Cars and driving: What's new in France in 2026

Changes include licence exchange fees, motorway toll changes and speed camera changes

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Many speed cameras will start making visible flashes again in 2026

The new year brings many changes for drivers in France, from licence fees to toll rises. Some are already confirmed, while others remain tied to the outcome of the ongoing budget negotiations.

Note that changes marked # are included in the ongoing negotiations for France's 2026 budget and may be subject to change

Foreign driving licence exchanges

# Drivers exchanging a non-French driving licence for a French one need to pay a €40 fee from January 2026, under a new rule introduced in the 2026 budget. The charge applies to all licence exchanges, including:

  • mandatory switches for new residents.

  • renewals when an old non-French licence expires.

  • cases of loss, theft, or a driving offence.

Previously, the procedure was free. The government says the fee is designed to cover the costs of producing and delivering licences. Officials expect the changes to generate around €160million in revenue.

All residents in France using a non-French licence must eventually switch to a French one. The deadlines depend on the licence type and origin:

  • EU/EEA licences (excluding Swiss) or UK licences issued before January 2021: exchange is only required when the original licence expires.

  • non-EU/EEA licences from countries with a reciprocal exchange agreement (including recent UK licences, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Brazil, and others): must switch within 12 months of moving to France. No test is required.

  • licences from other countries without reciprocal agreements (or in some US/Canada cases, depending on the state/province): a full French driving test is necessary.

Drivers must also apply for a French licence if their non-French licence is lost, stolen, damaged, if they commit a French traffic offence, or if they need to add a new vehicle category to their licence.

Applications are made online, with requirements varying according to the driver’s country of origin and reason for exchange. Drivers are advised to check the government simulator to confirm their obligations before moving.

Contrôle technique: stricter follow-up expected for recalled vehicles

The contrôle technique (CT) roadworthiness check is set to change from January 1, with tighter rules on how vehicles affected by safety recalls are treated.

The main change concerns vehicles subject to a ‘stop drive’ campaign, notably those fitted with defective Takata airbags. 

Under draft rules, if a CT identifies that a recall-linked repair has not been carried out, the vehicle will automatically be required to undergo a follow-up (contre-visite) verification once the problem is fixed.

The new CT rules also strengthen requirements for test centres. They will need to collect and pass on owners’ contact details to manufacturers for recall information to be tracked more easily. 

Centres that fail to meet their obligations could face penalties of up to €1,500. 

Motorway tolls to rise in February 

Drivers should expect a modest rise in motorway tolls from February 1, 2026, with fees set to increase by an average of 0.87%. The rise is lower than inflation but follows consecutive increases of 4.75% (2023), 3% (2024) and 0.92% (2025).

The exact amount will vary depending on the motorway operator. According to Le Parisien, the agreed rises are:

  • 0.95% on APRR/AREA

  • 0.85% on Sanef/SAPN

  • 0.82% on Vinci Autoroutes (ASF, Cofiroute, Escota)

The increases are automatic and require no action from drivers. Télépéage badge holders will see the updated amount debited automatically, while the same calculation applies to barrier-free stretches such as the A13.

Toll rates are partly tied to inflation but also reflect concessionaires’ investment plans, as the fees finance maintenance and upgrades. 

Operators have previously warned that further rises could be triggered by new taxes. 

Vinci Autoroutes noted earlier this year that the planned increase of the taxe sur les infrastructures de transport – from 4.6% to 10% in the draft 2026 budget – could feed through to toll prices if the measure survives the budget process.

Prison sentences for excessive speeders

New rules in place from December 29, 2025 mean that those caught speeding 50 km/h above a road's maximum limit now risk a prison sentence of up to three months, alongside a €3,750 fine

Previously, this level of speeding was seen only as a traffic violation, with a maximum €1,750 fine and certain road-based penalties such as points on your driving licence or a licence suspension (although these may still be incurred on top of the prison sentence).

The criminalisation of excessive speeding (before this it was merely a traffic violation) is part of a tougher stance on road infractions.

Thousands of parking spaces to be removed

Parking spaces within five-metres of a pedestrian crossing (facing the direction of the crossing) must be removed by the end of 2026

The changes are due to a deadline in the 2019 'Mobility Law' and applies to thousands of parking spaces, mostly in urban areas. 

The cost of altering the spaces - often into bicycle racks or planting a tree - must be covered by local mairies.

