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Send an emailBook NowFor many French learners, one situation feels surprisingly stressful: ordering food in France. You arrive at the restaurant. The waiter walks over. Suddenly, every French word you have ever learned disappears from your brain.
The good news?
You do not need perfect French to eat out confidently in France.
In fact, most restaurant interactions are short, repetitive, and much simpler than learners expect. Once you understand a few key expressions — and a little French food culture — restaurants become one of the best places to improve your French naturally.
And honestly?
Some of your best memories in France will probably happen around a table.
Before menus. Before pronunciation. Before grammar. There is one thing French people notice immediately: whether or not you say bonjour. When entering a café, a bakery, a restaurant or even a small shop, always begin with: “Bonjour”. In France, greeting people properly is considered basic politeness.
Walking into a restaurant and immediately saying: “A table for two?” without saying bonjour first can feel surprisingly rude to locals. One small word changes the entire atmosphere. And when leaving, a simple: “Merci, au revoir !” matters just as much.
French politeness often works through these small rituals.
One thing surprises many visitors quickly: French restaurants usually feel slower. And that is intentional. In many countries, restaurants focus on efficiency and speed.
In France, meals are often seen as a moment to relax, talk, enjoy food properly and spend time together. Nobody rushes you. In fact, waiters often leave customers alone on purpose. Foreign visitors sometimes think: “The service is slow.” But in France, constantly interrupting the table can actually feel impolite.
The idea is simple: you are there to enjoy the moment. Not to eat as quickly as possible and leave.
It is completely normal in France to spend two hours at lunch, an entire evening at dinner or thirty minutes simply drinking coffee on a terrace.
At some point, you realise French meals are not only about food. They are also about time.
Once inside, you usually do not need complicated sentences. Most French people simply say: “Bonjour, on est deux.” “Hello, we are two.”
Or: “Est-ce que vous avez une table ?” “Do you have a table?”
Simple. Direct. Natural.
You quickly notice that real spoken French sounds much less formal than textbook dialogues.
Another cultural surprise:
French meals often follow a structure.
Traditionally, lunch or dinner includes:
And yes: cheese is often served before dessert. Not after.
For many French people, cheese is not just food. It is practically a national treasure. Bread also plays an important role. A basket of bread often appears automatically on the table before you even ask for it.
Many learners are taught expressions like: “Je voudrais…”
Which is perfectly correct.
But in everyday restaurants, French people often use something more natural sounding: “Je vais prendre…”
Literally: “I’m going to take…”
But in context: “I’ll have…”
For example:
— “Vous désirez ?”
— “Je vais prendre le plat du jour.”
Or:
“Je vais prendre une pizza.”
Once you start listening carefully in cafés and restaurants, you hear this expression everywhere.
One expression you will see constantly in France is: “Le plat du jour”
Literally: “The dish of the day.”
Many restaurants offer a daily special that changes regularly depending on season, local ingredients, the chef and market products. The plat du jour is one of the best things on the menu.
This surprises many foreigners.
In France, meat is often cooked less than in English-speaking countries.
When ordering steak, you may hear:
And yes — if you order steak in France, it may arrive redder than expected. That is completely normal. Many French people consider well-done steak slightly tragic. If you prefer your meat fully cooked, simply ask for: “Bien cuit”. Nobody will mind. But you may receive a tiny look of sadness from the chef.
At some point, there will probably be something on the menu you do not understand. That is completely normal. French menus can confuse even advanced learners, especially in mountain restaurants where dishes are often regional. Luckily, you only need a few simple expressions.
“What is it?”
Very short. Very useful.
You can also ask:
“What do you recommend?”
French waiters often appreciate this question, especially in smaller local restaurants.
And if you have dietary restrictions:
“Is it vegetarian?”
Simple questions are often the most effective.
Many visitors are surprised by two things in French restaurants.
First: Bread is usually included. You normally do not pay extra for it.
Second: Tap water is free. You can simply ask: “Une carafe d’eau, s’il vous plaît.” “A jug of tap water, please.”
This is completely normal in France. Almost everybody does it. You are not expected to buy bottled water unless you want to. For many foreigners, this feels almost revolutionary.
Another classic tourist surprise: “Un café” in France usually means: a small espresso, not a giant takeaway coffee. Many visitors order: “Un café” expecting something large… and receive a tiny espresso cup instead. French cafés are traditionally designed for sitting, talking and slowing down… not walking around with enormous coffees the size of flowerpots. If you want coffee with milk, you are more likely to order: “Un café crème”
And after lunch?
Many French people stay sitting for coffee, dessert, conversation or all three together. Long lunches are almost a cultural institution.
If the food is good?
“That was delicious!”
A sentence every restaurant loves hearing.
If you need something during the meal:
“Can I have…”
Simple. Polite. Extremely useful.
And at some point during the evening, you will probably hear the waiter ask:
Literally: “How was it?”
Usually meaning: “Did everything go well?”
A very French restaurant question.
One cultural difference surprises many visitors: in France, the waiter usually does not bring the bill automatically. You normally ask for it yourself when you are ready. The standard phrase is:
“The bill, please.”
And if you want to pay by card:
“Can we pay by card?”
Easy. Natural. Useful everywhere.
Tipping culture in France is very different from countries like the United States. In restaurants, service is already included in the price. That means huge tips are not expected. Most people leave nothing extra, leave small change or round up the bill slightly. Leaving a few euros for excellent service is appreciated, but absolutely not obligatory.
Restaurants are perfect for practising real spoken French because the conversations are predictable and repetitive.
You hear the same things constantly: greetings, polite expressions, questions, numbers, food vocabulary, everyday reactions. And little by little, your brain starts recognising patterns automatically. At first, you mentally translate everything. Then one day, without really noticing, something changes. You stop rehearsing sentences in your head before speaking. You simply sit down, order naturally, ask questions, laugh, and enjoy the moment. That is usually the moment learners realise they are no longer just studying French. They are starting to live in it.
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