Over the past few weeks, a wave of confusion has been circulating across social media—especially among North American and UK audiences—suggesting that France may have quietly “opened the door” to remote workers living in the country on visitor visas. Posts and comment threads have been confidently claiming that you can simply move to France, keep your foreign job, and work remotely without issue.
The reality is more nuanced—and far less “new” than the online chatter suggests.
Where the confusion started
The rumours largely stem from a recent parliamentary question in France’s National Assembly, where lawmakers asked the government to clarify how remote work intersects with visitor visas and taxation rules.
The discussion touched on a familiar legal principle in French tax law: if you are physically in France performing work, that activity can—depending on your circumstances—be considered as carried out in France, regardless of where your employer is based.
At the same time, the Interior Ministry, represented by Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez, addressed the immigration side of the question. His response suggested that in certain cases, a visitor visa holder may be considered “inactive,” meaning they are not formally engaging in professional activity in France for immigration purposes.
That single word—“inactive”—is what quickly spiralled into social media interpretations like: “France now allows digital nomads on visitor visas.”
It doesn’t.
What the government actually said (and didn’t say)
Despite the online excitement, the parliamentary response did not introduce any policy change.
Instead, it did three important things:
It did NOT change tax law
France still applies the principle that work physically performed in France can be taxable there, depending on residency and treaty rules.It did NOT create a digital nomad visa or remote-work exemption
There is still no official immigration category allowing long-term remote work on a standard visitor visa.It did NOT address social security obligations
Meaning existing rules on cross-border contributions remain unchanged.
In other words, this was clarification—not reform.
So can you actually remote work from France on a visitor visa?
This is where things get messy, and where most online posts oversimplify.
A French visitor visa is designed for people who:
Live in France long-term, and
Do not engage in professional activity in France
Remote work for a foreign employer while physically in France sits in a grey area:
It is not explicitly legalized as a “remote work visa category”
It is not formally prohibited in every scenario either
It is assessed based on facts, duration, and how “active” your work presence appears
Short stays with occasional laptop work are treated very differently from someone effectively living in France while working full-time for a foreign employer.
Why social media got it wrong
This is a classic case of policy nuance being flattened into viral certainty.
The key misunderstanding is this:
“Not actively entering the French job market” ≠ “fully authorized to work remotely in France indefinitely”
The government’s use of “inactive” refers more to immigration classification logic, not a blanket approval of remote work lifestyles.
But online, that nuance quickly turned into simplified claims like:
“France allows digital nomads now”
“Visitor visa = remote work visa”
“No taxes if employer is abroad”
None of those statements are reliably true.
What North American and UK readers should take away
If you’re considering working remotely from France, the real situation is:
There is no official remote work visa for general long-stay living
Visitor visas are not designed as digital nomad permits
Tax obligations may still arise depending on time spent and residency status
Immigration, tax, and social security rules all operate separately—and can overlap
The biggest risk isn’t usually “getting caught immediately,” but rather misunderstanding long-term compliance obligations.
The
parliamentary exchange that sparked this debate did not quietly
legalize remote work in France—it simply clarified how existing
frameworks are being interpreted.
Believe me, if it was legalized it would be a top story for all kinds of news networks.
What social media turned into a “new rule” is really just old rules being discussed in a more modern context.
For now, France remains:
Welcoming to long-stay visitors
Flexible in interpretation at the margins
But still without a formal “remote work from anywhere on a visitor visa” policy
And that gap between perception and reality is exactly where the confusion lives.






