6:14 IDK where you checked out the Dijon - Paris excessive ticket price, but I just checked it out and trainline gave me a maximum price of 54€ in first class for a ride today. And if you can manage to book a second class ticket for a ouigo TGV for next saturday, you can get it for 13€.
@@chucku00 Totally agree. I was also shocked at the fare Suzi quoted. A trip from Dijon to Paris is actually much MUCH cheaper than that. As an example (provided you book early enough), you can even cross most of France and travel from Paris to Perpignan on a high speed train for less than €50!
@@Janpoldeu Merci de confirmer cette info. Par ailleurs, ton pseudo m'a permis de me rappeler d'une chanson qui va sur ses 40 ans, elle va sans doute t'amuser si tu la connaissais pas déjà : ruclips.net/video/6cpiyALckH4/видео.html 😜
So happy I found your channel! Very informative. Appreciate all the research you do! I am in Greenville, SC and went into a “European” bakery downtown over the weekend because I was craving a chocolate croissant and it was $6.75!!! And it was half the size of the ones you show in the video! Cannot wait until I arrive in Dijon 🥳😁
Simply an excellent video and thank you for your time and research. I have found wines in France a little cheaper overall. Your videos make us want to come back to France sooner than planned. 😊
Un ami m’a expliqué qu’à Dijon, à partir du moment que c’est vraiment la forme d’un croissant, on dit croissant au chocolat, alors que quand c’est carré, on dit pain au chocolat. Logique ! 🤣😂
In San Francisco area, phone plan - I pay $9/mo (Tello). Used to pay $17/ mo (Mint Mobile). Home internet - $35/mo (xfinity). But I’m always looking for deals and not afraid to move companies.
Great video. Since I’ve been married to a 🇫🇷guy for many years, I enjoy ‘Life in France’ videos. Yours stand out because they aren’t about the 5 best bistros selling steak frites or great gifts to bring home from France. Most are doing the same. You offer practical advice, particularly related to money. May I suggest a topic? I see YT videos & comments on them about people being in love with the idea of moving to France to work or retire. Going back & forth to visit family & friends for so many years, I am perplexed by videos where people say one need not speak much French to live in 🇫🇷. Equally odd, is people who have a plan to move to France in a year or two & “ just rent because I can’t afford to buy on retirement income.” I think a video on housing costs might be interesting & useful. I know someone with a lot of money who had a terrible time trying to find a place to rent in Paris because he was self-employed. Landlords want signed employment contracts. People need to understand the laws around renting, lease terms such as taxes paid by tenants, & actual costs. Then there’s the need to understand how to buy a house in 🇫🇷. Thanks.
@@ariannewdnotbe thank you for the encouragement and great suggestions! As a homeowner and landlord, I should be able to put together something on housing - at least about the market I’m familiar with here in Dijon 😌
Everything you write is relevant. Especially... "I am perplexed by videos where people say one need not speak much French to live in 🇫🇷." Yeah. These are the ones who will go back to the USA and say that France sucks, that the french are arrogant because they don't speak english to them, and hence, they are those who won't be missed here. It is always refreshing to see people like you, who are the opposite of this.
I think you can’t compare the % of salary spent for food. Americans eat a lot of cheap processed food (highly industrial), whereas many Frenchies prefer local fresh production, which is more expensive, but healthier.
Thank you for sharing. We pay $50 plus $10 per gig for data on our cell phone plan. Our fiber internet cost $65/month and we don't have a landline or cable/TV just internet. We pay $30 per office visit and $250 for emergency room visit with Blue Cross Blue SHield PPO. If we can find a decent pain au chocolat (which isn't easy) they cost between $4-5.50. These are just a few reasons we are moving to France in 2026. SO much is equal or better and costs less. We are looking to buy an EV when we move to France to hopefully help offset the higher fuel prices and ease the CritAire issues in big cities that seems to be expanding. I would love to see a video on EVs in France.
@@zeitgeist888 thank you for all these additional data points 🤗 Hm, EVs…great idea (to get one and for a video 😆) …I’m more into my electric bike, but I’ll see what I can come up with 😊
$300 every 2 weeks comes out of my paycheck for health insurance, and $70 every 2 weeks for dental. Copay is $30 a visit for an in network doctor’s visit, and $250 for an ER visit. Cellphone is 190/month for 4 family phones, and internet costs 85/month. Cut cable TV because it was $100+/month. Car insurance for 2 cars is $750 every 6 months. Et un pain au chocolate coute environ $4.50. 😊
Bonjour, Suzi. Absolutely love your channel. Great content! My wife and I live in the Great Lakes Region. Our internet is $83.00 per month, plus another $40.00 for streaming services. We pay $50.00 for our telecom. Auto insurance for both our autos is close to $1,000.00 per year. We'd much rather prefer paying a little more for food each month than paying so much for internet, telecom, and transportation. We're planning a trip to France in 2026. Your channel is helping us so much. Merci beaucoup!
My pleasure! Thanks for watching and for the additional info! (I just checked how much we pay for car insurance - 25€/month for my old, little jalopy 🤭 Seems like a lot to me considering I hardly drive it 😆)
Meme dans grande de villes comme Los Angeles, CA et Phoenix, AZ vous ne trouver pas patisseries aussi bon comme bien celui montré dans ta vidéo. Certainment le prix. J'suis envieux dans votre la vie en France ! Merci.
