Fifty years of family reunification in France : an increasingly less common route of entry
- By Julia Descamps,
- translated by Beatrice van Hoorn Alkema
Pages 1 to 4
Cite this article
- DESCAMPS, Julia,
- translated by VAN HOORN ALKEMA, Beatrice,
- Descamps, Julia.,
- et al.
- Descamps, J.,
- translated by Van Hoorn Alkema, B.
https://doi.org/10.3917/popsoc.643.0001
Cite this article
- Descamps, J.,
- translated by Van Hoorn Alkema, B.
- Descamps, Julia.,
- et al.
- DESCAMPS, Julia,
- translated by VAN HOORN ALKEMA, Beatrice,
https://doi.org/10.3917/popsoc.643.0001
Notes
- (1)Data for the tables and figures are available in Excel format in the ‘Related Data’ tab on INED’s web page for Population & Societies.
- (2)The family reunification scheme (regroupement familial) is separate from another system, called réunification familiale, designed to help refugees’ families join them in France.
- (3)The Online Appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.34847/nkl.6adft3ec.
- (4)Code of Entry and Residence of Foreigners and the Right of Asylum (CESEDA), Art. L423-23.
- (5)These applicants may therefore have been in a consensual union upon arrival in France.
Family reunification, which allows certain immigrants to be joined by their family, was introduced in France in 1976. What does the policy look like today? Who are its beneficiaries? Fifty years after its implementation, the author reviews the eligibility criteria and use of the family reunification scheme, and discusses how these have changed. (1)
1 Family reunification is a legally-accepted basis for immigration in many countries. It allows immigrants to bring their families from abroad to join them. In France, the policy was originally designed to facilitate the integration of foreign-born workers. France’s policy on family reunification (called regroupement familial) was established by decree on 29 April 1976, 2 years after foreign labour immigration was suspended. Its scope is strict: applicants must be third-country nationals (from outside the European Union [EU], European Economic Area [EEA], or Switzerland) holding a residence permit, must not be refugees, (2) and must meet various other criteria (Box 1 and Appendix A2). (3) Applicants may apply for only for their spouses and children under 18.
2 Family reunification is only one form of family immigration. Residence permits granted on family grounds also apply to family members of French nationals (foreign spouses, parents, and relatives), family members of EU nationals (non-European spouses and children), and those who can prove the existence of ‘strong’, ‘stable’, and ‘long-lasting’ ‘personal and family ties’ (4) in France (a more discretionary entry route that can be undertaken outside of marriage or parentage).
3 Less use of family reunification,
4 more use of other policies
5 Between 2000 and 2023, an average of 11,000 first residence permits per year were issued on the grounds of family reunification (Figure 1 and Box 2), compared with 20,000 to 32,000 between 1987 and 1992 [1]. After an exceptional lull in 2020–2021, the number of permits issued started to climb again, no doubt due to a catch-up effect after the COVID-19 pandemic : lockdowns hindered both the administrative work of the prefectures and migration flows themselves, as well as marriages and couple formation. However, the proportion of first residence permits with a validity of at least 1 year issued in France on family reunification grounds has consistently declined. In 2023, they represented only 5%, compared with 11% in 2000 (Figure 1), and only 16% of permits granted for family reasons, compared with 23% in 2000 (Appendix A1).
Numbers, composition, and proportion of family immigration permits within all first residence permits
Description
Numbers, composition, and proportion of family immigration permits within all first residence permits
J. Descamps, Population & Societies, 643, April 2026, INED.Guide: In 2023, 81,032 residence permits with a validity of at least 1 year were granted on family grounds, representing 31% of all first permits issued. Family reunification represented 12,885 permits (5%) in 2023.
Note: Data for 2009 are not available.
Scope: First residence permits of at least 1 year’s validity issued 2000–2003.
Why have entries via the family reunification scheme declined ?
6 The first possible reason relates to the tightening of the legal requirements for family reunification, which has narrowed the pool of potential beneficiaries (Box 1 and Appendix A2). It may be that families have decided not to file applications using this scheme and turned to other residence schemes, whether family-related or not. Certainly, other legal pathways to residence have been opened up to those with family ties to foreigners in the country. The number of permits issued to the family members of foreign nationals outside of the family reunification policy increased between 2000 and 2023. At the top of the social ladder, the creation of the skills and talents card in 2006, replaced in 2016 by the ‘talent passport’, facilitated access to residence for the family members of highly skilled workers. Among less privileged families, the so-called ‘Sarkozy’ circular of 13 June 2006 and ‘Valls’ circular of 28 November 2012 created a system for the in-country regularization of certain undocumented individuals : the parents of children schooled in France and the spouses of legally resident migrants. Lastly, the expansion of the European Union has automatically increased the number of permits issued to the family members of EU nationals. More broadly, the increase in permits issued to students or on economic and humanitarian grounds (Appendix A3) explains the relative decline in residence permits issued on family grounds, including family reunification.
