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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

3 month stay in France?

80 replies

Ofallthebarsinalltheworld · 09/05/2021 20:57

Hi, not sure if this is the right place to post. Basically we are thinking of staying in France for 3 months over the winter (all being well covid wise)

We have our own business so can work from anywhere. We have a supervisor who can run the on the ground bits.

Dd is homeschooled so that would continue in France.

I have itchy feet and after covid feel like I/we need an adventure. It would be a fabulous opportunity and life experience.

We would cut or cloth and save like mad to cover the 3 months and rent out our home as a holiday home to cover our Bill's here.

Am I mad? Is this possible?

All opinions/thoughts welcome 😊

OP posts:
LynetteScavo · 12/05/2021 18:15

@SwedishK - going to Mauritius is a fantastic idea! DH could work 6am -3pm. Happy days!

I was going to suggest Mauritius to the OP but had no idea if it was possible .

LynetteScavo · 12/05/2021 18:16

@loginfail - your posts have been great, and have explained a lot Smile

Biber · 13/05/2021 08:23

Found on Facebook and relevant.

RULES APPLYING TO BRITS VISITING FRANCE (other countries have different laws) RT Share

There are rules for third-country nationals visiting France. These are not new rules. They are standard rules. You will need to comply with them if you are planning to come on holiday to France. I set them out here to help.

At the border, you may be asked for three pieces of information:

  1. Motive for your stay in France
This can be satisfied by:
  • for tourism: a hotel or other accommodation reservation
  • in the absence of a hotel reservation, the traveller has to prove that he possesses means of living of at least 120€ per day – see point 2, documents from a travel agency;
  • for a professional visit: letter from the employer, invitation from a French firm or org;
  1. Means of living (cash, traveller's cheques, valid international credit card) along with an insurance certificate covering all medical, hospital and funeral expenses, which may be incurred during the entire period of your stay in France, inc medical repatriation costs;
  1. Guarantees of return: return ticket.

Just to remind you, these are standard rules for third-country nationals and nothing particularly to do with Brits.

So, about the “attestation d'accueil”. Here are the rules: t.co/CNjySZKWtH

Basically, if you are staying with friends, you need to be registered with the town hall of the commune that you will be staying at PRIOR TO ENTERING THE COUNTRY.

The person housing you will need to provide a chunk of information (including proof of ownership of the property, proof of residence at the address, ID documents, proof of revenue, commit to supporting you financially if required and so on).

There is a 30€ fee.

The relevant town hall can take up to one month to respond.

The applicant will be issued with a certificate which they will then need to send to you for you to be able to enter the country.

Now, I'm sure somebody's forehead vein will be twitching as they type to respond to this but, here's the deal >> you voted for this. France is a sovereign country and it protects its borders. These are literally the sorts of rules your government loves.

Bottom line - You were European but you decided to go it alone. You're just another one of the other non-European countries now &, as such, you have to submit to the rules.

Do not think for a moment that this is unique to France. This is your new normal.

Own your Brexit. X

LynetteScavo · 13/05/2021 12:23

Haha @ Own your Brexit - I'm so going to use that!

Ofallthebarsinalltheworld · 16/05/2021 20:16

Evening everyone 😊

Just to clarify my business is based in the UK and my operations manager would be in charge. I would have a once a week Zoom chat with her to catch up and ping some emails off once a week. That would be the extent of my work.

Great posts on here that I will definitely look more into. Thanks again everyone for all your thoughts.

We found a great place in France with a monthly rental of £900 which was below our budget. Pool/4 big bedrooms the place looked perfect. The owner was really lovely and friendly. Then the Indian variant sparked off and made us think about the what ifs. Also we couldn't find insurance to cover us incase of a lockdown etc.

So looks like we will need to push it back to next year unless anyone has any words of wisdom?

OP posts:
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