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LIVING IN FRANCE

Explained: What is the law in France on prostitution

As the European court of human rights upholds France's laws on prostitution, here's a look at what the law says on the buying and selling of sex.

Explained: What is the law in France on prostitution
French law outlaws paying for sex but not selling it. Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP

On Thursday the European Court of Human Rights ruled in favour of a French law from 2016 that radically overhauled the country’s laws on prostitution.

So what is the position now in the country that became famous for its legalised brothels, immortalised in the works of painters including Toulouse-Lautrec, Ingrès and Manet? 

History

It was Napoleon who laid out France’s long-standing legal code on lawful but regulated prostitution which saw state-sanctioned brothels known as maisons de tolérance or maisons close opening up in French towns and cities.

The legal position in France remained for a long time that prostitution was legal – albeit under tightly controlled conditions; registered brothels which were ‘discreet’ in appearance, prostitutes who were also registered and subject to regular medical inspections.

However in the period after World War II a series of laws were passed that first outlawed brothels and then criminalised behaviour including soliciting for sex, pimping and sex tourism.

The 2016 law

In 2016 a radical shakeup of the law was proposed, aimed at shifting the balance of power in favour of the people (mostly women) who sell sex.

It first repealed some older laws including the ‘Sarkozy law’ introduced in 2003 that made it a criminal offence to “be present wearing revealing clothing at a location known to be used for prostitution”.

But the main thrust of the law was to make it illegal to buy sex – but not illegal to sell sex, or to solicit it.

The idea was to remove the fear of criminalisation for people selling sex and therefore remove some of the barriers to people seeking help – for example to report a crime. The bill also came with a package of measures designed to help people working as prostitutes to leave the profession, if they want to, and enable them to leave exploitative or dangerous situations. 

It also included measures to give residency cards to the estimated 30,000 foreign people working as prostitutes in France – it is estimated that around 80 percent of sex workers in France are foreigners, the majority from eastern Europe or Africa.

Has it worked?

The intention was undoubtedly good, but many argue it has not worked – including the group of 20 sex workers who took France to the European Court of Human Rights over the law.

They say that criminalising customers means that sex workers are forced to work in more isolated and therefore dangerous places and that the drop in custom means that sex workers are being forced to accept customers that they might in the past have turned away.

The continuing ban on brothels means that sex workers must work alone, which raises their level of risk.

The main French prostitutes union Strass says: “It’s been a catastrophic law for our security and our health.”

However, the European judges rules that there is no evidence that the law itself was making sex work unsafe.

Judges said they were “fully aware of the undeniable difficulties and risks to which prostituted people are exposed while exercising their activity”, including their health and safety.

But they added that these were “already present and observed before the adoption of the law” in 2016, being attributed at the time to the since-repealed law against soliciting.

“There is no consensus on the question of whether the negative effects described by the claimants are directly caused by the… criminalisation of buying sexual acts, or their sale, or are inherent or intrinsic to the phenomenon of prostitution… or a whole array of social and behavioural factors,” the judges said.

So what exactly does the law say now?

Buying sex is illegal, punishable by a fine of up to €1,500, rising to €3,750 for repeat offenders. This applies whatever the situation – street prostitution, in a brothel or massage parlour or via an online transaction. 

Clubs including fetish clubs and swingers clubs are legal.

How strictly this law is enforced varies widely according to both place and time.

Selling sex is legal, as is soliciting for sex, however owning or operating a brothel is illegal. It is illegal to live off the earnings of a prostitute or to help or pressure someone to prostitute themselves.

Prostitutes are required to pay tax on their earnings and make an annual tax declaration in the same way as all other self-employed workers in France.

Prostitutes have a union and during the Covid pandemic qualified for furlough payments when they could not work.

Member comments

  1. Is there not a certain level of legal hypocrisy here? In most countries incitement to commit a crime is a crime in itself. A prostitute touting for clients is inciting that client to commit a crime. If she has sex with him she compounds that incitement. It would seem Napoleon had it right. Legal, well-run brothels, with regular medical checkups for the workers.
    Yet another example of the asininity of some EU legislation.

