Mark Posted July 26, 2008 Share Posted July 26, 2008 I'd be really grateful if someone could provide a list of the paperwork needed to take to the Mairie when registering a birth in France. Presumably the birth certificates of the parents feature somewhere, proof of residence?, utility bills?, carte vitale?, can't seem to find anything definitive.Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Posted July 26, 2008 Author Share Posted July 26, 2008 Typical - just found what I was looking for. Will paste it here for info:Where do I register my baby’s birth ?The baby’s birth has to be registered at the mairie of the commune or arondissement (for Lyon, Paris, Marseille) he was born in. You have three working days from the day after the birth to register him. (weekends don’t count). A lot of state hospitals deal with the registration process themselves. You give them the necessary paperwork and they send everything to the mairie. All you need to do is collect the updated livret de famille and the déclaration de naissance once they’re ready. Who registers the birth?The registration can to be done by the father, the mother or any person who was present at the birth What paperwork do I need?You need a medical certificate from the doctor or midwife who was present at the birth and the livret de famille (if you have one, otherwise proof of identity). The “déclaration de naisance” includes the following information:ðDate and place of birth ðSexðName (first names and surnames)ðParents’ full names (this will be the mother’s maiden name)ðParents’ birth datesðFamily addressðParents’ professionSo you will probably need papers to prove all this. (Most of it is in the livret de famille if you have one.) “My first birth was in a private clinique and they filled out the official birth form but dh had to to to the mairie to register the birth.” “We filled out everything at the hospital and then DH just had to go and collect the livret de famille from the mairie a few days later - easy!!” “I gave birth in a public hospital and it was all done by the hospital. We just filled in the form, handed over the livret de famille, and they did the rest. The livret came back in the post about a week or so later.” "Our hospital filled in the livret de famille with new ds's details, and gave us a form to fill in which dh just had to take to the local mairie (not the town where we live, the town where the hospital is)." What names can I use?French law used to control the names you could give a baby, but now whatever name you choose has to be accepted by the registrar. If he considers that the name is detrimental to the child (eg a rude word or the name of a well-known politician) he can then contact the Procureur de la Republique who will get a Juge aux Affaires Familiales to make the final decision. If the parents are married, the baby will have his father’s surname. If they aren’t married, then he will have the surname of the first parent to acknowledge him. (This can be done before birth.) What about registering with the British Embassy? (for British nationals) Registering a birth with the Embassy, isn’t compulsory but it is considered proof of citizenship and means that the birth will be registered with the UK General Register Office. A consular birth certificate isn’t necessary to get a British passport, you will still need the French birth certificate. At the time of writing (summer 2004) registering a birth costs 88 Euros and each copy of the registration (i.e the birth certificate) costs 56 euros. http://www.britishembassy.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1064572336696 “We registered both children's births with the consulate, the reasoning being that we may or may not end up staying in France permanently (at the moment no plans to go back to the UK, but you never know). I felt it was an important part of my children's British heritage. Mind you it is an expensive luxury" “I haven't bothered doing it, but maybe I would if there was a possibility of us ever going to live in the UK, that way they would have documents in English. Having a passport should be all that's needed to prove nationality.” Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russethouse Posted July 26, 2008 Share Posted July 26, 2008 Are you just doing research for the day or are Congratulations in order ?[:)] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wendy Posted July 27, 2008 Share Posted July 27, 2008 I would not worry about the 'three day' rule too much. We registered our sons birth ( three years ago ) FIVE days after he was born with no penalties at all; although the staff at the clinic were wetting themselves each time I refused to sign the papers. My partner and I are not married and we wanted his name on the cert; he could not get into the clinic to see me each of the 3 days I was in due to us having guests at a very busy time and you cannot put Dads name down unless he is there ( if you are not married ) and each time they came round with the paperwork he was not there to co-sign. So I waited.We registered bub when he was five days old at the Prefecture with no probs at all. But boy, were those nurses uptight about it! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chateau Miaou Posted July 27, 2008 Share Posted July 27, 2008 [quote user="Jura"]We registered bub when he was five days old [/quote]Bub? . . . kewl! [B] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wendy Posted July 29, 2008 Share Posted July 29, 2008 Bub - short for 'bubby' [:)] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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