France
Nice
French Riviera living — sunshine, beaches, and proximity to Monaco and the Italian border
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$4,500–$6,500 / month
3-bed family home
~$2,400 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$70
Nanny
~$16 / hr
Nice is the capital of the Cote d'Azur and one of France's most liveable cities for families. It offers a Mediterranean climate, a beautiful old town, walkable neighbourhoods, and significantly lower housing costs than Paris. The international school scene is smaller than Paris — the main cluster is in nearby Sophia Antipolis — but quality of life is exceptional for families who integrate into French life.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1EU/EEA families: no visa required — register at your local Mairie and obtain a justificatif de domicile (proof of address) within 90 days
- 2Non-EU families: apply for a Visa de Long Sejour at the French Consulate before travelling — do not attempt to switch status from a tourist entry inside France
- 3Start your housing search 5–7 weeks before your move — Nice is less pressured than Paris but 3-bed apartments in Cimiez and Mont-Boron move quickly
- 4Apply to international schools 12+ months before your move — the main cluster is in Sophia Antipolis (20–30 min from central Nice) and places fill fast
- 5Enrol young children in local Ecole Maternelle (free state nursery ages 3–6) via your Mairie — a good option while older children attend an international school in Sophia Antipolis
- 6Apply for your Titre de Sejour at the Nice Prefecture des Alpes-Maritimes after arriving and validating your VLS at ofii.fr
- 7Open a French bank account (BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole Alpes Provence, or Hello Bank!) — required for rent and utility direct debits
- 8Register with a local medecin traitant (your assigned GP) and apply for your Carte Vitale once your Numero de Securite Sociale is issued
Family fit
Great for
- Families seeking a Mediterranean lifestyle with beaches, mountains, and the Alps within an hour's drive
- EU/EEA parents with remote or European-based roles who want lower costs than Paris with exceptional quality of life
- Families with younger children happy to use the French state system and integrate into local life
- Those drawn to proximity to Monaco, the Italian border, and the broader Riviera region
Watch out for
- The international school scene is significantly smaller than Paris — the main cluster is in Sophia Antipolis 20–30 min away; a car is needed for school runs
- Nice requires a car for most suburban errands and school runs — public transport is good within the city but limited for the wider region
- Summers are hot (35°C / 95°F+) and the seafront crowds significantly June–August — accommodation costs spike during Cannes Film Festival and Monaco Grand Prix
- The same French bureaucratic system applies fully — Titre de Sejour, OFII validation, and Prefecture appointments require patience and some French language ability
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestAug · 28.5°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · 6°Cmean daily low
- WettestNov · 123.3 mmmonth total
- DriestJul · 16.7 mmmonth total
- Low
- 6°C
- Rain
- 55.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 6.2°C
- Rain
- 52.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 7.2°C
- Rain
- 62 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 9.9°C
- Rain
- 55.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~5
- Low
- 12.6°C
- Rain
- 48.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 16.7°C
- Rain
- 29.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 20.2°C
- Rain
- 16.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~1
- Low
- 20.8°C
- Rain
- 23.2 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 17.6°C
- Rain
- 46.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 13.4°C
- Rain
- 88 mm
- Wet days
- ~7
- Low
- 9.7°C
- Rain
- 123.3 mm
- Wet days
- ~10
- Low
- 7.4°C
- Rain
- 80.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~7
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 15°C | 6°C | 55.2 mm | 5 |
| Feb | 14.6°C | 6.2°C | 52.6 mm | 4 |
| Mar | 16.5°C | 7.2°C | 62 mm | 5 |
| Apr | 18.2°C | 9.9°C | 55.5 mm | 5 |
| May | 22°C | 12.6°C | 48.4 mm | 4 |
| Jun | 26.1°C | 16.7°C | 29.4 mm | 2 |
| Jul | 28.1°C | 20.2°C | 16.7 mm | 1 |
| Aug | 28.5°C | 20.8°C | 23.2 mm | 2 |
| Sep | 25.7°C | 17.6°C | 46.5 mm | 4 |
| Oct | 22.3°C | 13.4°C | 88 mm | 7 |
| Nov | 19.1°C | 9.7°C | 123.3 mm | 10 |
| Dec | 15.8°C | 7.4°C | 80.6 mm | 7 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Aug (mean daily high ~28°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~6°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Nov (~123 mm total); driest: Jul (~17 mm).
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 43.703°, 7.266° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
Nice is in France — the same national visa system applies as Paris. EU/EEA citizens move freely. Non-EU families need a Visa de Long Sejour (VLS) from the French Consulate before travelling. No standalone digital nomad visa exists.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
EU / EEA citizens
Move freely to France. Register at your local Mairie within 90 days for your justificatif de domicile.
Non-EU employed worker (VLS-Salarie)
Requires a French employer and signed work contract. Apply at the French Consulate before travelling.
Non-EU remote worker / passive income (VLS-Visiteur)
France has no standalone digital nomad visa. The VLS-Visiteur is the honest route for non-EU remote workers with sufficient income.
