Does speaking French on the phone make you a little nervous? You are absolutely not alone.
When I recently asked my French-learning community whether phone French made them panic, the response was something else. People said they’d rather drive somewhere than make a call. That they write a full script beforehand. That they let it ring and hope it stops.
And honestly? I completely understand why.
Why Speaking French on the Phone Feels So Much Harder
When you’re chatting face-to-face in French, you have so many clues working in your favour — facial expressions, gestures, lip reading, reassuring nods. You can pause naturally without it feeling awkward.
On the phone, every single one of those disappears.
It’s just you, and the voice at the other end — often speaking faster than you’d like.
But here’s what I really want you to hear:
Speaking French on the phone isn’t hard because your French is bad. It’s hard because it requires a specific skillset that most learners are never explicitly taught.
(If you’ve ever completely frozen when a French person speaks to you, I wrote about exactly why that happens — and what to do about it — in this post.)
And skills can be learned.
The Secret: Phone French Has Patterns
Most French phone calls follow very predictable patterns. There are standard opening lines, standard ways of asking someone to repeat themselves, and standard expressions for tricky moments.
Once you know those patterns, your brain stops panicking — because it has a plan.
Here are some of the most useful ones.
Starting the Call
- Allô ? — Hello? (when answering, or checking someone is there)
- Bonjour, [your name] à l’appareil. — Hello, [your name] speaking.
- Je voudrais parler à [name], s’il vous plaît. — I’d like to speak to [name], please.
When You Don’t Understand
These are your best friends when speaking French on the phone:
- Pardon, vous pouvez répéter, s’il vous plaît ? — Sorry, could you repeat that?
- Pouvez-vous parler plus lentement, s’il vous plaît ? — Could you speak more slowly?
- Je n’ai pas bien compris. — I didn’t quite understand.
When the Line Is Bad
- Je vous entends mal. — I can’t hear you very well.
- Ça coupe. — The line keeps cutting out.
- La connexion est mauvaise. — The connection is bad.
A Quick Word on French Numbers
If there’s one thing that causes extra stress when speaking French on the phone, it’s numbers coming at you fast.
My top tips:
Write as you listen — don’t try to process the whole number in your head first. Jot each part down as you hear it.
Read numbers back — this is completely normal and expected.
Ask them to slow down — people will not mind at all. They’d far rather repeat slowly than have to sort out a misunderstanding later.
3 Tips for Preparing Before a French Phone Call
A little preparation goes a long way when speaking French on the phone.
1. Know your opening line. Having “Bonjour, [your name] à l’appareil” ready before you dial can reduce that first-second panic considerably.
2. Keep your rescue phrases to hand. Write them on a sticky note if you need to. “Pouvez-vous répéter ?” and “Pouvez-vous parler plus lentement ?” are the two most important.
3. Have pen and paper ready. Especially for numbers, times, and names.
It’s a Skill – And You Can Learn It
Confidence when speaking French on the phone is not something you either have or you don’t. It builds with practice, and it starts with knowing the right phrases.
As the French say: Qui n’avance pas, recule. If you don’t move forwards, you move backwards.
You’re already moving forwards by reading this.
Want to Practise Speaking French on the Phone — Live?
If this post has resonated with you, I’d love to invite you to join our brand new live workshop:
Don’t Hang Up! — From Call Avoidance to Call Confidence
Judith and I are running three live Zoom sessions at the end of March, designed specifically for learners who find phone French stressful.
- Session 1 — Mon 30th March: Starting and ending calls, rescue phrases, signal problems
- Session 2 — Tues 31st March: French numbers, spelling names, messages
- Session 3 — Weds 1st April: Real-life calls — doctors, restaurants, deliveries, automated messages
All sessions run 2–3.15pm UK / 3–4.15pm FR. Replay access included.
Early Bird Bonus: The first 10 to sign up receive a free 10-minute one-to-one practice session with Judith.
£59.99 (Café members receive a special reduced price — details inside the Café)
Find out more and reserve your place here
I would love to see you there. 🇫🇷
À bientôt, Frannie x

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