Moving from France to Turkey
A practical guide to shipping from France to Turkey across the Mediterranean, clearing Turkish customs on your effects, and getting your tax number and residence permit.
Moving from France to Turkey, in one honest summary.
A move from France to Turkey is most often a sea shipment across the Mediterranean. A container loads in France, typically routed through Marseille and the neighbouring port of Fos sur Mer, and sails east to the terminals around Istanbul such as Ambarli or to Yarimca near the Gulf of Izmit, before an onward road leg to Izmir, Ankara, Antalya or the coast. Because both sit on the Mediterranean, transit is shorter than from northern Europe, usually around two to four weeks, with several weeks of booking and packing first.
For smaller homes a part load in a shared container is cheaper, and an overland road haul through Italy and the Balkans is an alternative for some movers. Cost is driven by volume and by whether you take sole use of a container or share one. As an indicative 2026 range, a two to three bedroom home runs about 4,500 to 13,000 euros door to door, with a studio or part load a good deal less.
The part that shapes this corridor is Turkish customs and the mix of movers, since alongside French nationals relocating for work, retirement or the coast there is a long established community of people with Turkish heritage in France who are moving home. Turkey allows people transferring their residence to import used household goods with relief, but the conditions differ for Turkish passport holders, who must have lived abroad for a continuous period. Almost everything also hinges on getting a Turkish tax number early.
Below you will find indicative 2026 costs by home size and mode, a realistic timeline for the sea route, how Turkish customs treats used household goods, the residence routes that fit a typical mover on this corridor, and how to choose a mover without guesswork.
What it costs in 2026, by home size and method.
These are indicative 2026 ranges in euros for the France to Turkey sea move, door to door. Your volume, whether you take sole use of a container or share one, the season, and the onward road delivery distance in Turkey move the number more than anything else.
A shared container is cheaper because your goods fill part of a box alongside other shipments, but it is slower and tied to consolidation schedules. A sole use container, a twenty foot or forty foot, carries only your household and clears as one shipment, which is worth the premium for a full home or a firm timeline.
- +Lowest cost for small volumes
- +Good for a studio or one bedroom flat
- −Slower, tied to consolidation
- −Wider delivery window in Turkey
- +Your goods fill one sealed box
- +Faster clearance as a single shipment
- +Right for a two to three bed home or larger
- −Higher cost than sharing space
- +Can suit awkward timing or a part load
- +Through Italy and the Balkans into Turkey
- −Long drive and several border crossings
- −Often pricier per cubic metre than sea
Get moving quotes for France to Turkey.
Tell us your home size and timing and we put your France to Turkey move in front of vetted movers who run this lane. Free, no obligation.
A realistic schedule for this route.
A realistic schedule for the France to Turkey sea move. Turkish customs clearance depends on your tax number and residence evidence, so start those before the container arrives.
Get quotes and book
Request a binding pre move survey from movers who run the France to Turkey lane. Book early for a summer sailing, when both the corridor and container space are at their busiest.
Start Turkish paperwork
Apply for your Turkish tax number, the vergi numarasi, and prepare your residence permit application or, if you are a returning citizen, evidence of your time lived abroad, since these shape the customs clearance.
Pack and load
Movers pack over one or two days and load the container at Marseille or Fos. Keep passports, your itemized inventory and residence or property documents in a bag that travels with you for clearance in Turkey.
At sea
The container sails across the Mediterranean to the Istanbul terminals. Track the vessel and line up your customs broker and tax number before it berths so clearance is not delayed.
Clear customs and deliver
Your goods clear Turkish customs against your tax number, residence evidence and inventory, then run on by road to your address. Complete your address registration so banking, utilities and health cover can follow.
How Turkey treats your used household goods.
Turkey allows people transferring their normal residence into the country to import used household goods and personal effects with relief from import duty, provided the goods are genuinely used and the move is tied to credible evidence of settling. For a move from France the file is built around a Turkish tax number, the vergi numarasi, a residence permit application or your status as a returning citizen, an address that matches your rental contract or title deed, and a clear itemized inventory.
