French school holidays are the periods when schools in France, and all the pupils in them, have a holiday. The dates are fixed nationally by the Ministry of Education for a period of three years. Holiday dates are given as a Saturday date "after classes", as some schools have lessons on Saturday mornings, and return on a Monday morning.
The fixed dates can lead to over-crowding in tourist resorts such as the Mediterranean coast and the ski resorts, and price increases and availability problems in travel and accommodations. To alleviate this problem, holiday schedules for the "winter" and "spring" holidays in February and April, respectively, are staggered by dividing the country into three zones. Nevertheless, the synchronized school holiday schedules still cause some crowding effects as families head to popular holiday locations, especially in the summer at the beginning and end of the months in July and August when the traffic jams are a regular feature of the news bulletins.
The summer holidays officially begins in early July[1] for all state schools and all students, whatever their age or type of school start their new school year at the beginning of September. Teachers return on 1 September, pupils usually on 2 September, but that might vary depending on how the weekend falls.
All Saints holidays start on the last weekend of October before 1 November and last two weeks since 2012 (before it lasted a week and a half).
Christmas holidays last two weeks encompassing Christmas and New Year. They are always full weeks; if, as happened for example in 2011/2012, the two weeks would have meant returning to school on Monday 1 January the return date is Tuesday 2 January.
Winter holidays last two weeks and are distributed in France depending on zones between the second week of February and the first week of March.
Easter holidays last two weeks and are distributed in France depending on zones between the second week of April and the first week of May.
The three zones (A, B and C) dictate when a school at a particular location will have its holiday. The zones are not contiguous areas of France, but are designed to split the population evenly.
Zone A includes Caen, Rennes, and Nantes in the North West, Clermont-Ferrand, Lyon, Grenoble and Montpellier in the South, and Nancy-Metz in the North East.