Hey... algorithm works sometimes! We're thinking about moving there in a few years, learning French, and visiting about once a year. We're starting our next trip in Dijon and should be there in 2 weeks. Hopefully the planned TGV strike doesn't affect our return trip to CDG. 😂 Salut!
@firedupinfrance Dijon/Burgundy, Annecy, a bit of the Black Forest, and the Alsace - in time for Christmas. Last year was southern Bretagne. We are super excited.
Excellent video, Suzi. Thank you 🙏👏. Totally agree with you. We just came back from a 1.5 month trip in France (Paris, Lyon and Montpellier) and we found cost of living there to be cheaper than what we pay in Southern California. However, as you said salaries in the USA are higher than France. I really enjoy watching your videos. ❤️ 🇫🇷
In Dijon or in France? In Dijon, I’d say the historic city center. In France, it depends what you like, do you want to be in a big city? By the ocean? The mountains? Great transport connections? Vineyards?
Thanks again - very interesting! No surprises for me in this vlog. I think in general if a country has allowed itself to be controlled by capitalism and profits over quality of life, then we end up with a situation the US is in now. Stockholders are happy. With regard to pharmaceuticals, in the US we consumers are also paying for the R & D and marketing that (at least American) companies claim is necessary to provide drugs, then the rest of the world benefits from cheaper prices, as you have noted. And the healthcare system and paradigm is such a mess I won't even go there...! Re food, my impression is, because France and some other countries care more deeply about their agricultural and food cultural traditions, spend more time daily on meal times, and choose higher quality products and preparations, that some food is going to cost more. And for some products it's not even a real comparison, comparing some French food with American. In many US stores and bakeries, what they call a baguette or croissant is not even made by people, nor without preservatives, nor with high quality eggs, butter, or chocolate, for example, which are expensive. Often you find a "baguette" or "croissant" and it is not that at all, it's just American white bread in the shape of those products. I went to culinary school for 3 years for baking and pastry (with a French chef teacher) and learned European artisanal and traditional methods and recipes, and I know that the average bakery in the US is not making those products the way they make them in France, because we (mostly) don't have that same craftsperson education and training, so we aren't using the same methods, nor do we have laws about what is a baguette or croissant (or what is any product AOC). So to even find an equal bakery product in the US is a challenge in the first place. If we even have the knowledge to know what to look for and have the availability near us of equivalent products, I think we pay more for it do to scarcity, the higher cost of labor, and the costs of high quality ingredients- not surprising. I know things are changing in France too where non-butter croissants exist, industrial preps exist, and many bakery products are actually made elsewhere then frozen for delivery to "bakeries" but that is by law somewhat made known to the consumer, and the price for the good stuff is still not magnitudes higher. And at least France is changing slower and has the cultural expectations to be able to insist on high quality if they choose, and it seems they still mostly do. But hey I bet our Lucky Charms cereal, and kids' lunch box contents (all with main ingredient high fructose corn syrup) are cheaper! 🤣
@@firedupinfrance Agreed! Ironically, I could not afford to quit my "real" job (which also paid for my culinary school) to become a baker. But if high school / college age kids start off with that education and are employed by a well-managed hotel / resort / restaurant group, (which also includes benefits) they can do well over time. 🥐
Hi Suzy! Thank you for your videos! Always such great information! We live in California and the costs for everything are HIGH! We pay $205/mo for cell phones (3 lines), high speed internet is $100/mo, auto insurance is $1000/yr for 2 vehicles, gas prices fluctuate between $5.30-4.60/gallon, home owners insurance is $900/mo, healthcare insurance is $900/mo with LOTs of out of pocket expenses on top of monthly premiums, doctor visit costs are typically from $150-$750/visit, especially if going to UCLA or any specialist then you’re looking at $650-750/hr, sometimes $1200 (this doesn’t include any labs!) Labs are extremely expensive! And food here is also crazy expensive with our grocery bills weekly running around $250/wk for family of 3. One thing I’ve noticed that is cheaper in US compared to France are household items such as pillows, blankets, decorative items, sheets, towels, etc. I also think furniture is cheaper in the US. I’m sure this is because of all the cheap products from China which France doesn’t have. It seems that France doesn’t allow imports of these goods? And things may be changing in US with new tariffs… But could you speak to the household items in France? Maybe I wasn’t shopping in the correct stores when we lived there for 3 months?… Warm Wishes!
well you need to take into consideration that sale taxes are 20%, so everything is so much more expensive. I grew up in France, and moved to USA when i was 18, so every year I go back and visit my parents for the past 27 years. If you want to retire in France, then it becomes interesting, because within a few months you can get enrolled into their social security( For an American citizen), and all you need a complementary private health insurance for 150-180$ per month and you are fully covered at 100%, no coinsurance, no deductibles. Just higher gas prices, grocery was way cheaper when I moved to USA, but since the pandemic forget it, I will prefer a better quality fruits, vegetables at maybe less expensive grocery prices than we pay in USA. I was in France last January, and the Fresh whole wheat bread at a bakery was 10 Euros a kilo, that was quite expensive.
