Moving to France comes with many wonderful discoveries: beautiful markets, long lunches, excellent healthcare… and a whole new administrative system to learn.
One of the first terms you’ll hear repeatedly is CPAM.
If you’ve found yourself wondering:
- “What exactly is CPAM?”
- “What is ameli?”
- “Why do I need a Carte Vitale?”
- “What is Mon espace santé?”
- “How do reimbursements actually work in France?”
…you are absolutely not alone.
The French healthcare system can feel confusing at first — especially if you come from the UK, US, Canada, Australia, or another English-speaking country with a very different system.
The good news? Once you understand the structure, France’s healthcare system is actually one of the most efficient and accessible in the world.
This guide breaks down exactly how CPAM works, what all the connected services mean, and how to navigate the system confidently as an English speaker living in France.
What Is CPAM?
CPAM stands for:
Caisse Primaire d’Assurance Maladie
In simple terms, CPAM is your local branch of the French national health insurance system.
CPAM manages:
- Your healthcare rights
- Reimbursements for medical costs
- Your Carte Vitale
- Sick leave payments
- Maternity and paternity benefits
- Healthcare administration
- Access to online services such as ameli
CPAM operates under the wider French public healthcare system known as:
Assurance Maladie
This is France’s state health insurance system.
If you legally live and/or work in France, you will generally become affiliated with Assurance Maladie and handled locally through your CPAM office.
Is CPAM “Free Healthcare”?
Not exactly — and this is where many newcomers get confused.
France does not operate a completely “free” healthcare system.
Instead, it is a partially reimbursed public insurance system.
Typically:
- You pay for treatment upfront
- The state reimburses a percentage
- Your mutuelle (top-up insurance) may reimburse the rest
For example:
| Treatment | Typical State Reimbursement |
|---|---|
| GP doctor visit | Around 70% |
| Specialist appointments | Varies |
| Prescription medication | 15%–100% depending on medication |
| Hospital care | Usually high coverage |
| Dental & optical | Lower coverage unless supplemented |
Official reimbursement information is managed through Assurance Maladie and visible in your ameli account.
Who Can Access CPAM?
You may qualify if you:
- Work in France
- Are self-employed in France
- Are retired and resident in France
- Have lived legally in France for at least 3 months under PUMA (Protection Universelle Maladie)
- Hold certain residency statuses
- Are registered through specific EU or international agreements
The exact route depends on your personal situation.
What Is PUMA?
You may hear the term:
PUMA = Protection Universelle Maladie
This is the system that allows eligible residents to access healthcare coverage in France.
For many non-working residents or retirees, PUMA becomes the basis for healthcare rights after living in France for 3 months legally and stably.
What Is ameli?
This is one of the most important things to understand.
ameli = The Official Online Health Insurance Portal
Think of ameli as the online control centre for your French healthcare administration.
The official ameli website is run by Assurance Maladie.
Through your ameli account you can:
- Track reimbursements
- Download healthcare certificates
- Update personal details
- Order a new Carte Vitale
- Send documents securely
- Contact CPAM
- View sick leave information
- Access payment statements
- Manage beneficiaries
- Use FranceConnect login services
Why Is ameli So Important?
Because in France, much of healthcare administration is digital.
Your ameli account becomes your main communication tool with CPAM.
Without it, even simple tasks can become much slower.
How Do You Create an ameli Account?
Generally, you need:
- A French social security number
- A registered CPAM file
- Your Carte Vitale (or temporary number)
- Bank details already linked to your account
You can create your account online once your rights are fully activated.
What Is a Carte Vitale?
The famous green card.
Your Carte Vitale is your French health insurance card.
It stores your social security information and allows healthcare professionals to transmit claims electronically.
When you present your Carte Vitale:
- Reimbursements are usually processed automatically
- Claims are faster
- Less paperwork is needed
Without it, you may need paper forms called:
Feuilles de soins
These paper treatment forms must be sent manually to CPAM for reimbursement.
How Reimbursements Actually Work
This is one of the biggest surprises for newcomers.
In France:
You often pay first.
Then:
CPAM reimburses you afterwards.
Example:
- GP visit costs €30
- Assurance Maladie reimburses part
- Your mutuelle may reimburse the remainder
Payments are usually transferred directly into your French bank account.
You can monitor reimbursements through ameli.
What Is a Mutuelle?
A mutuelle is supplementary health insurance.
This is extremely common in France.
It helps cover:
- The percentage not reimbursed by CPAM
- Hospital extras
- Dental costs
- Glasses
- Specialist fees
Many employers provide one automatically.
