Sunday, April 12, 2026

The End of the Passport Stamp: What Your Arrival in France Now Really Looks Like

 

If you’re picturing that romantic moment—passport in hand, a crisp stamp marking your arrival in France—you might want to update the script. As of April 2026, stepping into Europe feels less like a scene from a travel diary and more like entering a high-tech checkpoint.

Welcome to the new reality of arriving in France.

A New First Impression: Cameras, Kiosks, and Quiet Efficiency

The European Union has officially rolled out its Entry/Exit System (EES) across the Schengen Zone, including France. What this means in simple terms: passport stamps are being phased out and replaced with biometric tracking—facial scans and fingerprints.

For first-time visitors, your arrival will likely look like this:

  • You step off the plane and head to border control

  • Instead of just handing over your passport, you’re directed to a kiosk or officer

  • Your face is scanned and fingerprints taken

  • Your entry is logged digitally—no stamp, no ink

That data becomes your travel identity in Europe, valid for about three years.

It’s efficient in theory. In practice? It’s still finding its footing.

The Reality on the Ground: Expect Friction (For Now)

France, like much of Europe, is still adjusting. While the system is live, not every airport or border crossing is running smoothly yet.

Early reports show:

  • Longer wait times, especially for first-time registrations

  • Families taking significantly longer to process than before

  • Occasional technical hiccups or partial rollouts

At Paris airports, processing times have already stretched far beyond the old system during busy periods.

So if you’re arriving in Nice, Paris, or anywhere along the Riviera this summer, build in extra patience. That breezy Mediterranean arrival might start with a queue.

The Trade-Off: Convenience Later, Control Now

Once you’re in the system, future trips get easier.

On your next visit to France or elsewhere in the Schengen Zone:

  • No full registration required

  • Just a quick biometric verification (face or fingerprint)

  • Faster border crossings—at least in theory

But there’s a clear shift here. Europe is moving toward tighter tracking of who enters and how long they stay. The system automatically enforces the 90 days in any 180-day period rule, flagging overstays instantly.

No more ambiguity. No more “lost” stamps.

What Travelers Should Actually Expect Landing in France

If you’re arriving soon, here’s the grounded reality:

1. Your arrival will take longer than it used to
Especially if it’s your first time under the new system.

2. You will be scanned—no opting out
Refusing biometric data can mean being denied entry.

3. The process may vary depending on the airport
Some French entry points are smoother than others right now.

4. You won’t get a passport stamp
For many travelers, that nostalgic ritual is simply gone.

What Comes Next: Even More Changes

And this isn’t the end of it.

Later in 2026, the EU plans to introduce ETIAS, a pre-travel authorization system (similar to the U.S. ESTA), adding another step before you even board your flight.

So the travel experience to France is evolving into something more structured, more digital—and undeniably more controlled.

Arriving in France is still magical—the light, the air, the coastline—but the gateway into that experience has changed dramatically.

The romance now begins after border control.

Before that, it’s scanners, systems, and a quiet reminder: travel in 2026 is no longer just about where you’re going—it’s about how you’re processed getting there.

The Riviera Clock Is Ticking: Why Waiting to Buy Could Price You Out of the Côte d’Azur

 

There’s a particular kind of regret that follows people along the French Riviera. It usually sounds like this: “We almost bought last year.”

In a market like the Côte d’Azur, “almost” can cost you six figures.

A Post-Pandemic Shift That Hasn’t Slowed Down

Since the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions, something fundamental changed in how people prioritize their lives. Travel surged—but more importantly, so did intention. Visitors didn’t just come for a holiday; they came imagining a different way of living.

And many didn’t leave that idea behind.

My clientele base is primarily from North America and they have been arriving with purpose. Political uncertainty, lifestyle reevaluation, etc. The result? A steady influx of international buyers looking not just for vacation homes—but for footholds in a place they’ve fallen in love with.

The Cost of Hesitation, Measured in Real Numbers

Take Villefranche-sur-Mer—a jewel of the Riviera.

Just 12 months ago, a renovated two-bedroom apartment with sea views might have traded between €850,000 and €900,000. Today, that same property on the same street is commanding €950,000 to over €1 million.

And it’s not isolated.

  • In Cannes, prices are pushing €6,800 per square metre

  • In Nice, averages hover around €5,500 per square metre—and rising

This isn’t volatility. It’s upward pressure in a tightly constrained micro-market.

Why This Market Doesn’t Behave Like Others

Many buyers used to assume that what happens in their home country—market corrections, interest-rate dips, price softening—would eventually ripple into the Riviera.

That assumption is proving expensive.

Here’s why:

1. A Severe Supply Shortage
France is currently facing one of its lowest levels of new construction in decades. On the Riviera, where geography already limits expansion, this becomes even more pronounced. There simply aren’t enough new properties entering the market to meet demand.

2. Regulation Is Increasing Property Value—Not Lowering It
New rental rules have reshaped the landscape. Fully compliant, registered short-term rental properties are now significantly more valuable because they’ve cleared regulatory hurdles that others have not.

Add to that new energy efficiency requirements: properties that fail to meet standards face rental restrictions by 2028. Buyers are already paying premiums—often 10–15%—for homes that meet compliance.

3. Cash Buyers Are Driving the Market
Roughly half of luxury transactions along the Riviera are completed without financing. That means rising interest rates—so influential elsewhere—have far less impact here. Cash buyers don’t wait for dips. They compete for scarcity.

