CEFR B1 French Explained: Intermediate Level Skills [2026 Guide]

What is CEFR B1 in French? See what B1 learners can do, how B1 maps to Quebec Level 6, official B1 exams (DELF B1), and the path to B2 fluency.

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CEFR B1 French Explained: Intermediate Level Skills

Quick answer: CEFR B1 is the intermediate level — a learner who can deal with most situations likely to arise while travelling in French-speaking areas, can describe experiences and events, and produce simple connected text on familiar topics.

Are you at B1? Take our free French placement test — get your CEFR + Quebec score in 10 minutes.

What a B1 French Learner Can Do

At B1, you can:

  • Understand the main points of clear standard input on familiar matters regularly encountered at work, school, leisure
  • Deal with most situations likely to arise while travelling in a French-speaking area
  • Produce simple connected text on familiar topics
  • Describe experiences, events, dreams, hopes, and ambitions
  • Briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans

Still difficult at B1:

  • Following rapid native speech in unfamiliar contexts
  • Producing professional writing (long emails, formal reports)
  • Handling unexpected, abstract, or technical conversations
  • Catching idiomatic expressions and humour

How B1 Maps to Other Scales

CEFRQuebec Francisation ScaleDELF/DALFTCF Score
B1Levels 5–6DELF B1~400–499

In Quebec, B1 maps to Levels 5–6. Level 6 is the first level at which workers can function reasonably independently in French-speaking workplaces.

Official B1 Exams

  • DELF B1: Lifetime certificate testing all four skills. Widely accepted for university admission, immigration, and employment.
  • TCF: Score range ~400–499 corresponds to B1.
  • TEFAQ: Score 7 in oral modules typically maps to B1.

How Long Does B1 Take?

From zero, reaching B1 typically takes 350–400 hours of guided practice (roughly 9–12 months full-time, or 18–24 months part-time).

B1 in the Workplace

B1 is the threshold for many internal-only roles (no client contact) but most Quebec employers require B1+ or B2 (Level 7) for client-facing positions. See Level 7 French Quebec equivalent.

How to Move from B1 to B2

The B1 → B2 jump is one of the harder transitions. What helps:

  1. Workplace immersion — using French daily accelerates progress dramatically
  2. Targeted feedback on grammar and register — passive exposure isn't enough at this stage
  3. Wider vocabulary including abstract terms — push from concrete topics to ideas, plans, and abstractions
  4. Long-form content — podcasts, business articles, professional writing

Conversaflex's AI tutor is built specifically for this stage with industry-specific scenarios and detailed feedback.

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