Beyond your personal documents, your vehicle itself must meet legal requirements. French police can issue and collect on-the-spot fines for any missing items — fines for not having the right equipment can reach €135 per item. Sort this kit before you travel, not at the port.
🦺 Hi-Visibility Vest — Mandatory
One CE-marked reflective hi-viz vest or jacket is required for the driver and each passenger. If you stop at the roadside — for a breakdown, puncture, or any other reason — everyone leaving the vehicle must put one on before stepping out.
Critical: Vests must be stored inside the vehicle — never in the boot. If your car has broken down in a dark lay-by you cannot open the boot to get your vest: by the time you’re outside the car, it’s too late. Keep them on a back seat, in the door pocket, or in the glovebox. Fine up to €135 per person for not wearing one at a roadside stop.
⚠️ Warning Triangle — Mandatory
A warning triangle must be carried in the vehicle at all times. If you break down or are involved in an accident on a regular road, place it approximately 30 metres behind your vehicle to warn approaching traffic.
On the motorway: Do not place a warning triangle on a French motorway. Use the orange emergency phones at the roadside instead, then wait behind the crash barrier. Stopping on a French motorway carries serious risk — get behind the barrier, not beside the car. Fine up to €135 for not having a triangle in the vehicle.
💡 Headlight Beam Deflectors — Mandatory
UK right-hand drive cars have headlights that dip to the left — on French roads, this means your headlights dip towards oncoming traffic. Beam deflector stickers (also called headlamp converters) redirect the beam to avoid dazzling other drivers. They are legally required for UK vehicles on French roads.
These peel-on adhesive stickers are cheap and widely available: from the ferry shop on board the MV Saint-Malo or Armorique, from Halfords, AA/RAC stores, or online before you travel. Fit them before you drive off the ship. Remove them when you return to the UK — they dazzle oncoming drivers in the opposite direction at home.
UK Identifier — Mandatory
Your vehicle must display “UK” on the rear when driving in France. If your number plate already incorporates the UK flag and the letters “UK”, you do not need an additional sticker. If it only shows the EU stars circle or nothing at all, you must fit a UK oval sticker.
Important: The old “GB” sticker has not been valid since September 2021. If you still have a GB sticker on your car from a pre-Brexit trip, remove or replace it before travelling to France.
🌿 Crit’Air Pollution Sticker
France’s Crit’Air scheme requires all vehicles — including foreign vehicles — to display a colour-coded emissions sticker when entering low-emission zones (ZFEs) in French cities. As of January 2025, 25 cities operate ZFEs: Rennes, Caen, Le Havre, Rouen, Nantes, Angers, Paris, Lille, Reims, Nancy, Strasbourg, Dijon, Clermont-Ferrand, Lyon, Saint-Étienne, Annemasse, Annecy, Grenoble, Bordeaux, Pau, Toulouse, Montpellier, Nîmes, Marseille and Nice.
Order from: certificat-air.gouv.fr (the only authorised site — beware of unofficial third-party sellers charging inflated prices). Cost is around £4. Allow at least 10 days for delivery as it is posted to your home address. Fine for non-compliance: €135 for cars. Even if you don’t plan to enter city centres, it is worth having — enforcement is by camera and ZFE operating hours vary by city and by weather conditions.
🔦 Spare Bulbs — Strongly Recommended
Spare bulbs are not technically compulsory under French law for cars, but if a bulb fails, French police will expect you to replace it immediately and can prevent you from continuing your journey. A small kit of your car’s bulb types takes up no space and costs very little. Note: if your car has LED headlights, LEDs are not field-replaceable and police are aware of this — you are not expected to carry LED spares.
💡 Snow chains: If you’re driving in mountainous regions of France in winter — the Alps, Pyrenees, Massif Central — snow chains may be legally required when road signs indicate. While not relevant to most Brittany-based trips starting from St Malo, it’s worth knowing if your route goes south. Winter tyres are not legally required in France but are recommended in mountain areas.