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-   -   French breathalyzer law (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/french-breathalyzer-law-940215/)

kerouac Oct 2nd, 2012 09:45 AM

Oh, I've been checked twice so far, with a zero reading both times (once in the Somme, once on rue du Louvre in Paris).

My Dia is still selling the breathalyzers for 2 euros. I don't know if anybody is buying them.

StCirq Oct 2nd, 2012 09:53 AM

My neighbor and I were pulled over on our way to market in Le Bugue at least five years ago and made to souffler. We both passed the test just fine, but it was a bit unnerving.

PalenQ Oct 2nd, 2012 11:07 AM

Call your reliable sources, Pal>

well yeh that's why I am asking kerouac, a local who has always proven to be accurate.

Pvoyageuse Oct 2nd, 2012 11:10 AM

"My Dia is still selling the breathalyzers for 2 euros"

€1 at my pharmacy.

kerouac Oct 2nd, 2012 11:48 AM

Yes, the price should be 1€ -- I completely agree. But in July there were some people willing to pay 10€ online before even arriving in France.

hetismij2 Oct 2nd, 2012 11:56 AM

I have two in my car. I ordered them online for €2 for the two. I decided to get them early in case they became hard to find. As a visitor in a Dutch car I can imagine I would be a popular target for a gendarme looking to boost their numbers.

I have no problem with doing an official breathalyser test. This just seems like a money making action, by the government and the approved manufacturer, particularly aimed at other Europeans visiting France.

Pvoyageuse Oct 2nd, 2012 12:10 PM

"This just seems like a money making action, by the government and the approved manufacturer, particularly aimed at other Europeans visiting France."

There are 38 million cars in France. I doubt the government counts on foreign tourists more than on French citizens. When reflecting jackets became compulsory in Spain long before France, we didn't accuse the Spanish government !

PalenQ Oct 3rd, 2012 01:01 PM

As a visitor in a Dutch car I can imagine I would be a popular target for a gendarme looking to boost their numbers>

yes yes indeedy - I often stay in Orleans right near a Douaniers sp?) or Customs office, which is on a very busy main road - the N 20 - and they have road checks and I have seen twice at least cars with NL plates not only being pulled over but drug dogs sniffing all around. Leave your pot at home!

MaisiePlague Oct 3rd, 2012 01:56 PM

If you're coming from the UK you can pick them up for a couple of quid each on the ferry.

FrenchMystiqueTours2 Oct 3rd, 2012 02:42 PM

They are still nowhere to be found in the Val de Marne. There are only 2 manufacturers, one French and one South-African. I was once at a pharmacy and heard people buy expensive breathalizers after a long conversation with the pharmacist explaining they weren't from one of the two officially approved manufacturers but that it wouldn't be a problem. I still have my two expired ones from long before a law was even discussed.

kerouac Oct 4th, 2012 09:10 AM

I really can only imagine any of the personal devices ever being used on a Saturday night leaving a provincial disco -- and only if an argument breaks out among the people sharing the car. "You're in no condition to drive!" "Yes, I am!" etc. And in such a car, they would probably need to have 3 or 4 of them on hand to settle the discussion.

In every other car on the road, the devices will just sit in the glove box for years to show to the gendarmerie if necessary.

Carlux Oct 8th, 2012 04:18 AM

Exact.

Michael Oct 8th, 2012 07:38 AM

I have friends in the States who use them regularly when they attend a wine tasting. It's a question of habit.

ribeirasacra Oct 8th, 2012 07:50 AM

Friend got me some on a ferry from UK to France. He said they are impossible to find in France.
Now I am "safe"when I go from Spain to NL!
The law and fines is about to become compulsory in a few weeks.

Pvoyageuse Oct 8th, 2012 08:06 AM

Kerouac : all discos (provincial or not) are legally obliged to have an electronic breathalyzer on the premises. No need to use your own.

kerouac Oct 8th, 2012 08:27 AM

Of course not, but the argument starts when they stagger to the car, not while they are still inside.

FrenchMystiqueTours2 Oct 8th, 2012 09:01 AM

The fines are postponed till March 2013 because of the difficulty finding breathalizers: http://www.leparisien.fr/societe/pas...12-2215865.php
I looked again this weekend and no stores near me had them. Kerouac, are those in your local Dia the approved type?

kerouac Oct 8th, 2012 11:03 PM

Yes, I recognized the box on the morning news announcing the delay.

rhon Oct 9th, 2012 01:46 AM

We were in France in April and May and had hoped to bring home some test kits as souvenirs for sons and son-in- law but did not see any. [ We are from Australia and have .05 limit.]

We have random breath testing here in Australia. On our last two trips to France we have leased a car and therefore have the distinctive red numberplate, so are easily identifiable as overseas tourists. Both trips we have come across police stopping cars and both times have been waved on. On our last trip, police were testing in the Aude region. All other cars were stopped and we were waved on. DH was a bit disappointed!!So perhaps the theory I have seen mentioned on forums that it is all about getting those foreign tourists is not the case??

Carlux Oct 9th, 2012 02:50 AM

I don't understand why there seems to be this feeling that this measure is 'all about getting those foreign tourists' It's applicable to EVERYONE driving in France, of whom tourists are a small part.

And it doesn't really have any connection to the ongoing and ever increasing crackdown on drinking and driving, where the police stop you and get you to blow into THEIR device. Except of course as one more measure to try to cut down traffic accidents and deaths (When we took our driving test in France in 1994, there were 9 000 people killed per year. Now it's under 5 000.)

Whether the fact of having two breathalyser tests in your car will have any effect is another question.


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