Originfacts
France
country · FR

France

France occupies a hexagonal stretch of western Europe where Atlantic coastline, Alpine peaks, Mediterranean shores, and rolling agricultural plains exist within a single border — a country shaped as much by its landscape as by the weight of its cultural inheritance.

54
Airports
52
Cities
25
Airlines
0
Stories

Overview

France sits at the crossroads of western Europe, sharing borders with Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Andorra, and Monaco, with coastlines on both the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. Paris serves as the capital and cultural nucleus. French is the sole official language, and the currency is the euro. The country is broadly defined by its intellectual traditions, its agricultural identity — particularly wine and cheese — and a centralised republican heritage dating to the Revolution of 1789.

Visa Requirements

France is a member of the European Union and the Schengen Area. Citizens of many countries — including EU member states, the United States, Canada, and Australia — may enter visa-free for short stays. Travellers from some nationalities require a Schengen visa obtained in advance. The EU's ETIAS electronic travel authorisation system, once operational, will apply to visa-exempt non-EU visitors.

Airports in France

54 airports

Airlines based in France

25 airlines

Famous Attractions in France

The Eiffel Tower on the Champ de Mars in Paris remains the country's single most visited structure. The Palace of Versailles southwest of Paris preserves the formal gardens and Hall of Mirrors of the Bourbon monarchy. Mont Saint-Michel, a tidal island abbey off the Normandy coast, rises dramatically at high water. The cave paintings at Lascaux in the Dordogne date to roughly 17,000 years ago. The walled medieval city of Carcassonne in Occitanie retains intact ramparts, and the Gorges du Verdon in Provence offers one of Europe's deepest river canyons.

Weather & Climate

France has three broad climate zones. The north and west experience a temperate oceanic climate with mild summers around 20–25 °C and cool winters between 3–8 °C. The interior and east turn more continental, with colder winters that regularly drop below freezing. The Mediterranean south is hot and dry in summer, often exceeding 30 °C, with mild winters. Spring and early autumn are generally the most comfortable seasons for travel; pack layers for the north regardless of season.

Interesting Facts About France

  • France is the world's most visited country annually.
  • The Louvre is Earth's largest art museum.
  • France has 13 overseas regions across multiple continents.
  • French law bans supermarkets from destroying unsold food.
  • The country produces over 1,200 distinct cheese varieties.

Official Resources

Flights to France

3 routes

No stories from France yet