Introduction
You glance at your residence permit and that one detail freezes you: it expires in three months. You no longer remember whether it is the prefecture or ANEF, whether the récépissé costs anything, whether your new university enrolment certificate is enough, and above all — how many months it will take. That panic is universal, shared every year by tens of thousands of international students in France.
The problem is not just paperwork. Without a valid card or a récépissé, you can no longer travel outside the Schengen area, your employer can pause your work contract, your bank can block a transfer, and the CAF can suspend your APL housing aid. Below is the 2026 manual, aligned with the ANEF (Agence Nationale des Étrangers en France) portal and real processing times observed this year in major prefectures.
When should you start?
The non-negotiable rule: start 2 to 4 months before expiry. Article R.431-5 of the immigration code requires you to file within the 2 months preceding expiry, but in practice earlier is safer because:
- ANEF often requests extra documents weeks after the initial submission
- The physical appointment at the prefecture (when required for card pickup) can be 2 to 6 months out
- If you let your title expire without filing, you fall into irregular status, which is far heavier to fix
Concrete planning examples:
- Wei, Chinese master's student in Lyon, card expiring 15 September 2026: he filed on ANEF on 10 June (3 months ahead). PDF récépissé arrived 24 June, valid 6 months. Final card issued mid-November.
- Fatou, Senegalese undergraduate in Bordeaux, card expiring 30 October 2026: she waited until late August. Gironde prefecture took 5 weeks to issue the récépissé. She tried to fly back from Dakar without a valid card and was blocked at the airport.
- Aïcha, Moroccan PhD student in Strasbourg, card expiring March 2026: she planned ahead in December 2025 (4 months early). Stress-free.
The lesson: the calendar you set yourself matters more than the prefecture's deadline.
The ANEF procedure step by step
Since 2023, all student renewals go through administration-etrangers-en-france.interieur.gouv.fr (ANEF). No more queueing at 5 a.m. outside the prefecture. The procedure is fully digital:
- Create / log into the ANEF account with your foreigner number (10 digits, on your current card).
- Démarche "Renew my title" → pick "student" as the motive.
- Upload supporting documents (PDF or JPG, 5 MB max each).
- Pay the tax by card at the end: €75 for students in 2026 (€50 fee + €25 stamp duty).
- Email confirmation the same day. Status "instruction in progress" within 48 h.
- Digital récépissé sent by email between 1 and 6 weeks after filing — this PDF (printable) proves you are in order.
- Possible request for extra documents (recent bank statement, up-to-date proof of address, mid-term grades). You usually have 30 days to reply.
- Prefecture appointment by email to collect the card and give biometric fingerprints (often 3 to 8 months after filing).
- Plastic card handed over on the day, or sent by registered mail depending on the prefecture.
The récépissé counts as a residence permit and allows work up to 964 hours/year (same rules as the student card). It is valid 4 months, renewable. If processing takes longer than that (very common in Paris, Bobigny, Créteil), you can request an extension via ANEF messaging without going to the prefecture.
Documents to provide: 2026 checklist
For a simple student renewal (mention "étudiant"), prepare:
- Current residence permit (front and back, scanned)
- Passport (ID page + Schengen entry stamps + initial visa)
- 3 ANTS-compliant ID photos (e-photo code from a certified photo booth)
- Proof of address less than 3 months old: EDF, Engie, internet or water bill, or a host certificate + host's ID + their proof of address
- University enrolment certificate for academic year 2026-2027
- Proof of academic results (transcripts, certificates of attendance for medical leave, etc.)
- Proof of resources: minimum €615/month, i.e. €7,380/year over the past 12 months. Accepted: complete bank statements, scholarship attestations (CSC, AMCI, Eiffel, Erasmus+, CROUS), notarised parental support letter + parents' bank statements, student work contract
- OFII attestation if requested (medical visit validated upon arrival)
Extra documents based on situation:
- Gap year: gap year agreement signed by the university
- Apprenticeship / alternance: signed contract + employer attestation
- PhD candidate: CIFRE agreement, doctoral contract, or doctoral school attestation
- Forced break (illness, family emergency): medical certificate, supporting documents
Common pitfalls:
- Proof of address in a roommate's name: you need your name on it, or a full host certificate plus their own documents
- Foreign-language documents without translation: bank statements from Morocco, Senegal, Vietnam, etc. must be translated by a sworn translator (€50–80 per document) or in clear English depending on the prefecture
- Non-compliant photos: since 2024, ANEF rejects phone-shot photos. Use a certified photo booth (€5–10)
- Foreign scholarship without statements: the attestation alone is not enough — attach bank statements showing the actual transfers
Special cases: changing category
A renewal is rarely a copy-paste of last year. Many students change category mid-journey:
- Switch to "vie privée et familiale" (private and family life): if you got married, PACSed, or had a French-citizen child, you can move over. Conditions: minimum 6 months of cohabitation (PACS) or marriage to a French national, no removal order, proven integration. This card grants unlimited work rights.