Changes in family reunification scenarios
7 The second explanation for the decline in family reunification is linked to changes in the social and family profiles of migrants. Upon arrival in France, three family scenarios are possible. Applicants may already have formed their family prior to migrating, the scenario for which the family reunification scheme was intended. However, the family may also be formed after the applicant has arrived in France [2]: this is the scenario for immigrants who enter France as minors and subsequently form a family abroad. Lastly, individuals who enter France as single, childless adults and then form a family abroad may also apply to bring them in on the grounds of family reunification. Forming a family is understood here in the legal sense, i.e., getting married or formally recognizing children. (5)
8 In 2000, each of these three applicant scenarios corresponded to one third of family reunification applications (Figure 2). By 2023, 60% of applicants were immigrants who entered France as unmarried, childless adults. This trend reflects more general changes in the profiles of new migrants, the majority of whom are single and childless on arrival [3], entering France on student visas. They also have more opportunities to find a partner within France, in a growing community of foreign nationals. Furthermore, the rising average age at marriage and the decline of marriage in their country of origin may also explain the increasing proportion of applicants who arrive in France as single people, in the legal sense. Family life now begins more often after an immigrant’s arrival in France, such that certain people get married remotely before being able to initiate the process. These changes mean that the family reunification scheme has become a less appropriate system for contemporary migration and family realities than it was on its introduction.
Family situation and sex of family reunification applicant, and beneficiaries
Description
Family situation and sex of family reunification applicant, and beneficiaries
J. Descamps, Population & Societies, 643, April 2026, INED.Guide: 60% of family reunification applicants in 2023 were unmarried and childless on entering France, and 55% of applicants were men requesting a reunification permit for their wife only.
Note: Data for 2009 are not available.
Scope: First applications for family reunification, 2000–2023
Gendered migration flows
9 In 2023, 81% of applicants were men (Figure 2). Conversely, 55% of potential beneficiares were women and 37% were children (Appendix A4). In terms of residence permits issued, excluding documents issued to minors, family reunification is the family-based residence scheme with the highest proportion of women beneficiaries (Appendix A5). With its requirement for two-stage family migration and its stable income criteria, the family reunification scheme is particularly well-suited to the gendered migration scenario for which it was intended in 1976 : that of a female spouse, alone or with her children, joining a foreign-born working male spouse already living in France. This scenario still represents 76% of applications. Less frequent situations involve women seeking to bring in a husband (10%), husband and children (1%) or children only (8%) as well as men wishing to bring in children only (6%). Family reunification remains almost exclusively heterosexual. In 2023, 10 years after becoming eligible for the scheme, same-sex married couples represented less than 1% of applications.
In 2023, half of applicants came from the Maghreb region
10 As of 2023, applicants represented 115 different nationalities. Despite some diversification, which can also be observed for all first residence permits issued in France (Département des statistiques, des études et de la documentation, 2021), the individuals requesting family reunification primarily originated from the Maghreb region (51%) and sub-Saharan Africa (28%) (Figure 3).
11 This breakdown by origin provides only a partial picture of migrant stocks. For example, the successive expansions of the European Union, in 2004, 2007, and 2013 particularly, have exempted nationals from the countries in question from the system, which explains why almost no applications come from Europe (2% in 2023), despite the fact that Europeans represent more than 1 in 3 immigrants as of 2023 [4]. In 2010, the peak observed for the Americas region corresponds to a sharp increase in Haitian applicants (who represented 11% of applications in that year). The January 2010 earthquake and the subsequent humanitarian crisis seemingly prompted Haitian immigrants in France to apply for family reunification.
Origin (country or region) of applicants
Description
Origin (country or region) of applicants
J. Descamps, Population & Societies, 643, April 2026, INED.Guide: 28% of applicants in 2023 originated from sub-Saharan Africa.
Note: Data for 2009 are not available.
Scope: First applications for family reunification, 2000–2023.
Variable processing times...
12 In 2023, the average period between submission of an application and the administrative decision was 10 months. This processing time is higher than the statutory 6-month period within which prefectures are required to process an application and varies from one region to the next. In Île-de-France, where the number of applications submitted to each prefecture is particularly high, the average processing time recorded exceeds 12 months (Figure 4). Until the mid-2010s, variations in processing time correlated with the number of applications submitted, but this is no longer the case. While the number of applications submitted in Île-de-France has remained stable, or even fallen, the processing time has increased, likely due to insufficient resources for reviewing case files within a reasonable time—a situation that well predates the COVID-19 pandemic.