@@rlarson6107 oh my, that all sounds quite expensive - especially the healthcare-related expenses 😳 As for household items, here in Dijon, we have an Ikea where things (like furniture) seem pretty affordable. I have also bought second hand furniture using Le Bon Coin. There’s a company I’ve bought some items from (during les soldes) that doesn’t have a shop, but which sells a lot of items that are made in France or Europe called Camif. And as for things like linens, basic items can be found at affordable prices at big supermarkets like Carrefour and, again, Ikea, but then there are also all the higher-end shops in the city center which do seem more expensive. Hope that helps ☺️
@@firedupinfranceyes! Very expensive here! Your examples of where to buy things is super helpful, TY! We are in the middle of a 2 year plan to relocate to France! So any helpful tidbits of experience are most welcomed! ❤
@rlarson6107 well I did not till 2020. But it is obvious now that the USA is intended to go back to the 19th century. And when I retire. I will not stay and probably go back. For example, my cousin had cataract surgery in Orange County. It was 11k out of pockets... Not everyone can afford it, at the age of 75.
Loving your understated lowkey wholesome humor - what a lovely addition to my post-Xmas haze. Thank you! Curious if you meant to skip the Perrier. Somethng that may be of interest to know is that Perrier (now marketed here as Maison Perrier, though ironically with now less-charming packaging than ever) is no longer sold here in US in glass AT ALL. Quel horror !!! Yes. It's true. So now it leaches microplastics and tastes like trash. Worse, you can hardly even get it in plastic - mostly it has been converted into small aluminum cans, which of course completely ruin the water as well as leach metal into it, which is not cool. There is not a 1L bottle at all now (ours used to be in glass; now they don't exist at all as of early 2024); you can only buy the bottles in 6-packs. In my low-tax state they run 6.99 and up. So you;re lookng at around $3/L. Good luck finding the bottles; I buy literally all of them when I see them so don't live near me if you need some...or you can come to my house for some :).
Hi - my impression is it’s easier (and less expensive) to find a rental in Dijon than in the cities you mentioned. But Dijon is also very different from those places, too 😊☺️
Another very informative video. Thank you! Here in East Tennessee, I pay $85 per month (about 80.20 Euros at today's exchange rate) to Spectrum just for a landline and internet, no cable TV. Gasoline is cheap though. $2.60 per gallon here. If I figured it right, that is about 65 Euro cents per liter. People here always complain about the price of gas. To them I say be glad you're not paying what the Europeans are. If you were, you'd ditch that V8 pick-up pretty fast.
For mobile phone we pay at least $40 a month per phone. Our home internet (no landline) keeps going up and is currently $89 a month for 300mbps speed. Definitely much more expensive here (california).
300mbps for 89 😂 Good luck americans friends , i would have 1Gbit/s +netflix+amazon prime+ disney and phone mobile for that price here in france (and maybe less)
The question is not only about money...; what is your quality of life, restaurants, friends, hollidays, week-end, family, hobbies, love, weather, shares...etc
Absolutely - I had a bit in the video about how there’s no way to quantify the intangible value of not being worried about medical bankruptcy, for example, but it didn’t seem to flow with the rest of the video and I cut it out - but yes, absolutely, all the things you mention are what’s really crucial to living a good, satisfying, healthy, balanced life 😊☺️. Thanks for your comment 😊
Loved the info. One request? As someone with ADHD, the background music (although lovely) is incredibly distracting. You have a lovely voice. Leave the background quiet!
Last time a was in paris the ticket was as 2,40 and during the olímpics it went up to 4,45, talking about the health care system , to see the real cost you have to add the amount of taxes that you and how your employer pay , and you still need a complementary insurance meaning that you still have to pay , I don’t know how much you have to wait in the us for getting a doctor in a hospital but in France is an eternity specially in emergency, when you pay for something you expect quality and getting a better service , if you have been in a public hospital in France, you will see beds piled up one next to the other waiting to take in charge by a doctor , that’s not a good service
Yeah, I’ve had some less-than-ideal encounters with the health care system here over the years, too…😕 in particular, longish wait times for certain specialities, effectivement (dentist, dermatologist, gynaecologist). We have mainly avoided the ER by using SOS médecins on a few rare occasions and have been satisfied with their services…I didn’t realize the RATP prices had increased during the Olympics. Are they back to normal now?
The price of the iPhone in France are given with tax, which is not the case for the US. I was in New York a couple of years ago and I though that buying an iPhone on the 5th would be a great idea. But I didn't realize that the price was without tax. With 15% tax in New York, it was almost the same as in France...
Crazy cheaper in France for almost everything it sounds. Like 75% to 50% or less than what I am paying for things in Western New York. With the exception for gas for the car and tolls.
if you have an electric vehicle , to fuel the car is still pretty similar to the US even tho recently (since russian conflict) some "eu laws" forced France to rise electricity prices to (domestic "air") gas price. 80€/m for internet is not that cheap in france, should be at least half. i guess u subscribed to some good TV options , here in france i pay 60€ (now 50€ first year) for fiber 8 gb/s including netflix , prime video , disney+, Max , and 280 channels and being with same provider for mobile is 16€/m for real (no throttle so far) unlimited 5g. ye salary are usually lower but for every employees that also adds retirement plan , unemployement insurance , 5 paid weeks vacancy + officials paid days-off , health care , minimum wage at 9,40€ /h (11,88 gross) , ... also one thing i remember , i think the price of the iphone from US online store is before taxes, in France usual prices must be only shown with all taxes already in it for citizens , except in some cases like for pro but "HT" must be written beside.
I’m not really plugged into a big expat community here, personally, but that doesn’t necessarily mean there isn’t one at all. If the markers of a big expat community are things like big international employers, an international (English-instruction) school, consulats and embassies, bars and events where expats gather - we don’t have those things here - at least not as far as I know. I have a fair number of friends, colleagues, and acquaintances who are not French, though 😊
@@rjh2772 Why would you move to a country if you have no intention of integrating there ? Speaking the local language is the most basic, respectful thing you can (and definitely should do). Americans with the expats mindset will undoubtedly be the ones to fail in a country like France (and most of Europe). If you just move to get a cheaper lifestyle you won't be or feel welcome...
