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Grammar

En, Au, Aux: French Prepositions for Countries

June 4, 2026 FrenchNow 5 minute read

En, Au, Aux: French Prepositions for Countries
Table of Contents
  1. The whole rule in four lines
  2. En — feminine countries (and vowel-starters)
  3. Au — masculine countries
  4. Aux — and the “going to the US” trap
  5. À — cities are the easy ones
  6. The rebel six: -e countries that are secretly masculine
  7. Continents, and saying where you’re from

In English you reuse one tiny word for everywhere you go: you fly to France, to Japan, to the US, to Paris. French refuses to be that lazy. The word for “to” or “in” a country changes depending on whether the country is feminine, masculine, or plural. The moment you introduce yourself, plan a trip, or answer “where are you from?”, you need this rule — and getting it right is one of the clearest signals that you actually control French gender.

The good news: there are only four options, and a quick lookup table covers almost everything you’ll ever say. Let’s nail the rule, then deal with the handful of traps that trip up nearly every learner.

The whole rule in four lines

Here’s the entire system. Notice that “to” and “in” are the same word in French — je vais en France (going to) and je suis en France (am in) use the identical preposition. English’s to/in split simply doesn’t exist here.

FrenchEnglishWhy
Je vais en France. I'm going to France. feminine country
On est au Japon. We're in Japan. masculine country
Je vais aux États-Unis. I'm going to the US. plural country
J'habite à Paris. I live in Paris. city

The mechanic underneath is simple: au is just à + le squished together, and aux is à + les. So you’re really saying “to the [masculine] country” or “to the [plural] country.” Feminine and vowel-starting countries are the exception — they drop the article entirely and switch to en. If contractions like au and aux still feel mysterious, the French articles guide explains exactly how à + le becomes au.

En — feminine countries (and vowel-starters)

Most countries ending in -e are feminine, and they all take en. No article ever appears: it’s en France, never “en la France.”

FrenchEnglish
en France to/in France
en Espagne to/in Spain
en Italie to/in Italy
en Allemagne to/in Germany
en Chine to/in China

There’s one extra rule that overrides everything else: if a country starts with a vowel, use en no matter what its gender is. That’s purely for smoother pronunciation. So even though Iran and Iraq are masculine, you say en Iran and en Irakau Iran would sound clunky. Same goes for en Israël and en Afghanistan.

Au — masculine countries

Countries that don’t end in -e are generally masculine and take au (= à + le).

FrenchEnglish
au Canada to/in Canada
au Japon to/in Japan
au Portugal to/in Portugal
au Brésil to/in Brazil
au Maroc to/in Morocco

Quebec is technically a province, but it behaves like a masculine country: Martine habite au Québec. The verb habiter (“to live somewhere”) is your best friend for practising all of this, since you’ll constantly say where you and others live.

Aux — and the “going to the US” trap

A small set of country names are grammatically plural — their article is les — so they take aux (= à + les). Gender is irrelevant here; plural wins.

FrenchEnglish
aux États-Unis to/in the United States
aux Pays-Bas to/in the Netherlands
aux Philippines to/in the Philippines
aux Maldives to/in the Maldives

This is the single most common intermediate mistake. Because the country is les États-Unis, “to the US” is aux États-Unis — never à États-Unis and never au États-Unis. And spell it properly: capital É, the accent, and the hyphen all matter. If the country’s name starts with les, your preposition is aux.

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À — cities are the easy ones

After all that, cities are a relief. They take à with no gender and no article to worry about.

FrenchEnglish
à Paris to/in Paris
à Tokyo to/in Tokyo
à Montréal to/in Montreal
à Rome to/in Rome

The only wrinkle: a few cities carry an article inside their name, which then contracts. Cairo is le Caire, so “in Cairo” is au Caire; Le Havre gives au Havre; and The Hague (La Haye) stays à La Haye. These are rare — just memorise them when you meet them.

The rebel six: -e countries that are secretly masculine

Here’s the trap that punishes anyone who over-trusts the “-e means feminine” shortcut. A handful of countries end in -e but are stubbornly masculine, so they take au, not en:

FrenchEnglish
au Mexique to/in Mexico
au Cambodge to/in Cambodia
au Mozambique to/in Mozambique
au Zimbabwe to/in Zimbabwe

Think of them as the “rebel six”: le Mexique, le Cambodge, le Mozambique, le Zimbabwe, le Belize, le Suriname. Say au Mexique a few times out loud and the wrong version (en Mexique) will start to sound off.

Continents, and saying where you’re from

Every continent is feminine, so they all take en: en Europe, en Afrique, en Asie, en Australie. Islands are genuinely irregular — à Cuba, en Corse, aux Maldives — so treat those as vocabulary, not a rule.

Once you can say where you’re going, the natural follow-up is where you’re from, and it reuses the exact same gender logic with de:

FrenchEnglish
Je viens de France. I'm from France. feminine → de
Je reviens du Japon. I'm back from Japan. masculine → du
une lettre des États-Unis a letter from the US plural → des

Feminine and vowel countries use de (d’Italie before a vowel), masculine countries use du (= de + le), and plural countries use des (= de + les). The verb venir (“to come”) is the one you’ll pair with these constantly.

You now know the whole machine: pick en, au, aux, or à by the country’s gender and number, and the “from” forms fall out for free. Next time you talk about a trip, lean on aller plus your new preposition — and if you want to say where you’re headed soon, the near future with aller is the perfect next step. Bonne route !

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Question 1 of 5
  1. How do you say “I'm going to Japan”?

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