EU / EEA citizens — what to do after arriving in Nice
- No visa, permit, or income threshold required — EU/EEA passport holders have full freedom of movement in France.
- Register at your local Mairie in Nice. Bring your passport and rental contract.
- Children can enrol in French state schools immediately — your Mairie issues a carte scolaire confirming your assigned local school.
- After 5 years of continuous legal residence, apply for a Carte de Resident (10-year permanent residency card).
Visa de Long Sejour Salarie — employer-sponsored work visa
- Your French employer must obtain authorisation from the OFII (France's immigration authority) before you can apply.
- Apply for the VLS-Salarie at the French Consulate — required: passport, employment contract, OFII authorisation, proof of accommodation.
- After arriving in Nice, validate your VLS at ofii.fr within 3 months — mandatory step.
- Dependents receive a VLS-Famille granting the same residence rights.
VLS-Visiteur — the closest route for remote workers
- Requires passive or remote income from a non-French employer — roughly $1,500–$2,000/month per adult minimum typically assessed.
- Required: proof of remote income, private health insurance valid in France, proof of accommodation.
- Apply at the French Consulate in your home country — processing typically takes 2–4 weeks.
- After arriving, validate your VLS at ofii.fr within 3 months — mandatory step.
Book your French Consulate appointment early — slots fill 6–8 weeks ahead. Validate your VLS at ofii.fr within 3 months of arriving — mandatory step.
Residency & Titre de Sejour
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- Obtain a justificatif de domicile from your Mairie — bring your passport and signed rental contract.
- Non-EU residents apply for a Titre de Sejour at the Prefecture des Alpes-Maritimes in Nice. Bring your validated VLS, passport, rental contract, and 3 months of bank statements.
- Your Numero de Securite Sociale is issued once your Titre de Sejour is processed — required for healthcare, school enrolment, and tax registration.
- Children enrol at the local state school assigned to your address — your Mairie provides the carte scolaire confirming the school.
- After 5 years of continuous legal residence, apply for a Carte de Resident — a 10-year long-term residency card.
Search 'titre de sejour Nice prefecture rendez-vous' on Google to book your appointment — the Prefecture des Alpes-Maritimes has an online booking system.
Banking
- BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole Alpes Provence are the most widely used banks for expat families in the Nice and Cote d'Azur region.
- You need your justificatif de domicile, passport, and Titre de Sejour (or validated VLS in early weeks) to open an account.
- Hello Bank! and Boursorama Banque open fully online with no monthly fee — faster for new arrivals than traditional branch banking.
- Wise and Revolut work immediately from arrival for international transfers — essential while your French IBAN is pending.
- Most French landlords require a RIB (Releve d'Identite Bancaire — French bank account reference) for rent direct debit — a French IBAN is essential within the first month.
Hello Bank! (digital, BNP-owned) opens fully online — use it as a bridge while your Credit Agricole or BNP branch appointment is pending.
Housing
Nice is significantly more affordable than Paris. Family-friendly areas include Cimiez (leafy hilltop, large apartments), Mont-Boron (quiet, elevated, sea views), and Saint-Laurent-du-Var (suburban, near Sophia Antipolis schools).
Where to search
These are France's main long-term rental platforms — this is where residents rent, not Airbnb.
Search 'Nice' or the neighbourhood name inside each platform to filter local listings.
Tip: Nice's rental market is significantly less pressured than Paris — 3–4 weeks of in-person searching usually finds a suitable 3-bed family apartment.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed apartment, central Nice: $1,300–$1,900/month
- 3-bed apartment, Cimiez or Mont-Boron: $2,200–$3,500/month
- 3-bed apartment, seafront near Promenade des Anglais: $2,800–$4,500/month
- 3-bed house with garden, Saint-Laurent-du-Var: $2,000–$3,200/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport and Titre de Sejour (or VLS validation in early weeks)
- 3 months of recent bank statements
- Employment contract or proof of stable income
- DossierFacile application — standard digital rental dossier required by most French landlords
- 1 month deposit (caution) — legally capped for unfurnished rentals
- Attestation d'assurance habitation (tenant contents insurance) — legally required before signing
Schools
Nice has a smaller international school scene than Paris. The main cluster is in Sophia Antipolis (20–30 min west of Nice), not in the city itself. Apply at least 12 months ahead.
Public system
French state schools are free from age 3 and academically rigorous. All instruction is in French. Young children (under 8) typically integrate within one school year. Older non-French-speaking children benefit from tutoring or a transitional private school first.
International options
The main international school hub for the Nice area is Sophia Antipolis (20–30 min west) — British, IB, and bilingual options serving the tech and business expat community. Within Nice itself, options are limited. Fees range from $15,000 to $28,000/year.
Language notes
French is the language of instruction in all state schools. International schools in Sophia Antipolis teach in English. A small number of Nice private schools offer bilingual French/English tracks. Private French tutoring costs roughly $45–$70/hr.
If international school is a priority, apply to Sophia Antipolis schools before committing to a neighbourhood — school location should guide your housing choice.