Without a mutuelle, you may still receive state reimbursements — but you could pay more out of pocket.
What Is “Mon espace santé”?
This is where many people become confused because it sounds similar to ameli.
They are connected — but they are not the same thing.
Mon espace santé is your secure digital health record.
It is a separate national digital health platform created by the French Ministry of Health and Assurance Maladie.
Think of it as:
A secure online medical vault.
What Can Mon espace santé Do?
It allows you to:
- Store medical documents
- Access prescriptions
- View test results
- Share records securely with doctors
- Track health information
- Use secure medical messaging
- Centralise healthcare documents
It is designed to improve coordination between healthcare professionals.
Is Mon espace santé Mandatory?
Accounts are generally created automatically for people covered by French health insurance unless they opt out.
However:
- You control access permissions
- You can manage privacy settings
- You can restrict document visibility
Official guidance states that users remain in control of who can access their data.
Is Mon espace santé Safe?
This is a common concern among expats.
According to Assurance Maladie:
- Data is hosted in France
- Access is highly regulated
- Users control permissions
- Security is supervised under French healthcare data rules
As with any digital health system, people may have differing personal opinions about digital medical records — but the official system includes strict legal and technical protections.
What’s the Difference Between ameli and Mon espace santé?
This is the easiest way to remember it:
ameli | Mon espace santé |
| Administrative health account | Digital medical record |
| Reimbursements | Medical documents |
| CPAM communication | Health data storage |
| Carte Vitale management | Sharing medical records |
| Financial tracking | Healthcare coordination |
In short:
ameli manages the administration.
Mon espace santé manages the medical information.
What Is FranceConnect?
FranceConnect is the French government’s secure login system.
It allows you to access multiple official services using one identity login.
Many people use their ameli login through FranceConnect.
Common Mistakes Newcomers Make
1. Assuming Healthcare Is Completely Free
France has excellent healthcare — but there are still costs and reimbursement rules.
2. Not Getting a Mutuelle
Without supplementary insurance, some costs can add up quickly.
3. Ignoring Official Letters from CPAM
French administration often relies heavily on mailed documents.
Never ignore CPAM post.
4. Not Updating Your Carte Vitale
Pharmacies usually have update machines where you can refresh your card information.
5. Confusing CPAM with Private Insurance
CPAM is public state healthcare administration.
Your mutuelle is separate private supplementary insurance.
Can English Speakers Contact CPAM?
Yes.
Assurance Maladie provides some English-language support and resources for foreign residents.
However, many local offices primarily operate in French, so patience — and sometimes translation help — may still be necessary.
Helpful French Healthcare Vocabulary
| French Term | Meaning |
| CPAM | Local health insurance office |
| Assurance Maladie | National health insurance |
| Carte Vitale | Health insurance card |
| ameli | Online health account |
| Mon espace santé | Digital medical record |
| Mutuelle | Supplementary insurance |
| Feuille de soins | Paper reimbursement form |
| Médecin traitant | Registered primary doctor |
| Remboursement | Reimbursement |
Final Thoughts
At first, French healthcare administration can feel intimidating.
There are acronyms everywhere.
Letters arrive constantly.
Processes can seem overly bureaucratic.
But once your CPAM registration is complete and your ameli account is functioning, life becomes much easier.
The key is understanding that:
- CPAM manages your healthcare rights
- ameli manages your administration online
- Mon espace santé manages your medical data
- Your mutuelle fills reimbursement gaps
And despite the paperwork, France’s healthcare system is widely regarded as one of the strongest public healthcare systems in the world.
Understanding how it works is one of the most valuable things you can do as a new resident in France.
Official Resources
- ameli.fr — Official French Health Insurance website
- monespacesante.fr — Official Mon espace santé portal
Need Help Navigating French Healthcare?
Understanding CPAM, ameli, Carte Vitale applications, reimbursements, and French healthcare paperwork can feel overwhelming — especially when everything arrives in French administrative language.
That’s exactly why Hello Santé exists.
At Hello Santé, we help English speakers living in France confidently navigate the French healthcare system with clear guidance, practical support, and real human help.
Whether you need assistance with:
ameli account setup
Understanding reimbursements
Language support
Mon espace santé guidance
Finding your footing in the French system
…we’re here to make the process simpler, clearer, and far less stressful.
Because healthcare administration is hard enough in your own language — let alone someone else’s.
Hello Santé
Helping English speakers feel confident with healthcare in France.
hellosantefr@gmail.com