As an important reminder for your American viewers, to put things in perspective, the MEDIAN net income in France is around €23,000 per year. And the regional differences are considerable. There are millions of workers in rural or small-town France who would dream of making that much, but only get the minimum wage (€17,000 net/year) or slightly more. So yes, France can be a bargain...but having US-based income certainly helps!
According to OECD, the average household net-adjusted disposable income per capita is USD 51 147 a year in the US, and it is USD 34 375 in France, and that's without taking into account the power of purchase. If the income was calculated as PPP (purchasing power parity) which is a more correct measure, the difference in income would be even smaller.
@@Sayitlikitiz101 Average income is a very flawed measurement to represent the way most people live. Incomes generally follow a log-normal distribution (not gaussian), with a vast majority earning very low incomes, and a few earning huge amounts. This "fat tail" of the distribution skews the data so much that the mean does not bear any meaningful information. The median or lower quintiles are much more representative of how most people live. Unfortunately, most people and media do not understand basic statistics...
I just checked the iPhone 15 over 800$ so not so dissimilar. You are also tied into a provider in the US. The food thing is important to the French and in all honesty, not so much for Americans. That money will go to eating out vs cooking at home.
En fait , on comprend mieux , pourquoi il y'a tant de milliardaires aux États-Unis...Nous vivons trés correctement , en Bretagne , avec 6000 €...Mes amis à New York , on un budget plus serré avec 16 000 $....et vivent à Brooklin dans 80 m2...Sans la qualité de vie , et bien plus de travail , et des dépenses inconcevables ici....Alors , en fait , je ne les envie pas....
Healthcare! Healthcare! Healthcare!. In the U.S we are seen as an ATM and a line item. I will go out on a limb and say that France treats patients as Human beings and not as an entity that needs to be ROBBED like in the U.S.
Pour comprendre il suffit de regarder votre fiche de paie mensuelle ... Tous les prélèvements y sont indiqués ... Cela va de la sécurité sociale, la retraite, le chômage, à la mutuelle, il y a ce que vous cotisez et également ce que votre employeur cotise ... Apparaissent également les jours de congés payés ...😁😁
Merci ☺ Je ne vois que « cot pat maladie deplafon » et « cot pat mal majoration » sur ma fiche de paie (d’un travail dans le publique) - c’est ça ? C’est tout ? 😌 Et la CSG ? Et la CRDS ? Elles vont aussi en partie à la « sécu » ? Je n’ai jamais cherché à comprendre toutes ces lignes sur ma fiche de paie - mais il est temps 🤭
@firedupinfrance et il y a votre colonne ... Ce qu'on vous prélève ...et la colonne patronale ... Ce qu'on prélève à votre patron ... En gros il faut enlever 20% du salaire brut pour avoir le net ...
I have been a French expat in the US for the last 40 years and thinking retiring in France. Yes life and healthcare is so much cheaper in France, but if instability in the world happen, like the war in Ukraine, the US has so much more material and intellectual resources that its economy is not going to suffer as much as any other countries in Europe. Also, the healthcare system in France might be unsustainable as it represent 12% of GDP vs 3% of Medicare in the US.
Thanks for watching 😊 Did anything surprise you in the video?🍷🏥🥐🥖🚅
De rien. Your videos are always full of surprises. All good. Merci beaucoup!
6:14 IDK where you checked out the Dijon - Paris excessive ticket price, but I just checked it out and trainline gave me a maximum price of 54€ in first class for a ride today. And if you can manage to book a second class ticket for a ouigo TGV for next saturday, you can get it for 13€.
@@chucku00 Totally agree. I was also shocked at the fare Suzi quoted. A trip from Dijon to Paris is actually much MUCH cheaper than that. As an example (provided you book early enough), you can even cross most of France and travel from Paris to Perpignan on a high speed train for less than €50!
@@Janpoldeu Merci de confirmer cette info.
Par ailleurs, ton pseudo m'a permis de me rappeler d'une chanson qui va sur ses 40 ans, elle va sans doute t'amuser si tu la connaissais pas déjà :
ruclips.net/video/6cpiyALckH4/видео.html
😜
@@chucku00 Ahaha, nan je connaissais pas, j'adore ! 😂
Excellent and most informative, thank you.
So happy I found your channel! Very informative. Appreciate all the research you do! I am in Greenville, SC and went into a “European” bakery downtown over the weekend because I was craving a chocolate croissant and it was $6.75!!! And it was half the size of the ones you show in the video! Cannot wait until I arrive in Dijon 🥳😁
Oh my 🫣 $6.75!? Wow!
@ I know, right?! And this isn’t even a big city! 🤣
Fab video, love the variety of items you compared.
Simply an excellent video and thank you for your time and research.
I have found wines in France a little cheaper overall.
Your videos make us want to come back to France sooner than planned. 😊
1:09 "Pain au Chocolat" and not the false of course "Chocolatine" Now we are sure, you are perfectly integrated and a true French Citizen! 😁🤣
Mais non, c'est "pain à la chocolatine", juste pour enquiquiner tout le monde.
