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How to Survive Your First Week in France as an Indian Student 

  • VLS-TS visa validation must be completed within three months of arriving in France to regularise your stay and allow free travel across the Schengen Area.
  • Your certificat de scolarité from the university is required to open a French bank account and should be collected on the same day as enrolment.
  • Your RIB is the single most important financial document in France and is required for rent, salary, CAF, and Sécurité Sociale payments.
Study Abroad

Your first week in France as an Indian student sets the tone for everything that follows. Between the jet lag, the unfamiliar language, and a pile of administrative tasks, it is easy to feel overwhelmed. But every single task on this checklist is manageable when you know what to do and in what order.

In this blog, we will walk you through the exact steps for your first week in France, covering French visa validation, CVEC payment, French bank account setup, SIM card, and university registration so you can settle in with confidence from day one.

Day 1 Priority: Validate Your VLS-TS Visa

The very first task after landing is to validate your student visa online. This is not optional, and missing this step puts your legal stay in France at serious risk.

Within three months of your arrival in France, you must validate your VLS-TS and pay a tax that is added to the visa fee. The online process makes it possible to regularise your stay and cross Schengen Area borders freely.

  • Visit: administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr
  • Enter your visa number, validity dates, date of issuance, and your address in France
  • Pay the stamp tax of €50 (approximately ₹5,350) if you hold student status. You can pay online by purchasing an electronic stamp or buy a fiscal stamp at a tabac shop.
  • Download your validation confirmation (attestation OFII) immediately in PDF format and save multiple copies — you will need this document for almost every subsequent admin step in France

If you fail to validate your VLS-TS visa within three months of arrival, your visa may be considered irregular, which means you lose your legal right to remain in France and may need to leave and reapply for a new visa from India.

Day 1 to 2: Get a French SIM Card

Before anything else in your first week in France, you need a working local number. Banks, universities, and landlords cannot reach you without one, and most online verification processes in France require a French mobile number.

Budget-friendly SIM options for Indian students:

ProviderMonthly Cost (approx.)Best For
Free Mobile€2 to €20 (₹214 to ₹2,140)Cheapest data plans, widely used by students
Bouygues Telecom€5 to €15 (₹535 to ₹1,605)Good coverage across smaller cities
Orange€10 to €25 (₹1,070 to ₹2,675)Best nationwide network coverage
SFR€5 to €15 (₹535 to ₹1,605)Reliable, available at supermarkets

Day 2 to 3: Pay Your CVEC and Register at University

Before completing your university enrolment in France, you must pay the CVEC, a mandatory annual student contribution. Your university will not accept your registration without this certificate.

The CVEC for the 2026-2027 academic year is €116 (approximately ₹10,440).  French government scholarship holders and CROUS scholarship recipients are exempt but must still complete the online procedure to obtain their exemption certificate.

  • Visit: cvec.etudiant.gouv.fr
  • Create or log in to your MesServices student account first at messervices.etudiant.gouv.fr
  • Pay by card online and download your CVEC attestation immediately
  • The CVEC is paid once per academic year — if you enrol in more than one programme in a given year, you do not pay it again for the same academic year.
  • Present your CVEC certificate number during university enrolment, either online or in person

After paying your CVEC, visit your university international office to collect your student card, confirm enrolment, and collect your certificat de scolarité. This document is essential for opening a French bank account.

Day 3 to 5: Open a French Bank Account

A French bank account and your RIB (Relevé d’Identité Bancaire) are required for rent payments, salary deposits, and university scholarship disbursements. The sooner you have your RIB, the sooner everything else moves forward.

Documents needed:

  • Valid Indian passport
  • VLS-TS validation confirmation (attestation OFII)
  • Certificat de scolarité from your university
  • Proof of address in France (CROUS letter, accommodation contract, or temporary housing confirmation)
  • Indian PAN card, which serves as your Tax Identification Number for French financial institutions

Day 4 to 7: Complete Your OFII Registration

After validating your VLS-TS visa online, your OFII registration is the next compulsory immigration step for all non-EU students in France.

