French Republic vs Hellenic Republic
A neutral side-by-side of immigration systems, routes and regulators. Each row links to the underlying visa page with its primary government source.
Last reviewed:
Source basis
This comparison combines French Republic and Hellenic Republic government portals with the primary sources for each side's dominant skilled route. Every detailed figure links through to the underlying route or data page.
Reviewed
Primary sources
- France-Visas — Official visa application portal
Ministry of the Interior (France) - verified
- Ministry of Migration and Asylum — Greece
Ministry of Migration and Asylum (Greece) - verified
- Service-Public.fr — Passeport talent
Direction générale des étrangers en France (DGEF) - verified
- EU Immigration Portal — Highly-qualified worker in Greece
European Commission / Greece Ministry of Migration and Asylum - verified
French Republic
France issues residence permits through préfectures inside France and consulates abroad. The headline skilled route is the Talent Passport (Passeport Talent) with multiple categories covering salaried workers, researchers, entrepreneurs, investors, and artists. The EU Blue Card (carte bleue européenne) is also available. Family reunification (regroupement familial), student visas, and the long-stay visa equivalent to residence permit (VLS-TS) are the other major categories.
- Official portal
- Ministry of the Interior (France)
- Languages
- French
- Currency
- Euro
Hellenic Republic
Greece should be added because it combines standard work and EU Blue Card routes with high-interest residence categories for remote workers, financially independent people and investors. The system is document-heavy, so the user value is in translating official Ministry guidance into plain planning checklists.
- Official portal
- Ministry of Migration and Asylum (Greece)
- Languages
- Greek
- Currency
- Euro
How French Republic and Hellenic Republic differ
| Dimension | French Republic | Hellenic Republic |
|---|---|---|
| Total routes covered | 6 | 3 |
| Routes without employer sponsor | 2 | 2 |
| Routes leading to permanent residence | 5 | 2 |
| Typical full settlement timeline | Talent Passport -> 10-year resident card around year 5 -> naturalisation from around 5 years where integration and language criteria are met. | — |
| Dominant skilled visa | Talent Passport — Salaried Employee (Passeport Talent Salarié) | EU Blue Card / highly qualified worker |
| Skilled visa salary minimum | €39,582/year | — |
| Skilled visa processing time | France does not publish a single Talent Passport decision-time commitment on the Service-Public route page; for the salaried qualified category, no prefecture response after 4 months is treated as an implicit refusal. | — |
| Skilled visa government fees | France publishes EUR 350 in residence-card tax and stamp duty for Talent Passport salaried workers. | — |
| Official languages | French | Greek |
| Currency | Euro | Euro |
| Primary regulator | CNB | Greek Bars |
| Policy changes (last 12 months) | 0 | 0 |
Skilled-route head-to-head
Comparing each country’s most-used skilled-migration route side by side.
French Republic
Talent Passport — Salaried Employee (Passeport Talent Salarié)
- Salary minimum
- €39,582/year
- Government fees
- France publishes EUR 350 in residence-card tax and stamp duty for Talent Passport salaried workers.
- Processing time
- France does not publish a single Talent Passport decision-time commitment on the Service-Public route page; for the salaried qualified category, no prefecture response after 4 months is treated as an implicit refusal.
- Sponsor required
- Yes
- Leads to settlement
- Yes
Hellenic Republic
EU Blue Card / highly qualified worker
- Salary minimum
- —
- Government fees
- —
- Processing time
- —
- Sponsor required
- Yes
- Leads to settlement
- Yes
Routes unique to French Republic
Routes unique to Hellenic Republic
Visa routes side by side
French Republic (6)
Talent Passport — Salaried Employee (Passeport Talent Salarié)
Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Up to 4 years; renewable.
Talent Passport — Researcher (Passeport Talent Chercheur)
No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Up to 4 years; renewable.
EU Blue Card (Carte Bleue Européenne)
Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Up to 4 years; renewable.
Long-Stay Visa — Salaried Worker (VLS-TS Salarié)
Sponsor · Leads to settlement · 1 year; renewable.
Student Visa (VLS-TS Étudiant)
Sponsor · Non-settlement · 1 year; renewable for duration of studies.
Family Reunification (Regroupement Familial)
No sponsor · Leads to settlement · 1 year; renewable. Leads to 10-year carte de résident after 5 years.
Hellenic Republic (3)
EU Blue Card / highly qualified worker
Sponsor · Leads to settlement · Residence permit validity follows Greek/EU Blue Card rules and the employment basis.
Digital Nomad Visa
No sponsor · Non-settlement · Short initial visa with possible residence-permit route depending on stay plan.
Golden Visa
No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Residence permit is renewable if the qualifying investment condition continues.
Frequently asked questions
Which country has an easier skilled-migration route, French Republic or Hellenic Republic?+
French Republic’s Talent Passport — Salaried Employee (Passeport Talent Salarié) requires a salary of at least €39,582/year; Hellenic Republic’s EU Blue Card / highly qualified worker is the dominant skilled route. “Easier” depends on your salary, sponsor situation, and nationality — see each visa’s eligibility detail.
Cite or reuse this dataset
This comparison is free to reuse under CC BY 4.0. Cite the page for the compiled head-to-head table and use the country-comparisons JSON endpoint to retrieve the indexed pair, destination profiles and underlying source datasets.
Suggested citation
Visa Atlas, "French Republic vs Hellenic Republic immigration comparison", https://visaatlas.org/compare/france/vs/greece. Last verified 27 June 2026.
- JSON endpoint
- https://visaatlas.org/api/public/country-comparisons