...requiring financial and residential resources
13 The application acceptance rate is 82% as of 2023, a higher rate than in the past, when it has fluctuated (Appendix A6). The more stringent criteria for requesting family reunification may have discouraged applications from families with less robust application files.
14 In total, in 2023, the 18% of applications refused (Figure 5) were mainly rejected due to insufficient income (11%) or because the housing criteria were not met (3%). Applications submitted by women were more likely to be rejected on one of these two grounds (16%) than those submitted by men (13%). Immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa, Europe, and Turkey or the Middle East also had more difficulties meeting these income and housing criteria. Conversely, rejection rates were lower among immigrants of Asian origin. The same is true for immigrants from the Maghreb region, primarily due to the less stringent requirements applicable to Algerians (Box 1). In Île-de-France, inadequate housing is cited as the reason for rejection three times as often as elsewhere, reflecting the housing shortage there and the difficulties faced by immigrants trying to obtain accommodation of sufficient size. The housing crisis may explain the fall in applications submitted in Île-de-France and the increase in those filed elsewhere in France since the mid-2010s. Lastly, high rejection rates among applicants from Europe (outside the EU, EEA, and Switzerland) and the Americas reflect that they are more likely than others to submit applications when their family is already in France, since they can obtain access more easily (due to geographical proximity or ease of obtaining a short-stay visa).
Number of applications submitted and average processing time
Description
Number of applications submitted and average processing time
J. Descamps, Population & Societies, 643, April 2026, INED.Guide: In 2023, 15,780 applications were submitted, 4,942 of which in Île-de-France, where the average processing time was 12.5 months.
Note: Data for 2009 are not available.
Scope: First applications for family reunification, on identified grounds (91% of the total) for processing time, 2000–2023.
Grounds for rejection by sex, origin, and applicant department in 2023
Description
Grounds for rejection by sex, origin, and applicant department in 2023
J. Descamps, Population & Societies, 643, April 2026, INED.Guide: 18% of applications submitted in 2023 were refused, 11% of which due to insufficient resources.
Note: ‘Invalid applications’ include those submitted for family members other than a spouse or child under 18, ‘in-country’ reunification applications for those illegally resident, or applications erroneously submitted for EU, EEA, or Swiss nationals.
Scope: First applications for family reunification on identified grounds (91% of the total), 2000–2023.
Box 1. The rules on family reunification have become increasingly strict
* These legal provisions do not apply to Algerians, who, under the Franco–Algerian Agreement of 1968, benefit from less stringent requirements, particularly in terms of mandatory income and duration of residence [5].
Box 2. The AGDREF database
The AGDREF subset on family reunification records the applications received by the prefecture (forwarded, if complete, by the French Office for Immigration and Integration [OFII]) and contains information on the foreign national who submitted the application (the applicant) and the composition of their eligible family—children under 18 and spouse.
* Minors do not have to have a permit but some do appear in the AGDREF system (beneficiaries of family reunification and those for whom their parents have requested a document de circulation to enable them to travel).
15 The declining use of the family reunification scheme has been driven by multiple factors: the narrowing of the pool of potential beneficiaries; the opening up of other entry routes for families; and changes in the profiles of migrants (younger, more educated), their partnerships (decline in marriage), and the ways they start a family. Family reunification appears, moreover, a restrictive and inflexible pathway to residence in terms of both time frame and the criteria to be met. Nonetheless, it remains a right open to family members of third-country nationals, considering that other entry routes for these families are not any simpler.
References
- [1] Tribalat M. 1994. Chronique de l’immigration. Population, 49(1), 161–210. https://www.persee.fr/doc/pop_00324663_1994_num_49_1_4574
- [2] Thierry X. 2007. Caractéristiques démographiques des ouvrants droit au regroupement familial. In Regnard C. (ed.), Immigration et présence étrangère en France en 2006. Rapport annuel de la DPM (p. 58). La Documentation française. https://hal.science/hal-02081811/
- [3] Pailhé A., Hamel C. 2016. Avoir des enfants en contexte migratoire. In Beauchemin C., Hamel C. and Simon P. (eds.), Trajectoires et origines (p. 323–352). Ined Éditions. https://doi.org/10.4000/books.ined.906
- [4] Raynaud É., Roussel P. 2024. France, portrait social. Édition 2024. INSEE. Insee Références. https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/8242421
- [5] Cohen M. 2020. Des familles invisibles. Les Algériens de France entre intégrations et discriminations (1945-1985). Éditions de la Sorbonne.
Publisher keywords: Family reunification, France, immigration, residence permit, AGDREF database
Uploaded: 05/04/2026
https://doi.org/10.3917/popsoc.643.0001