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Certified French driver licence translation for North Narooma residents. Accepted by RMS, VicRoads and all Australian state transport authorities.
Upload your French driver licence for a fast quote. Our certified translators provide officially accepted translations for licence conversion and vehicle rental.
If you hold a French driver licence and live in or are visiting North Narooma, you may need a certified translation to drive legally in Australia. The requirements depend on your visa type.
On a student, working holiday or tourist visa, you can generally drive on your overseas licence with a certified English translation. State-specific rules:
Permanent residents must convert their overseas licence to an Australian licence within 3-6 months (varies by state). A NAATI-certified translation is required for the conversion process.
Most Australian car rental companies require an English translation of your licence. A certified French licence translation from Mighty Translation is accepted by all major rental companies.
French is an official language in 29 countries across multiple continents, most of which are members of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (OIF), the community of 84 countries which share the official use or teaching of French. French is also one of six official languages used in the United Nations. It is spoken as a first language (in descending order of the number of speakers) in France; Canada (provinces of Quebec, Ontario and New Brunswick as well as other Francophone regions); Belgium (Wallonia and the Brussels-Capital Region); western Switzerland (Romandy-all or part of the cantons of Bern, Fribourg, Geneva, Jura, Neuchâtel, Vaud, Valais); Monaco; parts of Luxembourg; parts of the United States (the states of Louisiana, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont); northwestern Italy (autonomous region of Aosta Valley); and various communities elsewhere.
French is estimated to have about 76 million native speakers; about 235 million daily, fluent speakers; and another 77-110 million secondary speakers who speak it as a second language to varying degrees of proficiency, mainly in Africa. According to the OIF, approximately 300 million people worldwide are "able to speak the language", without specifying the criteria for this estimation or whom it encompasses. According to a demographic projection led by the Université Laval and the Réseau Démographie de l'Agence universitaire de la Francophonie, the total number of French speakers will reach approximately 500 million in 2025 and 650 million by 2050. OIF estimates 700 million by 2050, 80% of whom will be in Africa.