Un ami m’a expliqué qu’à Dijon, à partir du moment que c’est vraiment la forme d’un croissant, on dit croissant au chocolat, alors que quand c’est carré, on dit pain au chocolat. Logique ! 🤣😂
@@firedupinfrance Chocolatine dans le sud. C'est le vrai, le bon, le juste mot ! Cho-co-la-ti-ne 🥳
In San Francisco area, phone plan - I pay $9/mo (Tello). Used to pay $17/ mo (Mint Mobile). Home internet - $35/mo (xfinity). But I’m always looking for deals and not afraid to move companies.
Great video. Since I’ve been married to a 🇫🇷guy for many years, I enjoy ‘Life in France’ videos. Yours stand out because they aren’t about the 5 best bistros selling steak frites or great gifts to bring home from France. Most are doing the same. You offer practical advice, particularly related to money.
May I suggest a topic?
I see YT videos & comments on them about people being in love with the idea of moving to France to work or retire.
Going back & forth to visit family & friends for so many years, I am perplexed by videos where people say one need not speak much French to live in 🇫🇷. Equally odd, is people who have a plan to move to France in a year or two & “ just rent because I can’t afford to buy on retirement income.”
I think a video on housing costs might be interesting & useful. I know someone with a lot of money who had a terrible time trying to find a place to rent in Paris because he was self-employed. Landlords want signed employment contracts. People need to understand the laws around renting, lease terms such as taxes paid by tenants, & actual costs.
Then there’s the need to understand how to buy a house in 🇫🇷.
Thanks.
@@ariannewdnotbe thank you for the encouragement and great suggestions! As a homeowner and landlord, I should be able to put together something on housing - at least about the market I’m familiar with here in Dijon 😌
Everything you write is relevant. Especially... "I am perplexed by videos where people say one need not speak much French to live in 🇫🇷."
Yeah. These are the ones who will go back to the USA and say that France sucks, that the french are arrogant because they don't speak english to them, and hence, they are those who won't be missed here. It is always refreshing to see people like you, who are the opposite of this.
I think you can’t compare the % of salary spent for food. Americans eat a lot of cheap processed food (highly industrial), whereas many Frenchies prefer local fresh production, which is more expensive, but healthier.
Its more about availability of the unprocessed food than choice. Many areas simply have no supermarkets.
Thank you for sharing. We pay $50 plus $10 per gig for data on our cell phone plan. Our fiber internet cost $65/month and we don't have a landline or cable/TV just internet. We pay $30 per office visit and $250 for emergency room visit with Blue Cross Blue SHield PPO. If we can find a decent pain au chocolat (which isn't easy) they cost between $4-5.50. These are just a few reasons we are moving to France in 2026. SO much is equal or better and costs less. We are looking to buy an EV when we move to France to hopefully help offset the higher fuel prices and ease the CritAire issues in big cities that seems to be expanding. I would love to see a video on EVs in France.
@@zeitgeist888 thank you for all these additional data points 🤗 Hm, EVs…great idea (to get one and for a video 😆) …I’m more into my electric bike, but I’ll see what I can come up with 😊
$300 every 2 weeks comes out of my paycheck for health insurance, and $70 every 2 weeks for dental. Copay is $30 a visit for an in network doctor’s visit, and $250 for an ER visit. Cellphone is 190/month for 4 family phones, and internet costs 85/month. Cut cable TV because it was $100+/month. Car insurance for 2 cars is $750 every 6 months.
Et un pain au chocolate coute environ $4.50. 😊
Bonjour, Suzi. Absolutely love your channel. Great content! My wife and I live in the Great Lakes Region. Our internet is $83.00 per month, plus another $40.00 for streaming services. We pay $50.00 for our telecom. Auto insurance for both our autos is close to $1,000.00 per year. We'd much rather prefer paying a little more for food each month than paying so much for internet, telecom, and transportation. We're planning a trip to France in 2026. Your channel is helping us so much. Merci beaucoup!
My pleasure! Thanks for watching and for the additional info! (I just checked how much we pay for car insurance - 25€/month for my old, little jalopy 🤭 Seems like a lot to me considering I hardly drive it 😆)
Meme dans grande de villes comme Los Angeles, CA et Phoenix, AZ vous ne trouver pas patisseries aussi bon comme bien celui montré dans ta vidéo. Certainment le prix. J'suis envieux dans votre la vie en France ! Merci.
Appréciable de voir ceci rédigé en français.
In my medium French town, public transportation ( a bus network) is free.
Of course we pay the bill with the local taxes.
Hey... algorithm works sometimes! We're thinking about moving there in a few years, learning French, and visiting about once a year. We're starting our next trip in Dijon and should be there in 2 weeks. Hopefully the planned TGV strike doesn't affect our return trip to CDG. 😂 Salut!
In case of train strikes, there’s always BlaBla car 😳😬🤣😂🤣 What other cities/regions will you be visiting on your trip? Very exciting! 🤗
@firedupinfrance Dijon/Burgundy, Annecy, a bit of the Black Forest, and the Alsace - in time for Christmas. Last year was southern Bretagne. We are super excited.
"...learning French..." I can read your future. It is one where France will accept you there.
Excellent video, Suzi. Thank you 🙏👏. Totally agree with you. We just came back from a 1.5 month trip in France (Paris, Lyon and Montpellier) and we found cost of living there to be cheaper than what we pay in Southern California. However, as you said salaries in the USA are higher than France. I really enjoy watching your videos. ❤️ 🇫🇷
Thank you 😊 I’m glad you enjoyed your time here in France ☺️
Damn, you're a homie ! Greetings from Dijon 😀
What areas would you suggest for slow travelers to rent for 1 to 3 months?