Paper tickets scrapped on key routes in the east

Drivers in eastern France will notice a structural change in 2026: the disappearance of traditional paper toll tickets on several AREA-managed motorways.

The operator is switching 253km of its network to automatic number-plate scanning at entry points.

The new system, already familiar to users of barrier-free routes such as the A79, A13 and A14, identifies where a vehicle joins the motorway using cameras installed on 27 gantries.

However, unlike fully barrier-free systems, drivers will still pass through physical exit barriers to pay. Terminals at the exit will display the amount due, payable by card or cash depending on the lane. Télépéage users will have dedicated lanes as usual.

The rollout will affect stretches of the A41, A43, A48 and A49, although AREA says the system will not be fully operational until mid-2026. 

It is already in place on part of the A41 between Chambéry and Aix-les-Bains, where more than 90% of drivers report preferring the system.

AREA says the change will reduce paper waste by up to 24 tonnes a year and allow land previously used for large entry lanes to be replanted or converted into car-sharing facilities.

New traffic-alert app planned for Spain-France AP-7 motorway

Drivers using the AP-7 motorway between France and Spain could have access to a new, more responsive traffic-information app from December 2026, according to Catalan authorities.

The tool, being developed by the Servei Català de Trànsit (SCT), will provide geolocated voice alerts about congestion, accidents, flooding and other incidents along the route between Pyrénées-Orientales and Barcelona. 

The aim is to help drivers reroute earlier and reduce traffic jams – a growing issue on the AP-7, where accidents have doubled in a year (from 33 in 2023 to 66 in 2024), particularly involving lorries.

Also note that from 2026 vehicles registered in Spain must carry a V-16 emergency beacon, to be placed on the roof in case of breakdown. However, this rule does not apply to foreign-registered vehicles in Spain.

Eure to raise some secondary-road speed limits

More than half of French departments now mix 80 km/h and 90 km/h limits after a 2019 law allowed councils to revert where safety studies support it.

Eure (Normandy) will follow suit in 2026, with the departmental council planning to implement a 50-70-90 km/h system.

See our map here, dating July 2025, of current speed limits.

However, the issue remains contentious. Critics say higher speeds increase accidents and emissions, while supporters argue lower limits encourage risky overtaking and penalise rural drivers. 

Pink licence plates 

A new pink licence plate will appear on certain vehicles from January 1 to help authorities better identify cars with temporary registrations.

The plates will be applied to:

  • new vehicles awaiting their permanent French registration

  • cars imported from abroad pending French registration

  • professional vehicles undergoing on-road testing

Until the change, temporary plates for new or imported vehicles looked like standard plates, typically starting with ‘WW’, which led some drivers to continue using them past the four-month limit or even after the plate had been assigned to a different vehicle. This created cases where the new owner received fines intended for the previous user.

While authorities describe this as a marginal problem, it has grown in recent years. 

The new pink plates will be highly visible and include the month and year of expiry instead of the regional identifier and department number, making it easier for law enforcement to spot vehicles with temporary status.

Speed cameras to return to visible ‘flashes’ 

Many of France’s fixed speed cameras will once again flash visibly in 2026, as a signal to drivers that an offence has been recorded. 

The measure is intended to make enforcement more educational and preventative, rather than relying solely on stealth infrared flashes that have been standard for the past decade.

The Département du contrôle automatisé (DCA), part of the interior ministry, says new flashes will be implemented across:

  • 1,552 turret (radar tourelle) cameras, operational since 2019.

  • latest-generation discriminating radars, which identify vehicle types and lanes.

  • some 350 urban radars already installed by the central state.

  • thousands of new ‘local authority’ radars, to be installed in towns under the 2022 decentralisation (3DS) law.

The visible flash will trigger just after the infrared capture of the vehicle’s speed, ensuring enforcement is recorded accurately while immediately notifying drivers that they have exceeded the limit. 

Authorities hope this will increase driver awareness and acceptance of penalties.

In addition, new urban camera models are expected to be installed from 2026, with around 5,000 local authority cameras planned over ten years. 

The cameras will monitor both speeding and red-light offences, and some models may be adapted in future to detect other violations, such as driving in bus or cycle lanes.

Many older speed cameras (10-15 years old) are also expected to be replaced.

However, despite claims in the French media, cameras are not yet able to detect infractions such as not wearing a seatbelt or drivers using their mobile phone.