- Switch to "talent passport - chercheur": for PhD students with a hosting agreement signed with a French lab. Multi-year card, generally 4 years.
- Switch to "salarié" or "travailleur temporaire": if you land a CDI or CDD after your master's. Apply before your student card expires. Minimum salary: roughly 1.5 SMIC to skip the labour market opposability test (open to French master's degree holders).
- Switch to "recherche d'emploi / création d'entreprise" (APS): a 1-year non-renewable permit, after a master's-level diploma. This is not a student renewal — it is a separate ANEF démarche.
Concrete 2026 cases:
- Linh, Vietnamese, finishes her master's in June 2026 and signs a CDI in a Paris startup in July. She files for a change of status to "salariée" as soon as the signed offer is in hand — not a student renewal.
- João, Brazilian, completes his PhD in September 2026: he switches to APS 1 year to look for a research job, then will apply for a "talent passport" once hired by INRA.
- Mei, Chinese, married a French citizen during her studies: she can request the vie privée et familiale card after 6 months of cohabitation. More stable than the student card (renewed without academic conditions).
Comparison of main 2026 permit categories
| Title | Duration | Work | Renewal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Student (annual) | 1 year | 964 h/year max | Based on academic results |
| Student multi-year (master/PhD) | 2 to 5 years | 964 h/year max | Based on enrolment |
| Vie privée et familiale | 1 year then 10 years | Unlimited | Family conditions |
| APS (temporary) | 12 months | Unlimited | Non-renewable |
| Salarié (employee) | 1 year then 4 years | Unlimited | Based on contract |
| Talent Passport | 4 years | Unlimited | Situation maintained |
Bottom line
- Start 2 to 4 months before expiry, not after
- 100% online via ANEF: no more prefecture queues
- Récépissé valid 4 months, extendable
- €75 student tax in 2026
- Resources proof: €615/month minimum
- Status change = different procedure, not a renewal
- Foreign documents → sworn translation
On Pionra
On Pionra, the Chinese, Moroccan and Algerian communities share prefecture-by-prefecture feedback (Bobigny vs Lyon vs Bordeaux), trusted sworn translators, and ANEF tips. The Vietnamese, Senegalese, Portuguese and Brazilian communities also have dedicated threads on renewals and status changes. Find an immigration adviser or lawyer in /fr/annuaire.
FAQ
My récépissé is about to expire and I still don't have the card. What now?
Log into ANEF, open your ongoing démarche, and message the prefecture via the "messagerie" tab. Request the récépissé extension, attaching your enrolment certificate and proof of address again. The prefecture issues a new PDF récépissé valid for another 4 months. No need to go in person.
I need to travel to my home country. Is the récépissé enough?
Never on its own. To return to France after a trip you need: a valid passport AND either your valid residence permit or a return visa issued by the French consulate in the country you are in. The récépissé alone does not let you re-enter France from abroad. If you must travel, request the return visa in advance (€60, 3–5 working days) or wait until you have the final card.
I had to repeat a year. Will my renewal be denied?
Not automatically. The prefecture assesses the real and serious nature of your studies: an isolated repeat with partial progress (e.g. semester 1 validated, semester 2 failed) usually passes. Two consecutive repeats or three random changes of major are harder. Attach a sincere explanatory letter (illness, bereavement, language adaptation in year one, deliberate reorientation) — it often makes the difference.
How long does the full renewal take in 2026?
It depends on the prefecture. Lyon, Toulouse, Bordeaux, Strasbourg: 2 to 4 months on average. Paris, Bobigny (93), Créteil (94), Nanterre (92), Marseille: 4 to 9 months, sometimes more. The récépissé itself usually arrives within 4 to 6 weeks of a complete filing. The bottleneck is card production and the biometric appointment.
Does the récépissé let me sign a new lease or apply for Visale?
Yes. The récépissé is a valid residence permit for housing, employment (within mention limits) and bank account opening. Action Logement (Visale) accepts it. Some private landlords are still hesitant — in that case attach a recent university certificate and your previous card history to reassure them.