This corridor carries a particular feature: alongside French nationals there is a large community of people with Turkish roots in France who are moving home. For Turkish passport holders the relief carries its own condition, namely having lived abroad for a continuous period, commonly understood as more than two years with limited time spent back in Turkey. If that describes you, gather evidence of your residence in France, such as your titre de sejour or carte nationale records and employment history, well before you ship.
A few categories carry their own rules regardless. Vehicles are treated separately and are complex and often costly to import, so many people sell before they leave. Alcohol and tobacco beyond small personal quantities, firearms, and certain electronics can attract duty or controls. Many movers appoint a customs broker in Turkey under a narrow power of attorney with sworn translations so the clearance at the Istanbul terminals runs smoothly.
Keep a clear, valued inventory beyond what customs strictly asks for, because it also protects you on the insurance side if anything is lost or damaged on the sea leg.
The routes in for this corridor.
People moving from France to Turkey split between returning Turkish citizens who need no visa and others coming for work, retirement, family or on income. Each route is summarised in two sentences. None of this is immigration advice, so confirm the current rules before you rely on them.
The short term residence permit, the kisa donem ikamet, covers foreign nationals living in Turkey on income, owning a home, or staying for an extended period. You apply through the Presidency of Migration Management and it is the usual route for French nationals settling without a local job.
Many movers on this corridor hold Turkish citizenship and need no residence permit, though they still complete address registration and obtain a tax number. Returning citizens should keep evidence of their years lived in France for the customs relief.
A work permit is sponsored by a Turkish employer and processed through the Ministry of Labour, with the residence right flowing from it. It suits people moving for a job rather than independent means.
Family members of a Turkish citizen or permit holder can apply for family residence, and buying property, common along the coast, can support a short term residence permit. The relationship or the property drives the paperwork.
How to pick a mover for this route, without the guesswork.
We do not rank or recommend individual companies. We teach you the criteria that separate a safe international move from an expensive mistake, then put your request in front of vetted movers who run this lane.
Look first for membership of FIDI or IAM, the two international moving networks whose members are audited for financial stability and quality. A mover that runs the France to Turkey lane regularly will know how to route a container out of Marseille or Fos, the clearance routine at the Istanbul terminals, and how to coordinate with a broker so your goods are not held while paperwork catches up.
Insist on a binding pre move survey, in person or by video, so the quote reflects your actual volume rather than a guess. Ask exactly what the price includes: packing and materials, the sea freight, Turkish customs clearance, the onward road delivery, and any long carry or stairs where a truck cannot reach the door in an older building.
Compare like with like. Get two or three quotes on the same scope and the same dates, check each carries proper transit insurance with a clear claims process, and read recent reviews from other movers on routes between France and Turkey. The cheapest headline number is rarely the cheapest move once you add what was left out.
Questions people ask about this move.
How much does it cost to move from France to Turkey?
As an indicative 2026 range, a one bedroom home runs roughly 2,600 to 7,500 euros and a two to three bedroom home roughly 4,500 to 14,000 euros door to door, depending on volume, whether you share or take sole use of a container, the season and the onward delivery distance in Turkey.
How long does shipping from France to Turkey take?
A sea container from Marseille or Fos to the Istanbul terminals is usually about two to four weeks in transit across the Mediterranean, plus booking, packing and customs clearance at each end. An overland road haul is around eight days to two weeks but is priced by the truck.
Do I pay duty on my furniture moving to Turkey?
People transferring their residence can usually import used household goods with relief from import duty, but Turkish passport holders must have lived abroad for a continuous period, commonly more than two years, to qualify. Verify the current rules for your status before you ship.
Can I bring my car from France to Turkey?
A vehicle is treated separately from household goods and importing one into Turkey is complex and often costly, so many people sell before they leave. Confirm the current position if you are set on bringing one.
What is the vergi numarasi and why do I need it?
The vergi numarasi is the Turkish tax number, available from a local tax office. You need it to apply for a residence permit, open a bank account, and clear your household goods, so get it early.