France mixes branded stations — chiefly TotalEnergies — with supermarket forecourts from Carrefour, Leclerc, Intermarché and Auchan that are usually the cheapest option. Autoroute (A-road) stations are convenient but carry a clear price premium, so many drivers plan fills at supermarket sites just off the motorway.
Low-emission zones (ZFE) in Paris and other large cities affect which vehicles can drive in. EV charging has expanded rapidly, with high-power hubs along the autoroute network operated by several providers.
What you'll find at the pump
Sans plomb 95 (E10 and E5), 98, and diesel (gazole). Supermarket stations tend to be cheapest; autoroute stations are the most expensive. Check the E10 compatibility of older cars.
EV charging in France
CCS is the main DC standard with Type 2 for AC. Autoroute charging hubs make long trips practical, and urban on-street and car-park charging is growing quickly.
Prices are added when reported by drivers or verified sources, always with a timestamp. Refuelia never shows invented numbers — where data isn't available yet, it says so. See France on the map →