From French Polynesia to France
When travelling from French Polynesia to France: Good news: all your French Polynesia plug types fit in France. Voltage matches at 230V. Frequency differs (60Hz → 50Hz). Modern phone and laptop chargers are usually fine, but some clocks, motors, and appliances may behave incorrectly.
Your plugs
Type C
Fits
Type E
Fits
Accepted in France
Type C
Type E
2 of 2 plug type(s) match
You: C, E • France: C, E
Voltage: 230V → 230V
Same voltage
Frequency: 60Hz → 50Hz
Different frequency
Check device supports both 50/60 Hz.
Adapters you may need
Plugs, voltage and frequency line up for most chargers.
About electricity in France
France runs on 230V/50Hz with Type C and E sockets. Type E has a male earth pin built into the socket itself, so flat-pin US and Canadian chargers will not fit without an adapter.
Grid & history
France has one of the world’s most nuclear-heavy grids: roughly two-thirds of generation comes from EDF’s fleet of 56 reactors, the largest in Europe. The rest is hydropower from the Alps and Pyrenees, with growing wind and solar.
Availability
The grid is highly reliable nationwide, including in rural areas. Storms occasionally cause brief outages in the south and west.
Sockets & hotels
Type E is the dominant socket: two round holes with a male earth pin protruding from the socket. Type C Europlugs slot straight into Type E sockets, but without the earth connection.
Energy mix
Nuclear has been the backbone since the 1970s oil shocks.
Practical tips
- A small Type C/E adapter (often sold as “European”) is all you need.
- Modern phone and laptop chargers handle 230V; older US-only heaters and hair dryers do not.
- TGV trains have power sockets in standard and first class on most routes.