In Dijon or in France? In Dijon, I’d say the historic city center. In France, it depends what you like, do you want to be in a big city? By the ocean? The mountains? Great transport connections? Vineyards?
Thanks again - very interesting! No surprises for me in this vlog. I think in general if a country has allowed itself to be controlled by capitalism and profits over quality of life, then we end up with a situation the US is in now. Stockholders are happy. With regard to pharmaceuticals, in the US we consumers are also paying for the R & D and marketing that (at least American) companies claim is necessary to provide drugs, then the rest of the world benefits from cheaper prices, as you have noted. And the healthcare system and paradigm is such a mess I won't even go there...! Re food, my impression is, because France and some other countries care more deeply about their agricultural and food cultural traditions, spend more time daily on meal times, and choose higher quality products and preparations, that some food is going to cost more. And for some products it's not even a real comparison, comparing some French food with American. In many US stores and bakeries, what they call a baguette or croissant is not even made by people, nor without preservatives, nor with high quality eggs, butter, or chocolate, for example, which are expensive. Often you find a "baguette" or "croissant" and it is not that at all, it's just American white bread in the shape of those products. I went to culinary school for 3 years for baking and pastry (with a French chef teacher) and learned European artisanal and traditional methods and recipes, and I know that the average bakery in the US is not making those products the way they make them in France, because we (mostly) don't have that same craftsperson education and training, so we aren't using the same methods, nor do we have laws about what is a baguette or croissant (or what is any product AOC). So to even find an equal bakery product in the US is a challenge in the first place. If we even have the knowledge to know what to look for and have the availability near us of equivalent products, I think we pay more for it do to scarcity, the higher cost of labor, and the costs of high quality ingredients- not surprising. I know things are changing in France too where non-butter croissants exist, industrial preps exist, and many bakery products are actually made elsewhere then frozen for delivery to "bakeries" but that is by law somewhat made known to the consumer, and the price for the good stuff is still not magnitudes higher. And at least France is changing slower and has the cultural expectations to be able to insist on high quality if they choose, and it seems they still mostly do. But hey I bet our Lucky Charms cereal, and kids' lunch box contents (all with main ingredient high fructose corn syrup) are cheaper! 🤣
Wow - wonderful insights - thank you ☺️ We’ll have to keep the true artisans in business so they can keep the traditions going 🤗
@@firedupinfrance Agreed! Ironically, I could not afford to quit my "real" job (which also paid for my culinary school) to become a baker. But if high school / college age kids start off with that education and are employed by a well-managed hotel / resort / restaurant group, (which also includes benefits) they can do well over time. 🥐
Hi Suzy! Thank you for your videos! Always such great information!
We live in California and the costs for everything are HIGH! We pay $205/mo for cell phones (3 lines), high speed internet is $100/mo, auto insurance is $1000/yr for 2 vehicles, gas prices fluctuate between $5.30-4.60/gallon, home owners insurance is $900/mo, healthcare insurance is $900/mo with LOTs of out of pocket expenses on top of monthly premiums, doctor visit costs are typically from $150-$750/visit, especially if going to UCLA or any specialist then you’re looking at $650-750/hr, sometimes $1200 (this doesn’t include any labs!) Labs are extremely expensive! And food here is also crazy expensive with our grocery bills weekly running around $250/wk for family of 3.
One thing I’ve noticed that is cheaper in US compared to France are household items such as pillows, blankets, decorative items, sheets, towels, etc. I also think furniture is cheaper in the US. I’m sure this is because of all the cheap products from China which France doesn’t have. It seems that France doesn’t allow imports of these goods? And things may be changing in US with new tariffs…
But could you speak to the household items in France? Maybe I wasn’t shopping in the correct stores when we lived there for 3 months?…
Warm Wishes!
well you need to take into consideration that sale taxes are 20%, so everything is so much more expensive. I grew up in France, and moved to USA when i was 18, so every year I go back and visit my parents for the past 27 years. If you want to retire in France, then it becomes interesting, because within a few months you can get enrolled into their social security( For an American citizen), and all you need a complementary private health insurance for 150-180$ per month and you are fully covered at 100%, no coinsurance, no deductibles. Just higher gas prices, grocery was way cheaper when I moved to USA, but since the pandemic forget it, I will prefer a better quality fruits, vegetables at maybe less expensive grocery prices than we pay in USA. I was in France last January, and the Fresh whole wheat bread at a bakery was 10 Euros a kilo, that was quite expensive.
@@rlarson6107 oh my, that all sounds quite expensive - especially the healthcare-related expenses 😳 As for household items, here in Dijon, we have an Ikea where things (like furniture) seem pretty affordable. I have also bought second hand furniture using Le Bon Coin. There’s a company I’ve bought some items from (during les soldes) that doesn’t have a shop, but which sells a lot of items that are made in France or Europe called Camif. And as for things like linens, basic items can be found at affordable prices at big supermarkets like Carrefour and, again, Ikea, but then there are also all the higher-end shops in the city center which do seem more expensive. Hope that helps ☺️
@@firedupinfranceyes! Very expensive here!
Your examples of where to buy things is super helpful, TY!
We are in the middle of a 2 year plan to relocate to France! So any helpful tidbits of experience are most welcomed! ❤
@@raminsamii745thank you! Good information to know 😁
Do you plan on moving back?
