or a carte de séjour. Although hopefully it will be sometime before I renew my passport again.

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frakkinaround · 11/11/2009 13:39

You can't travel in Europe with a carte de sejour, only on the carte d'identité which I'm sure they only give to French citizens. For this reason alone I plan to take citizenship as soon as they'll give it to me! Or get a British ID card, who whichever I can get my hands on first ...

Can you not call the consulate to chivvy them along?

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flyingcloud · 12/11/2009 08:45

Thanks - I will do today - not sure I would have got much joy yesterday!

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