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    Commissariat central du 5ème

    4.0 (1 review)

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    Préfecture de Police - Only visiting

    Préfecture de Police

    3.6(5 reviews)
    0.6 kmÎle de la Cité/Île Saint Louis, 1er

    The Préfecture de Police is the administrative offices of the French National Police…read more They are the real deal. None of that Inspector Clouseau nonsense. They were very helpful a number of years ago to our family, when one of my Scottish relatives went missing and helped find him. If you want a French view of the Préfecture watch The Paris Murders on Prime, or even the lighter, Murder in Provence on BritBox. Their offices on the Seine are imposing and impressive. They are certainly worth a photo or two if you're walking nearby, which is very close to the Louvre and Latin Quarter.

    This is how immigration should work. As a legal resident living in Paris, all of your most…read moreimportant paperwork and inquiries pass through this inpenetrable island fortress. You're not even going to a 'bureau of immigration', like you would even in a police state like China; you're going to a militarised police compound on an island, with sub machine guns, and thick bulletproof doors with submarine like security signals, and all that. If you have some business here, it should spell a very bad day for you. It doesn't. There is a reception desk with civilian ladies answering questions and giving you directions within the compound. Let's say you have a question about something really complicated, like that you've applied for a carte de séjour, but it hasn't arrived by the time your visa has expired, and you need to leave the country on business. No problem! Somewhere in this compound someone has the answer, and instead of giving you the typical French 'Non, c'est pas possible' they instead tell you exactly where you need to go to have your question answered that day. Yes, when you get to the appropriate office, you have to take a ticket and wait, but you should always bring a book on such occasions. When it's your turn, you are greeted by a compitent, professional, and impeccably polite officer who speaks English. Mine was a lady officer who was also pretty... this is too much! The first question you get is basically, 'OK, so did you do all the sh* that we told you like 10 times to do?' They know you haven't. You haven't bothered to changing your address. Didn't you get something in the mail eight months ago about a medical exam, or some such nonsense that you piled underneath all the other things you're putting off? Meh, it's OK, she'll sort you out. Did you forget to bring the one document you need? Meh, it's OK, here's her email address, scan it and send it to her when you can. 10 mimutes later: 'Is there anything else I can help you with, Mr. Daniel?' 'Um... no... not really, no..' I mean, I suppose I could use a fist-bump and to hear that I'm special and that everyone loves me... there's also that cabinet in the bathroom that won't close that you keep meaning to fix... but, no, she has just solved every problem that one could reasonably pose to her. Upon leaving, you feel shame for having maybe let her down for not doing all those things before. 'Argh.. I'm so irresponsible. .. I'm really going to make an effort to follow all the laws in the future.' A simple act of professionalism, kindness, and humanity is a thousand times more effective than a sub machine gun, and they understand that here. This is a rare gem in the world.

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    Commissariat Central du 14ème Arrondissement

    Commissariat Central du 14ème Arrondissement

    2.5(2 reviews)
    2.4 kmMontparnasse, 14ème

    This place is - well - a bummer. This is where you go for temporary visas if you live in Paris and…read morecannot get your new carte de séjour before the old one expires (this is frequently the case). The lines are normally long - but that's life right? Now they have shut down one of the other centers to treat temporary visa applications in Paris. So now you have to get here at 5am and wait for 4 hours before it opens - or risk coming later and having a line so long that you can't get in at all... The best part is that this is not even for a real visa - it's just a temporary one. Even with requesting an appointment 5 months prior to the expiration date of my present visa - I could only get an appointment one month after my visa expires. It's the same every year so basically I have to waste three days of my time annually just to be allowed to pay taxes in France. Such an incentive! One day to get a temporary visa, one day to ask for a real visa, and one more to go get the new visa! And that is if everything goes well... So where do my taxes go? I'd sure like to see a bit more invested in the visa system :-/

    No, that's not a mob of striking migrant workers, it's the line to get into the police station, but…read moredon't worry, you don't go in that line unless you have a problem with your carte de séjour, and there's a macho guy with a machine gun standing there just in case (in case what?). I'm pretty sure they set up the steel fence to make the long line of immigrants watch as other people freely enter and exit the building on other business while they're there hot, cold, and unmoving. Everything here is preposterous. To file a change of address you must go to 'Objets trouvés'. This is but one example. Once you realize that this is not actually a police station but a police-themed clown house providing the public with free entertainment and occasional public services, I promise that you will leave there with a smile. Bring your honky red nose to fit in.

    Commissariat central du 5ème - policedepartments - Updated May 2026

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