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TRAVEL NEWS

Explained: The rules of travelling in the Schengen zone for French residents

Europe's Schengen zone is the area of frictionless travel and free movement, but from police checks to passports, there are important restrictions for foreigners living in France - especially as Germany increases border checks.

Explained: The rules of travelling in the Schengen zone for French residents

Established in 1995, the Schengen Zone or Schengen Area encompasses 29 European countries which have officially abolished border controls at their mutual frontiers, making for seamless travel between them.

But the return of controls at the German border is throwing into perspective some of the other limitations on the freedoms of the Schegen zone, particularly for non-EU citizens who are officially resident in France.

Schengen countries

The Schengen zone is not quite the same as the EU – most EU countries are part of it but there are a couple of exceptions, while some other countries are part of the Schengen zone but not members of the EU.

The Schengen zone countries are; Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. 

Travel between these countries usually does not involve a border check, while commercial traffic can also pass freely between these countries without requiring customs checks or import taxes.

It’s worth noting that the tiny microstate of Andorra, situated between France and Spain, is not a member of the Schengen zone, meaning that customs officials can check what you are bringing back into France and limit the amount of items such as cigarettes, alcohol and household products (which are significantly cheaper in Andorra since it has no sales tax).

The EU member states of Ireland and Cyprus are not part of the Schengen zone.

Police checks 

While Schengen zone countries agree to abolish border checks, they can impose police checks at the border if they feel this is necessary.

This could be either temporary – for example if one country is on heightened alert for terrorism – or on a longer-term basis as Germany has recently announced it will be doing.

During the Covid pandemic many Schengen borders saw the return of regular police checks in order to enforce health restrictions. 

Police have the right to check the documents of anyone crossing the border and to perform a search of baggage or vehicles if applicable. 

Documents 

Although in practice crossing an internal Schengen border may involve no checks at all, the rules still state that you need to have a valid travel document.

For non-EU citizens who are resident in France, this means a passport. A carte de séjour is a residency document – it proves your right to re-enter France and can also be used as an ID document but it is not a travel document. You should therefore always have with you a valid passport when travelling in Europe.

Non-EU nationals may also have their passports stamped at the border, although in practice this is rare.

For EU citizens, a national ID card – such as the French ID card – does count as a travel document, which means you don’t need a passport in order to travel within the Schengen zone (although since Brexit the French ID card can no longer be used to travel to the UK).

Freedom of movement

Non-EU citizens who have residency status in France (visa or carte de séjour) have the right to unlimited stays in France for the duration of their card/visa – however this does not extend to other EU countries.

Once a non-EU national leaves France, immigration rules kick in, which for countries that benefit from the 90-day rule means a limit in stays to 90 days in every 180.

Although in practice a lack of border checks mean that there is not strict controls, non-EU citizens who are resident in France should be aware that their right to stay in other EU countries is limited. Likewise having residency in France does not entitle you to work in another EU or Schengen area country.

These rules do apply to Brits who have the Brexit carte de séjour known as WARP or Article 50 TUE, since onwards freedom of movement (ie moving to a different EU country) was not part of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement deal.

Overstayers

If you have over-stayed in one EU or Schegen zone country, this risks barring you from entry to all the others.

There are a range of sanctions for ‘over-staying’ – which includes both remaining in a country after your visa/residency card has expired or over-staying your 90-day allowance – and they can include being barred from re-entry to both the country you over-stayed in and the other 28 Schengen zone countries.

Even if you are not officially banned, having the ‘over-stayer’ stamp in your passport can lead to increased checks and scrutiny at an internal Schengen border. 

READ ALSO What happens if you ‘over-stay’ in France?

EES/ETIAS 

In good news, the EU’s new Entry & Exit System of enhanced biometric passport controls – due to come into effect on November 10th – is only applicable at external EU/Schengen borders. Therefore there is no need to complete EES pre-registration if you are making a trip between two Schengen zone countries.

The same will apply to ETIAS, once that comes into force in the spring of 2025.

EES and ETIAS: The big changes coming for travel in Europe

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