Education options
British / IB curriculum international schools (Sophia Antipolis)
Main cluster for the Nice area — serving the large tech expat community. Limited places. Apply 12+ months ahead.
French bilingual private schools (Nice city)
Small number of private schools in Nice with partial English-language tracks. More accessible than Sophia Antipolis schools.
French public schools (Ecole Maternelle / Primaire)
Free from age 3. French-only instruction. Strong quality. Ideal for younger children or families committing to full integration.
Childcare
Nice has similar public childcare to the rest of France. Creche waiting lists are shorter than Paris. Most expat families use private creches or nannies for under-3s then transition to the free Ecole Maternelle at age 3.
Daycare & nurseries
- Creche (public nursery ages 2.5 months to 3 years) — subsidised, income-tested, typically $150–$400/month in Nice; waiting lists exist but shorter than Paris
- Private creches charge roughly $900–$1,500/month — many offer bilingual French/English programmes in expat-popular areas like Cimiez
- Ecole Maternelle (free state nursery) available from age 3 — enrol via your Mairie
- Register for creche in the first weeks after arriving — private lists fill quickly even in Nice
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time assistante maternelle in Nice: typically $1,300–$1,800/month net plus employer social contributions
- Part-time nanny: roughly $13–$17/hr net
- English-speaking nannies available in expat-popular areas (Cimiez, Mont-Boron) — specify language when searching
- Start searching 6–8 weeks before arrival — demand is lower than Paris but good nannies fill quickly
Where to find childcare
- Yoopies.fr — France's main nanny platform; good coverage in the Nice and Cote d'Azur area
- Babychou Services — nanny agency with an office in Nice
- Search 'Nice Expats France' on Google — community recommendations are the most reliable source for English-speaking nannies
Healthcare
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- France's Securite Sociale applies fully in Nice. Access begins once you have a Numero de Securite Sociale and a Carte Vitale.
- Employed residents enrol through their employer. VLS-Visiteur holders apply via the PUMA scheme (Protection Universelle Maladie — France's universal coverage for non-employed legal residents).
- Typical costs with Securite Sociale: GP visit roughly $28 (partially reimbursed); specialist $55–$110. A mutuelle (top-up insurance) costs roughly $70–$130/month for a family.
- CHU de Nice (Centre Hospitalier Universitaire — Nice's main public university hospital) provides full specialist and emergency care. Clinique Saint-George is a private clinic popular with expats.
- Arrange private international health insurance before arrival — required for your VLS application and essential as a bridge until your Carte Vitale arrives.
Apply for your Carte Vitale as soon as your Numero de Securite Sociale is issued — required for GP and specialist visit reimbursements.
Safety
- Violent crime in family residential areas (Cimiez, Mont-Boron) is uncommon — Nice is broadly safe for daily family life
- Pickpocketing is the main daily risk — particularly on the Promenade des Anglais in summer, at the beach, and in the Vieux-Nice tourist areas
- The city is very safe outside peak tourist season (September–May) — residential areas are quiet with minimal incidents
- Nice has invested significantly in security infrastructure since 2016 — police presence in tourist areas is high
- Traffic on coastal roads requires vigilance with young children — cyclists and pedestrians share space with drivers who are not always cautious
FAQ
Is Nice good for families?
Yes — Mediterranean quality of life, mild winters compared to northern France, and more manageable rents than Paris. The trade-off is a smaller international school footprint than Paris (many families look toward Sophia Antipolis for options) and the same French administrative rhythm.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget roughly $4,500–$6,500/month all-in for a family of four, depending on housing size and school fees. Nice is materially cheaper than Paris for similar space — but the Riviera is not a low-cost region overall.
Is housing hard to find here?
Moderately easier than Paris — more stock and less frenzy in many neighbourhoods — but good family apartments in Cimiez, Mont-Boron, or the Californie still move quickly. Allow 4–6 weeks of active searching and be ready with your dossier.
Do children need international school here, or can local schools work?
French public schools are free and viable if your children speak French or you plan a longer integration path. English-medium international places are fewer than in Paris — start school research early if you need an English-first programme.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Same national system as elsewhere in France — once your Sécurité sociale numéro and Carte Vitale are active, care is straightforward. Private top-up (mutuelle) is common for families. Bridge insurance matters in the first weeks.
Do you need a car in Nice?
Often helpful but not always mandatory — trams and buses cover the city; a car makes weekend trips along the coast and inland easier. Parking and narrow streets reward a smaller car if you buy one.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Comparable to the rest of France — mairie registration, préfecture steps for non-EU residents, and banking that waits on proof of address. Expect French-language forms; allow time for appointments in high season.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
How strong the seasonal tourism pulse is along the seafront — summer crowds and winter calm feel like different cities. And how much school and housing choices are linked on the Riviera — map both together before you commit.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Nice Expats France' on Google — main English-speaking community for families on the Cote d'Azur
Search: “Nice Expats France Facebook group”Search on GoogleSearch 'Cote d Azur Expats' on Google — broader Riviera expat community covering Nice, Cannes, and Monaco
Search: “Cote d Azur Expats Facebook group”Search on Google