The French Healthcare System: How It Works

France’s healthcare system is consistently ranked among the world’s best. The Assurance Maladie (Sécurité Sociale) provides universal coverage funded through payroll contributions. All legal residents — including visa holders — are covered.

How Reimbursement Works

Sécurité Sociale reimburses 70% of standard consultations (€26.50 GP visit), 80% of hospital costs, and 65% of prescribed medications. A mutuelle (complementary insurance) covers the remaining 30% and is provided by most employers. Cost: €50–150/month for individuals, €150–400 for families.

Quality Indicators

MetricFranceUK (NHS)US
WHO Ranking#1#18#37
GP Wait TimeSame day–1 week2–4 weeks1–3 weeks
Specialist Wait1–4 weeks6–18 weeks2–8 weeks
Annual Cost (per capita)€4,600€4,200€10,500

Access for Expats

Upon validating your visa and registering with CPAM (Caisse Primaire d’Assurance Maladie), you receive your Carte Vitale — the green health card used at every medical interaction. Processing takes 2–4 months; interim coverage is available via European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) for EU citizens or private insurance for non-EU arrivals.

For International Arrivals: Step by Step

Month 1: Upon arrival with your VLS-TS visa, you are covered by temporary arrangements. EU citizens can use their EHIC card. Non-EU arrivals should maintain private travel insurance. Month 2–3: Register with your local CPAM (Caisse Primaire d’Assurance Maladie). You’ll need your validated visa, proof of residence, and RIB (bank details). Month 3–4: Receive your numéro de Sécurité Sociale (temporary, then permanent). Month 4–6: Receive your Carte Vitale — the green card used at every medical interaction for automatic reimbursement.

Choosing a Mutuelle

Most employers provide a mutuelle d’entreprise (mandatory since 2016). If self-employed or between jobs, individual mutuelles cost €50–150/month for comprehensive coverage. Top providers: Alan (digital-first, popular with startups — see our Alan profile), Harmonie Mutuelle, MGEN, SwissLife. Key coverage to check: optical (lunettes), dental (soins dentaires), hospital private room (chambre particulière), and specialist excess fees (dépassements d’honoraires).

Pharmacies and Prescriptions

France has 21,000+ pharmacies — one of the densest networks globally. Pharmacies are identified by the green cross and operate with extended hours. Prescription medications are reimbursed 15–100% depending on classification. Médecin traitant (declared GP): every resident should declare a treating physician to maximize reimbursement rates. Without one, specialist consultations are reimbursed at 30% instead of 70%.

Emergency Services

15 — SAMU (medical emergencies), 18 — Pompiers (fire/rescue), 112 — European emergency. Hospital emergency departments (urgences) provide immediate care regardless of insurance status. France has 1,350+ hospitals including world-renowned institutions: Pitié-Salpêtrière, Hôpital Necker (pediatrics), Institut Curie (oncology), Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou.