Become a French citizen. Passports are issued by the country you're a citizen of.
Being French. You can claim French Citizenship if at least one of your parents is French, or in some cases French-born. The requirements are different according to the agreements and treaties between France and your home country. Any French consulate or French Embassy abroad will provide you with the list of requirements.
If you have a green card and have lived in the US for at least five years; then apply for American citizenship and become a dual citizen of France and the US. Why giving up your French passport!?* If you are just a French citizen and do not live in the US, thinking about just exchanging the two nationalities with eachother, the answers is no.
You must always use a valid American passport when entering and departing the US even if you are a dual citizen.
The best to do is to contact the Mairie (town Hall) of the city you are living in. If you are not in France, and got married, contact the French Embassy.To get a french passport requires to get the French nalionality.Formalities can be different and depend on the native country of your husband.I think, but I am not sure of that, marriage can give the nationality to a foreign husband (or wife) but formalities have to be made (medical examination ....)But take care, France has a strict legislation about "white marriages" (Mariages blancs).A white marriage is a marriage contracted just for a foreigner to get the French nationality. And they are punished by law.
Yes, though you have to be still married and that many formalities have to be taken, you are legally allowed to obtain a French passport. You should check at your town's Town Hall or French Consulate.
A visa is not required as France is a VWP member country, but a valid passport would still be required.
Passports are issued by the country where you LIVE, not where your dad was from. If you were born in, or live in France, you will get a French passport to travel internationally. If you are a US citizen, to travel abroad you will get a US passport, whether or not your father was born in the US, France, or Mars... If your father is a French citizen and you are under 18, you're entitled to a dual citizenship, and passports from both countries. Some countries ask you to choose one or the other at 18. I do not believe the US or France are among these. You might check with the French consulate in your area.
A delay of five years is quite common before acquiring French citizenship after marriage. You have to be granted French citizenship before applying for a French passport, and this is not at all automatic. To discourage bogus unions, the French are asking for proof of a long-term common life, plus evidence of integration into mainstream society (i.e. speaking French, working, etc..).
It is possible only for a person whose father or mother has / had French citizenship, or under special conditions if the applicant is born in France.
If you have a French Passport, you might require a US visa to travel to Jersey.
Citizen in French is spelled "citoyen."
French passports are for French nationals. If your father holds French citizenship - which is possible from the fact he was born on a French territory, but not automatic - you can in turn apply for French citizenship. It is very unlikely that you could get French citizenship if your father isn't himself French. If he his, that will not be granted automatically either. To size up your chances, contact the French embassy or consulate in your home country.