With Vensure Global you can expand your global workforce to France with ease. We help you find, hire, and pay employees accurately and compliantly, ensuring full alignment with local labor laws, payroll regulations, and employer requirements.
With Vensure Global you can expand your global workforce to France with ease. We help you find, hire, and pay employees accurately and compliantly, ensuring full alignment with local labor laws, payroll regulations, and employer requirements.
Euro (€)
Paris
French
Monthly
66.5 Million
20%
Thinking about hiring in France? This guide covers the key employment laws, payroll rules, required benefits, and compliance considerations for employers. Explore everything you need to hire and manage talent in France with confidence.
Minimum Wage is 1,747.20 EUR ($1,987.43 USD) Monthly
Primary Time Zone: Central European Time (CET) UTC+1.
Working Hours: 8:30-9:00 AM. to 6:30-7:00 PM. It’s not uncommon for leaders to work until 8:00 or 9:00 PM.
Overtime is rewarded with a minimum pay increase of 25% for the first 8 additional hours. For overtime exceeding 8 hours, a 50% pay increase is applicable.
The legal maximum working hours are 35 hours per week, and the working day may not exceed 10 hours.
Daily Rest:
Meal/Break Periods:
Weekly Rest:
Before hiring, verify the following legal documents and procedures to ensure compliance:
Employers can request information from applicants, either directly or through a third party, as long as it is necessary to evaluate the applicant’s professional abilities and skills relevant to the position. However, employers are not allowed to collect private background information unless it is specifically relevant to the job.
Collecting Required Documentation
Employers must gather essential documents, including:
Providing Employee Rights and Obligations
Upon hiring, employers must inform employees of their rights and responsibilities, including:
Universal Healthcare System:
Mandatory Supplementary Health Insurance (Mutuelle):
Employer Contributions:
Plan Coverage Requirements:
Employee Expectations:
Management of the Mutuelle:
The French retirement system is multi-layered, combining mandatory state schemes with supplementary plans.
Cost and Value Considerations:
At this time, Vensure does not have social security details available.
Types of Employment Contracts
Mandatory Clauses Each employment contract must include mandatory clauses to be valid:
This Period can last between two to four months, depending on the position’s nature. Both parties may end the contract during this time, with specific notice periods outlined in the contract.
Types of Visas
Application Process
Post-Arrival Requirements
Independent contractors in France are defined as individuals whose working conditions are determined entirely by themselves or through a contract with the client, rather than being subject to an employer’s control.
Criteria for Classification:
Registration and Taxation:
Legal Risks and Misclassification:
Contractual Considerations:
Employees are entitled to five weeks of paid annual leave, spread over the duration of a year.
Employee is entitled to three days’ leave in the event of the death of an immediate family member.
Employees are entitled to 16 weeks, which increases with the number of children.
Maternity pay is provided by Social Security to eligible employees. To qualify, the employee must have been affiliated with Social Security
Available to employees with at least one year of service at the time of the child’s birth, subject to employer approval. This leave is unpaid and allows employees up to one year of parental leave or a change to part-time working hours, along with a monthly allowance (Allocation parentale d’enfant) for employees with more than one child and over two years of service.
Sick reimbursements are provided by the Social Security office starting from the fourth day of absence due to illness.
At this time, Vensure does not have termination requirement details available, but for related information, please see Notice Period section below.
Notice of Requirements
Employees are entitled to severance pay depending on their length of service, and standard notice periods apply, usually ranging from one to three months.
Applicants must have contributed to the unemployment insurance scheme by working a minimum period prior to job loss. For example, younger workers typically need around 4 months (or 88 days) of work within the last 28 months; longer qualifying periods apply for older job seekers (e.g., 36 months for those aged 53–54 and 44 months for those aged 55 and older).
Contribution-Based Calculations:
Benefit Duration and Extensions:
Application and Active Search Requirements:
The Labor Code protects employees against harassment and discrimination in which an employer must not take into account an employee’s:
Moral harassment refers to repeated verbal or physical actions aimed at degrading working conditions, which can negatively impact an employee’s rights, dignity, physical or mental health, or professional future.
Sexual harassment involves repeated or implicit sexual comments or behaviors that degrade or humiliate an employee, or create an intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment. It can also include serious, non-repeated pressure to engage in sexual acts, whether for the benefit of the harasser or a third party. Employees are protected from discrimination for experiencing or rejecting sexual harassment.
The French Labor Code sets out comprehensive standards to safeguard worker health and safety. This includes the mandate to conduct regular risk assessments and to prepare a “Document unique d’évaluation des risques” (a unique risk evaluation document).
Employee Training and Awareness
Enforcement and Compliance
Occupational Accidents and Diseases
Reporting and Claims Process
Compensation Benefits
Jobseeker Sanctions: Under the Law on Full Employment (2023) and the Decree of May 30, 2025, jobseekers registered with France Travail face sanctions for failing to:
Sanctions include:
These penalties are gradual, proportionate, and reversible, depending on the severity and frequency of non-compliance
Employer Sanctions Employers can face sanctions for:
Penalties include:
EU-Linked Labor Sanctions France is also implementing EU directives such as:
The information included in this section are provided for reference as samples of official documents derived from government agencies, law firms, or other entities. This content is not and may not be construed to be legal advice or to be a legal opinion on any specific facts or circumstances, or to be a comprehensive or all-inclusive compilation of facts potentially relevant to country, federal, state, or local laws. Any data referenced here is for informational purposes only. It is strongly recommended that any data you view, be carefully reviewed as well as any applicable changes in federal, state, and local laws, regulations, guidance, and guidelines set forth by the governing agencies, which may change at any time and in such instances will render some content in the above information void or inaccurate. Users should not rely on this content for editing and customization exclusively but should consult an attorney for legal guidance for proper and compliant drafting. You are solely responsible for compliance with all applicable laws and regulations.