CEFR French Levels: A1 to C2 Guide for Learners
Get ready for your CEFR French Levels: A1 to C2 Guide for certification. Practice questions with step-by-step answer explanations and instant scoring.
CEFR French: How the Framework Applies to French Learning
The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages — CEFR — is the international standard for describing language ability. Originally developed for European language education policy, it's now used worldwide by language schools, employers, universities, and testing bodies. If you're learning French, CEFR levels structure everything from your textbook chapters to the certificate you'll put on your resume.
French has one of the most developed CEFR testing ecosystems of any language. The DELF, DALF, and TCF exams all map directly to CEFR levels, which means your French level isn't just a vague description — it's a credential with international recognition. Understanding what each level actually requires helps you set realistic goals and study more efficiently.
The Six CEFR French Levels
CEFR divides language ability into three broad bands — basic, independent, and proficient — each containing two levels. Here's what each level looks like in practice for French learners:
A1: Breakthrough (Beginner)
At A1, you can introduce yourself, ask and answer simple questions about familiar topics — your name, where you live, people you know, things you own. You understand very slow, clear speech and simple texts. Think: ordering a coffee, filling out a basic form, greeting someone in a shop.
A1 takes most adult learners 60-150 hours of study to reach from zero. The DELF A1 exam certifies this level. If you've completed a semester of French or worked through the first few units of Duolingo seriously, you're probably approaching A1.
A2: Waystage (Elementary)
A2 means you can handle routine tasks and exchanges — shopping, making travel arrangements, getting information from simple signs and notices. You can describe your background, immediate environment, and matters related to immediate needs. Conversations work when the other person speaks slowly and clearly.
A2 typically requires 150-300 total hours of study. The DELF A2 is the corresponding exam. This is also around the level many students reach after two years of high school French.
B1: Threshold (Intermediate)
B1 is a significant milestone — it's often described as functional independence. You can handle most travel situations, follow the main points of standard speech on familiar topics, write simple connected text, and describe experiences and events. You can hold a conversation on familiar topics even if you make mistakes.
This is the level required for some European university admissions and many work visa applications. Expect 350-600 total hours to reach B1. The DELF B1 certifies this level.
B2: Vantage (Upper Intermediate)
At B2, you can interact with native speakers with a reasonable degree of fluency without strain for either party. You understand the main ideas of complex texts, including technical discussions in your field of specialization. You can produce detailed text on a wide range of subjects.
B2 is the most common target level for professional French use — many employers in French-speaking countries or international organizations require at least B2. It typically takes 600-800 total hours to reach. The DELF B2 is well-regarded in hiring contexts.
C1: Effective Operational Proficiency (Advanced)
C1 means you can express yourself fluently and spontaneously, use language flexibly for social, academic, and professional purposes, and produce well-structured complex text. You can understand demanding texts and recognize implicit meaning. Native speakers won't need to simplify for you.
C1 takes most learners 800-1,000+ hours. The DALF C1 certifies this level. It's typically required for academic study at French universities and for professional roles that require native-level French communication.
C2: Mastery (Proficient)
C2 is near-native fluency. You can understand virtually everything you hear or read, summarize complex information from multiple sources, express yourself spontaneously with precision, and distinguish fine shades of meaning. Very few non-native speakers reach C2.
The DALF C2 is the highest French certification. It's sometimes required for academic teaching positions or for immigration purposes in French-speaking countries.

French CEFR Exams: DELF, DALF, and TCF
Unlike English, which has multiple competing international exams (IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge), French has a relatively unified certification system administered by the French Ministry of Education and delivered through France Éducation International (previously CIEP).
The DELF (Diplôme d'études en langue française) covers A1 through B2. Each level is a separate diploma — you don't take a single test that covers all levels. DELF is valid for life, which makes it particularly useful for immigration and visa purposes. There are different versions: DELF standard for adults, DELF Scolaire et Junior for school students, and DELF Pro for workplace French.
The DALF (Diplôme approfondi de langue française) covers C1 and C2. Like DELF, each level is a separate diploma valid for life. DALF C1 is widely accepted for university admissions in France without requiring a separate language test.
The TCF (Test de connaissance du français) is a single-sitting test that produces a score mapped to CEFR levels rather than granting a diploma at a specific level. It's particularly used for immigration applications (TCF Canada for Canadian permanent residence, TCF pour le Québec for Québec immigration). The TCF has a shorter validity period — typically two years — which matters for immigration timelines.