@rlarson6107 well I did not till 2020. But it is obvious now that the USA is intended to go back to the 19th century. And when I retire. I will not stay and probably go back. For example, my cousin had cataract surgery in Orange County. It was 11k out of pockets... Not everyone can afford it, at the age of 75.
Loving your understated lowkey wholesome humor - what a lovely addition to my post-Xmas haze. Thank you! Curious if you meant to skip the Perrier. Somethng that may be of interest to know is that Perrier (now marketed here as Maison Perrier, though ironically with now less-charming packaging than ever) is no longer sold here in US in glass AT ALL. Quel horror !!! Yes. It's true. So now it leaches microplastics and tastes like trash. Worse, you can hardly even get it in plastic - mostly it has been converted into small aluminum cans, which of course completely ruin the water as well as leach metal into it, which is not cool. There is not a 1L bottle at all now (ours used to be in glass; now they don't exist at all as of early 2024); you can only buy the bottles in 6-packs. In my low-tax state they run 6.99 and up. So you;re lookng at around $3/L. Good luck finding the bottles; I buy literally all of them when I see them so don't live near me if you need some...or you can come to my house for some :).
Is it really that difficult to find a rental there Suzi? Is it easier areas other than Paris and Nice for instance? Merci!
Hi - my impression is it’s easier (and less expensive) to find a rental in Dijon than in the cities you mentioned. But Dijon is also very different from those places, too 😊☺️
Another very informative video. Thank you! Here in East Tennessee, I pay $85 per month (about 80.20 Euros at today's exchange rate) to Spectrum just for a landline and internet, no cable TV. Gasoline is cheap though. $2.60 per gallon here. If I figured it right, that is about 65 Euro cents per liter. People here always complain about the price of gas. To them I say be glad you're not paying what the Europeans are. If you were, you'd ditch that V8 pick-up pretty fast.
Cellphone is usualy 15 to 20 €
Internet 40 to 50 € with television+ netfix+ prime
Croissants and baguette are around 1€ here in strasbourg
For mobile phone we pay at least $40 a month per phone. Our home internet (no landline) keeps going up and is currently $89 a month for 300mbps speed. Definitely much more expensive here (california).
300mbps for 89 😂 Good luck americans friends , i would have 1Gbit/s +netflix+amazon prime+ disney and phone mobile for that price here in france (and maybe less)
@ one of the reasons I’m going to move to France!
@@isayx3 for internet prices?🤣
You have the best mustard
In US. Mobile bill, $184 for unlimited use 5G for two numbers.
We are in Virginia, USA. We budget 300$ a month for medical expenses (doc appt co-pays mostly)
Cell service here in the US is usually $30+ (could be very plus) per month.
The question is not only about money...; what is your quality of life, restaurants, friends, hollidays, week-end, family, hobbies, love, weather, shares...etc
Absolutely - I had a bit in the video about how there’s no way to quantify the intangible value of not being worried about medical bankruptcy, for example, but it didn’t seem to flow with the rest of the video and I cut it out - but yes, absolutely, all the things you mention are what’s really crucial to living a good, satisfying, healthy, balanced life 😊☺️. Thanks for your comment 😊
Loved the info. One request? As someone with ADHD, the background music (although lovely) is incredibly distracting. You have a lovely voice. Leave the background quiet!
Yes, please!
For internet, it varies a lot, currently paying $93 a month. No landline, no cable.
Last time a was in paris the ticket was as 2,40 and during the olímpics it went up to 4,45, talking about the health care system , to see the real cost you have to add the amount of taxes that you and how your employer pay , and you still need a complementary insurance meaning that you still have to pay , I don’t know how much you have to wait in the us for getting a doctor in a hospital but in France is an eternity specially in emergency, when you pay for something you expect quality and getting a better service , if you have been in a public hospital in France, you will see beds piled up one next to the other waiting to take in charge by a doctor , that’s not a good service
Yeah, I’ve had some less-than-ideal encounters with the health care system here over the years, too…😕 in particular, longish wait times for certain specialities, effectivement (dentist, dermatologist, gynaecologist). We have mainly avoided the ER by using SOS médecins on a few rare occasions and have been satisfied with their services…I didn’t realize the RATP prices had increased during the Olympics. Are they back to normal now?
I recently paid $1800 for an MRI because my employer insurance (I pay $50 every 2 weeks) said it was part of my $2000 annual deductible.
😳 unbelievable 😕 I’m sorry, and I hope you’re okay 😌
@ Turned out fine but insurance is crazy here.
The price of the iPhone in France are given with tax, which is not the case for the US. I was in New York a couple of years ago and I though that buying an iPhone on the 5th would be a great idea. But I didn't realize that the price was without tax. With 15% tax in New York, it was almost the same as in France...
Crazy cheaper in France for almost everything it sounds. Like 75% to 50% or less than what I am paying for things in Western New York. With the exception for gas for the car and tolls.
My mobile service for w phones, 10GB/month with one phone currently being ‘financed’ is $135/month so yeah….my gigabit speed internet is $125/month.
I wonder if the difference in food spending is explained by comparing dining out budgets?
Maybe, good point - I wish I had more time to delve into the research 😌
Are taxes included for IPhone prices in the United States? In France, they are.
I paid 350 for a 15 minute visit to a specialist a couple weeks ago
😳 oh my goodness - I hope you’re okay 😌
if you have an electric vehicle , to fuel the car is still pretty similar to the US even tho recently (since russian conflict) some "eu laws" forced France to rise electricity prices to (domestic "air") gas price.