4. Turnkey Properties Are Disappearing Fast
Renovated, professionally managed, income-generating homes represent a shrinking slice of an already limited inventory. When they appear—and are priced correctly—they move quickly.

The New Buyer Mindset: “Now or Never”

Before 2019, hesitation was common. Buyers waited, watched, and hoped for a better entry point.

Today, that mindset has shifted.

Some are driven by urgency—a recognition that lifestyle decisions can’t be postponed indefinitely. Others arrive well-informed, having tracked the region long enough to understand a key truth:

Waiting here doesn’t create opportunity. It erodes it.

The Riviera Reality

The French Riviera isn’t a speculative market. It’s not prone to dramatic corrections or sudden bargains. Instead, it operates on a quieter, more persistent force: limited supply meeting global demand, quarter after quarter.

Prices don’t spike wildly—they climb steadily. And while that may sound less dramatic, it’s far more unforgiving to those on the sidelines.

So When Is the Right Time?

If you ask anyone who bought property here a year ago, the answer is obvious.

The best time was then.

The second-best time?
Before the next buyer decides they’re done waiting.

Connect with Experience The French Riviera.

Friday, April 10, 2026

Monaco Becomes a Living Gallery as Art Week Unveils Its 8th Edition

 

This spring, Monaco is set to once again blur the lines between gallery walls and city streets as Monaco Art Week returns for its 8th edition. Scheduled from April 27 to May 1, 2026, the event is shaping up to be one of the Principality’s most dynamic cultural showcases to date.

More than just an art fair, Monaco Art Week transforms the entire city into a curated experience. From Monte-Carlo to La Condamine and the Larvotto waterfront, galleries, auction houses, and cultural spaces collaborate to create a seamless, walkable art circuit.

A Curated Journey Through Time and Style

The strength of Monaco Art Week lies in its diversity. Visitors can move effortlessly between eras and disciplines—encountering everything from classical works and historical masterpieces to bold contemporary pieces and cutting-edge design. The event invites both seasoned collectors and curious newcomers to explore art in a more fluid, accessible way.

This year’s edition also aligns with Art Monte-Carlo, reinforcing Monaco’s growing influence on the global art calendar and drawing an international crowd of collectors, curators, and enthusiasts.

Heavyweights of the Art World


An impressive lineup of internationally respected galleries and auction houses will participate, including Sotheby’s, Christie’s, and Artcurial. They are joined by leading galleries such as Opera Gallery and Almine Rech, alongside a strong presence of local and regional players.

Together, they form a network of exhibitions and events that extend far beyond traditional gallery settings—offering private viewings, curated shows, and opportunities to engage directly with art specialists.

Beyond the Exhibitions

While the artworks remain central, Monaco Art Week is equally about dialogue and experience. A series of talks, panel discussions, and special events will explore themes shaping today’s art market and creative landscape. Live artistic interventions and performances are also expected to animate the programme, adding an element of spontaneity to the week.

Auction houses will open their doors for previews and presentations, giving visitors a behind-the-scenes look at how the global art market operates.

A Cultural Statement

As the Principality continues to invest in its cultural identity, Monaco Art Week stands out as a defining moment in its annual calendar. It’s not just about showcasing art—it’s about positioning Monaco as a destination where culture, luxury, and international influence intersect.

For five days, the city becomes more than a backdrop. It becomes part of the exhibition itself.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

In&Out Nice Film Festival Turns 18: A Bold Celebration of Queer Cinema

 

As it reaches its 18th edition, the In&Out Nice Film Festival steps into adulthood with both pride and urgency. Marking what is often called the age of possibility, this milestone arrives at a moment shaped by global and local instability—making its mission more vital than ever.

In an increasingly uncertain world, organizing a queer film festival is not just a cultural act, but a political one. For the team behind In&Out, this annual gathering represents a deliberate space for expression, dialogue, and resistance—where creativity thrives and diversity is not only celebrated but fully lived.

The 2026 edition will run from April 23 to May 4, offering a rich and multifaceted program that extends beyond cinema into the visual arts. Two major exhibitions set the tone. Out of Body, hosted at the Espace à vendre from April 4 to May 30, brings together artists Tom de Pékin, Lazare Lazarus, Yannick Cosso, and Latifa Lekhdar, each exploring shared aesthetic and political commitments.

Meanwhile, Nice Queer: A History to Be Written, on view from April 10 to May 3 at Le 109, shines a light on the evolving and often underrepresented history of Nice’s LGBTQIA+ communities.

On screen, the festival continues its tradition of excellence and discovery. The Panorama section will present twelve premieres highlighting standout works in contemporary queer cinema. Documentary tributes will honor Hélène Hazera and Lionel Soukaz, two influential figures in queer cultural history.

Thematic programming will further deepen the conversation, with one strand dedicated to queer animation and another examining the experiences of LGBTQIA+ migrants.
Special screenings will include the extended version of The Laughter and the Knife (2025) by Pedro Pinho, alongside a restored presentation of The Lovers (1994), the second feature by Catherine Corsini.

Short films remain at the heart of In&Out’s identity. This year’s lineup includes the third Night of “Queer-film,” the second “Short en Queer DIY” competition—linked to the Nice Queer exhibition—and a cabaret inspired by Jérémy Piette’s debut short Le Garçon qui la nuit.

Guided by the enduring words of Oscar Wilde—“Wisdom is having dreams big enough not to lose sight of them while pursuing them”—the festival embraces its coming of age with conviction.

In challenging times, In&Out Nice stands as a reminder to keep imagining, keep creating, and above all, keep going.