Complete your registration at anef.interieur.gouv.fr. After the online registration is processed, OFII will arrange a medical examination. The only documents checked at the appointment are your passport with your visa. Keep a copy of your OFII confirmation document as you will need it when applying for a Titre de Séjour at the end of your first year. When renewing your residence status after the first year, students must pay a stamp duty of €75 (approximately ₹8,025).

First Week Checklist at a Glance

TaskTimelinePlatform or Location
Validate VLS-TS visa and pay €50 (₹5,350) stamp taxDay 1Official Website
Get a French SIM cardDay 1 to 2Tabac, supermarket, or operator store
Pay CVEC fee of €105 (₹11,235)Day 2 to 3Pay CVEC fee
Complete university enrolment and collect certificat de scolaritéDay 2 to 3University international office
Open French bank account and get RIBDay 3 to 5BNP Paribas, Crédit Agricole, or Wise
Complete OFII registrationDay 4 to 5OFII registration
Register with Sécurité SocialeDay 5 to 6Register Sécurité Sociale

Key Takeaways

Your first week in France as an Indian student is administrative, and that is completely normal. Validate your VLS-TS visa on day one at administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr and pay the student stamp tax of €50 (approximately ₹5,350) online. Pay your CVEC of €105 (approximately ₹11,235) before university enrolment and collect your certificat de scolarité the same day. Open your French bank account within the first five days as your RIB unlocks rent, salary, and CAF payments. 

Planning your move to France and not sure where to start? AdmitX supports you through every step of your study abroad journey. Our services include:

And much more! 

Book your free study abroad counselling session with our experts today! 

FAQs

Can I use my Indian driving licence in France as a student?

 Yes, for up to one year after arrival. After that, you must exchange it for a French licence through the prefecture. Not all Indian state licences are accepted, so verify yours at permisdeconduire.gouv.fr before assuming it is valid.

Contact your university’s international office immediately. Most French universities maintain emergency CROUS beds for exactly this situation. CROUS emergency housing is subsidised and can be booked for short stays while you arrange permanent accommodation.

Keep €200 to €300 in cash for the first few days. Many tabacs, local markets, and smaller administrative counters still prefer cash. Card payments are widely accepted in cities, but smaller towns can be unreliable for contactless transactions.

 Not mandatory for students, unlike some European countries. However, registering voluntarily at your local mairie can strengthen future residency applications and is sometimes requested by landlords as additional proof of local address.

 Rescheduling is possible but slow, often taking four to six additional weeks. Missing it without contacting OFII directly can flag your file and create complications when applying for your Titre de Séjour renewal at the end of your first year.

 Yes, through SWIFT transfers, but transactions above €1,000 may require source of funds documentation from French banks. Using Wise for family remittances is faster, cheaper, and avoids the scrutiny that large SWIFT transfers sometimes trigger.

BlaBlaCar for intercity travel, Leboncoin for second-hand furniture, Too Good To Go for cheap meals, and Citymapper for public transport are used daily by most students. Google Translate with offline French downloaded is essential for your first week.

La Poste is the standard option but slow for international delivery. Use Chronopost or DHL for urgent document dispatch. Always send notarised copies rather than originals, as documents lost in international post are extremely difficult to replace from abroad.

 Most universities have a Bureau des Etudiants Internationaux that runs orientation week separately from the general student welcome. Some cities like Paris, Lyon, and Toulouse also have active Indian student associations that run informal arrival helpdesks each September.

Request an interpreter through your university international office in advance. You are legally entitled to request translated documents at prefecture appointments. Google Translate in camera mode works reasonably well for reading French administrative forms in real time.

If you are an aspirant looking to study at your dream university, book an appointment with AdmitX today and start your applications early to avail yourself of all the benefits.

Prabhat Agrawal - Founder - AdmitX Study Abroad Consultant

Prabhat Agrawal

Prabhat, the founder of AdmitX, is a recognized expert in international education and admission consulting. Prabhat earned a Master’s degree in Management from ESCP Business School with a 100% scholarship, where he developed his skills in business and AI and worked with cutting-edge startups. Prabhat has helped over 1,000+ students get into global universities with maximum possible scholarships over the last 4 years. 

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