80€/m for internet is not that cheap in france, should be at least half. i guess u subscribed to some good TV options , here in france i pay 60€ (now 50€ first year) for fiber 8 gb/s including netflix , prime video , disney+, Max , and 280 channels and being with same provider for mobile is 16€/m for real (no throttle so far) unlimited 5g.
ye salary are usually lower but for every employees that also adds retirement plan , unemployement insurance , 5 paid weeks vacancy + officials paid days-off , health care , minimum wage at 9,40€ /h (11,88 gross) , ...
also one thing i remember , i think the price of the iphone from US online store is before taxes, in France usual prices must be only shown with all taxes already in it for citizens , except in some cases like for pro but "HT" must be written beside.
I enjoyed your video. I might suggest you do a little more research because so many of the numbers were lacking specifics or were just guesses.
is there a large American expats in Dijon
I’m not really plugged into a big expat community here, personally, but that doesn’t necessarily mean there isn’t one at all. If the markers of a big expat community are things like big international employers, an international (English-instruction) school, consulats and embassies, bars and events where expats gather - we don’t have those things here - at least not as far as I know. I have a fair number of friends, colleagues, and acquaintances who are not French, though 😊
@@firedupinfrance We are just looking for other Americans to connect with due to the lack of speaking and understanding French
@@rjh2772 Why would you move to a country if you have no intention of integrating there ? Speaking the local language is the most basic, respectful thing you can (and definitely should do).
Americans with the expats mindset will undoubtedly be the ones to fail in a country like France (and most of Europe). If you just move to get a cheaper lifestyle you won't be or feel welcome...
9:20. Those US cost estimates are on the LOW side.
As an important reminder for your American viewers, to put things in perspective, the MEDIAN net income in France is around €23,000 per year. And the regional differences are considerable. There are millions of workers in rural or small-town France who would dream of making that much, but only get the minimum wage (€17,000 net/year) or slightly more. So yes, France can be a bargain...but having US-based income certainly helps!
According to OECD, the average household net-adjusted disposable income per capita is USD 51 147 a year in the US, and it is USD 34 375 in France, and that's without taking into account the power of purchase. If the income was calculated as PPP (purchasing power parity) which is a more correct measure, the difference in income would be even smaller.
@@Sayitlikitiz101 Average income is a very flawed measurement to represent the way most people live. Incomes generally follow a log-normal distribution (not gaussian), with a vast majority earning very low incomes, and a few earning huge amounts. This "fat tail" of the distribution skews the data so much that the mean does not bear any meaningful information. The median or lower quintiles are much more representative of how most people live. Unfortunately, most people and media do not understand basic statistics...
And this is before the tariffs
Internet in Philadelphia is $50/month
You forgot to take into account that prices in France are already including the sales taxes while US prices aren't
Yep - oops, sorry about that🫣 🤭 Thanks for pointing that out!
I just checked the iPhone 15 over 800$ so not so dissimilar. You are also tied into a provider in the US. The food thing is important to the French and in all honesty, not so much for Americans. That money will go to eating out vs cooking at home.
That train fare is unreasonable, Dijon needs regular Ouigo HS services. Alors, la SNCF? Tu te bouges, ouais?
Et en plus ils ont annulé le service direct Dijon Roissy CDG 🥹
En fait , on comprend mieux , pourquoi il y'a tant de milliardaires aux États-Unis...Nous vivons trés correctement , en Bretagne , avec 6000 €...Mes amis à New York , on un budget plus serré avec 16 000 $....et vivent à Brooklin dans 80 m2...Sans la qualité de vie , et bien plus de travail , et des dépenses inconcevables ici....Alors , en fait , je ne les envie pas....
C’est clair 😌
Your cotisations pay for the majority of your healthcare not so much your mutuelle and is roughly 13% of your cotisations.
Healthcare! Healthcare! Healthcare!. In the U.S we are seen as an ATM and a line item. I will go out on a limb and say that France treats patients as Human beings and not as an entity that needs to be ROBBED like in the U.S.
Pour comprendre il suffit de regarder votre fiche de paie mensuelle ... Tous les prélèvements y sont indiqués ... Cela va de la sécurité sociale, la retraite, le chômage, à la mutuelle, il y a ce que vous cotisez et également ce que votre employeur cotise ... Apparaissent également les jours de congés payés ...😁😁
Merci ☺ Je ne vois que « cot pat maladie deplafon » et « cot pat mal majoration » sur ma fiche de paie (d’un travail dans le publique) - c’est ça ? C’est tout ? 😌 Et la CSG ? Et la CRDS ? Elles vont aussi en partie à la « sécu » ? Je n’ai jamais cherché à comprendre toutes ces lignes sur ma fiche de paie - mais il est temps 🤭
@firedupinfrance oui ... C'est tout ça ...😁😁
@firedupinfrance cot pal ... Pour cotisation patronale ... Etc ...
@firedupinfrance et il y a votre colonne ... Ce qu'on vous prélève ...et la colonne patronale ... Ce qu'on prélève à votre patron ... En gros il faut enlever 20% du salaire brut pour avoir le net ...
I have been a French expat in the US for the last 40 years and thinking retiring in France. Yes life and healthcare is so much cheaper in France, but if instability in the world happen, like the war in Ukraine, the US has so much more material and intellectual resources that its economy is not going to suffer as much as any other countries in Europe. Also, the healthcare system in France might be unsustainable as it represent 12% of GDP vs 3% of Medicare in the US.
no way. France spent under 5% whereas the Us spend more. Do not add retirement benefits in the equation.