Montpellier Méditerranée Technopole
ARE YOU WORRIED ABOUT STRICT FRENCH LABOR LAWS?
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK?
We can help you find the right people. A partnership agreement with the public-service employment agency and close links with other partners for employment and training enable us to respond individually to your recruitment needs by identifying local skills organizing additional training when necessary.For more information, please fill out our 1-minute form.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO LEARN ABOUT THE PROCEDURES AND AVAILABLE AID RELATED TO HIRING?
You can start hiring as soon as your company is registered. Administrative procedures for hiring have been simplified with a single hiring declaration form ("Déclaration unique d'embauche", or DUE). The employer must fill in and file this form with URSSAF ("Unions de Recouvrement des Cotisations de Sécurité Sociale et d'Allocations Familiales", meaning the Organizations for the payment of social security and family benefit contributions) before the employee assumes his or her job functions. Filing may be handled on-line.
Financial aid for hiring and professional training is available. Each case must be analyzed in order to determine the most appropriate form of aid for both the employer and employee. We can help you identify and contact the right resources. For more information, please fill out our 1-minute form..
IF YOU ARE GOING TO BE THE DIRECTOR, WHAT STATUS WILL YOU CHOOSE FOR YOURSELF?
Company directors in France are generally not tied to the company with a regular work contract. Their appointment, compensation and conditions for termination are written into the company's by-laws. However, in some cases it may be possible to cumulate a director position and a work contract with the company (for example for general managers and presidents of public limited companies (SA), presidents in simplified joint-stock companies (SAS) and minority-shareholder managers in limited liability companies (SARL). For more information, we recommend that you contact a labor law specialist.
WHAT ABOUT SOCIAL BENEFITS?
Expatriates (still under contract with a company abroad) who come to work in France have the option to continue with the social security/healthcare plan in their country of origin. Impatriates (those who actually sign a French work contract with a French company ) can only choose this option if a treaty between France and the other country specifically allows it. To find out more about bilateral social security/healthcare treaties between France and other countries, please check the Center for European and International Social Security Liasons ("Centre des liaisons Européennes et Internationales de Sécurité Sociale, or CLEISS").
If these treaties do not apply, or are no longer applicable, France offers a social security/healthcare system for all employees, covering the vast majority of people's healthcare costs, and those of their dependents. There are four major types of coverage:
HOW CAN FOREIGNERS WORK IN FRANCE?
Citizens of the European Union, the European Economic Community and Switzerland are free to travel and work in France without a visa, resident permit, work permit or authorization to engage in commerce. Resident cards for France are still required for citizens of new member States.
Employees from outside the European Union must respect an immigration procedure. They must obtain a long-term resident visa, a work permit (introduction contract) and a resident card with the mention employee (salarié).