CEFR B2 French Explained: Upper Intermediate / Professional Fluency [2026 Guide]
What is CEFR B2 in French? See what B2 learners can do, how B2 maps to Quebec Level 7-8, the DELF B2 exam, and why B2 is the workplace gold standard.
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CEFR B2 French Explained: Upper Intermediate / Professional Fluency
Quick answer: CEFR B2 is upper intermediate — the level at which a learner can interact with a degree of fluency and spontaneity that makes regular interaction with native speakers possible without strain. It's the most commonly required workplace minimum in Quebec.
Are you at B2? Take our free French placement test — get your CEFR + Quebec score in 10 minutes.
What a B2 French Learner Can Do
At B2, you can:
- Understand the main ideas of complex text on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in your field
- Interact with a degree of fluency and spontaneity that makes regular interaction with native speakers quite possible
- Produce clear, detailed text on a wide range of subjects
- Explain a viewpoint on a topical issue, giving the advantages and disadvantages of various options
Still difficult at B2:
- Subtle humour, fast-paced native banter, very specialized technical content
- Long-form professional writing with sophisticated argumentation
- Idiomatic expressions across all registers
- Following dense oral content (radio debates, court proceedings)
How B2 Maps to Other Scales
| CEFR | Quebec Francisation Scale | DELF/DALF | TCF Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| B2 | Levels 7–8 | DELF B2 | ~500–599 |
In Quebec, B2 maps to Levels 7–8. Level 7 is the entry of B2; Level 8 is consolidated B2. See our detailed Level 7 French Quebec equivalent guide.
Why B2 Is the Workplace Gold Standard
B2 is the practical minimum for most professional roles in Quebec because:
- Bill 96 compliance: Many roles requiring "knowledge of French" in regulated sectors are interpreted at B2 or higher
- Client-facing positions: Customer service, account management, sales typically require B2
- Office and administrative roles: HR, executive assistance, project coordination
- Quebec immigration: B2 is often the threshold for selection grids in skilled-worker programs
- Professional licensing: Many Quebec professional orders accept B2 as proof of working French
Official B2 Exams
- DELF B2: Lifetime certificate. Widely accepted for university admission, immigration, and employment in Quebec.
- TCF: Score range ~500–599 corresponds to B2.
- TEFAQ: Scores 8–9 in oral modules typically map to B2.
How Long Does B2 Take?
From zero, reaching B2 typically takes 600–800 hours of guided practice. From B1, the jump to B2 typically takes another 200–300 hours (12–18 months part-time, faster with workplace immersion).
How to Move from B2 to C1
The B2 → C1 transition is famously difficult because C1 requires nuance, not just fluency:
- Heavy reading of authentic material — newspapers, government documents, professional literature
- Long-form writing with feedback — reports, formal emails, presentations
- Diverse accents and registers — Quebec French, France French, Belgian, African
- Idiomatic expressions and register-switching — formal vs. informal, written vs. spoken
Conversaflex's AI tutor supports this stage with industry-specific scenarios and feedback on register, idioms, and complex grammar.