For practical purposes: if you want a permanent credential for a resume or university application, DELF/DALF. If you need a quick level assessment for immigration or employment, TCF. Both are widely recognized internationally.
How to Progress Through CEFR French Levels
The hours-to-level estimates above assume consistent, quality study. What actually moves the needle?
Comprehensible input at your level. Language acquisition research strongly supports the idea that you learn best from material you mostly understand — maybe 95% — with some new vocabulary or structures. For A1-A2, this means children's books, simple podcasts like "Coffee Break French," beginner grammar drills. For B1-B2, French news radio (RFI's "Journal en français facile" is classic), French TV with French subtitles, books written for young adults.
Deliberate grammar study, not just exposure. French grammar — verb conjugations, gendered nouns, subjunctive mood, object pronouns — doesn't absorb automatically. You need to learn it explicitly and then practice applying it until it's automatic. The ratio changes as you advance: grammar study dominates at A1-A2, while input and speaking practice dominate at B2-C1.
Speaking practice, especially after A2. Reading and listening can carry you to A2-B1 without much speaking practice. Above that, the gap between passive comprehension and active production becomes the main bottleneck. Regular conversation with native speakers — iTalki tutors, French language exchanges, conversation groups — accelerates progress at B1+.
Exam-specific preparation for the last 4-6 weeks. DELF and TCF have specific task types — written production, oral production, listening comprehension, reading comprehension — each with their own formats and scoring criteria. Doing 3-4 past exam papers under timed conditions before your exam is non-negotiable. The format is learnable; don't let unfamiliarity cost you points you've earned.
What CEFR French Level Do You Need?
The right target level depends entirely on what you're trying to do.
Travel in France or French-speaking countries: A2-B1 is enough to manage independently. You'll handle most practical situations without relying on English.
Working at a French company in an English-speaking country: B1-B2. You'll need to participate in French meetings and write professional emails, but English may still be the primary language.
Working in a French-speaking country: B2 minimum. C1 for most professional roles that require you to be indistinguishable from local colleagues in writing and complex discussions.
University study in France: Most public French universities require DELF B2 or DALF C1 for admission. Sciences Po and other selective institutions typically expect C1.
French citizenship or immigration: Requirements vary by country. France requires B1 for naturalization. Canada's Quebec Skilled Worker program uses TCF Quebec, and the required score varies by the specific immigration stream. Check the specific requirements for your situation — they change.
Whatever your target, a CEFR English Levels: A1 to C2 Explained for Learners comparison can also help you understand how CEFR skill descriptors apply across languages — the framework is language-neutral by design.
- +Validates your knowledge and skills objectively
- +Increases job market competitiveness
- +Provides structured learning goals
- +Networking opportunities with other certified professionals
- −Study materials can be expensive
- −Exam anxiety can affect performance
- −Requires dedicated preparation time
- −Retake fees apply if you don't pass
Finding Your Current French Level
If you're not sure where you stand, placement tests can give you a rough idea. Most language schools use their own placement assessments. Online tools — Alliance Française placement tests, TV5Monde level test — give informal estimates. The most accurate approach is to work through DELF past papers: if you score above 50% on B1 material, you're likely in the B1 range.
Don't overestimate your level based on passive comprehension. Reading and listening usually outpace speaking and writing, sometimes by a full CEFR level. A learner who can follow French radio might still struggle to produce a coherent B1 essay under time pressure. Your productive skills — speaking and writing — are what exams test most rigorously and what employers and universities care most about.
Set your target level based on your actual goal, not the highest level you can imagine reaching. B2 is genuinely useful and achievable for most dedicated learners. C1 and C2 require sustained immersion and years of practice — they're worth pursuing if your goals require them, but B2 opens most professional and academic doors.
CEFR Study Tips
What's the best study strategy for CEFR?
Focus on weak areas first. Use practice tests to identify gaps, then study those topics intensively.
How far in advance should I start studying?
Most successful candidates begin 4-8 weeks before the exam. Create a structured study schedule.
Should I retake practice tests?
Yes! Take each practice test 2-3 times. Focus on understanding why answers are correct, not memorizing.
What should I do on exam day?
Arrive 30 min early, bring required ID, read questions carefully, flag difficult ones, and review before submitting.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.