Best French Books for Babies and Toddlers To Buy in the UK

Best of music books, touch-and-feel books, vocabulary books with real photos in French

Time to read:

7–10 minutes
Best French Books for Babies and Toddlers To Buy in the UK

Why French books are the secret weapon you didn’t know you needed

You can speak French all day long to your baby… and still get absolutely nothing back but a blank stare and a soggy biscuit.

Then, slowly, something shifts. Words start landing, routines start sticking. One day your toddler casually says poisson at bath time, and you stand there, wondering if that was luck or if something is finally working. This is how bilingual language grows – through repetition, rhythm, and hearing the same words again and again.

And books are your secret weapon. Not because they’re “educational” (we’re all too tired for that), but because story time is one of the few moments your child is still, listening, and not attempting to lick the furniture. That’s your window. Use it in French.

These are the French books we keep reaching for at home. Available in the UK, and thoroughly tested by a small, highly opinionated human.

BookBest forAge Buy
Mon grand recueil de berceuses Bedtime routine1–3 yrsAmazon
Mes premières chansonsDaytime songs & giggles0–2 yrsAmazon
Promenade sous l’océanBaby’s first French book3–18 mAmazon
Regarde dans la forêtBaby’s first picture book in French0–18 mAmazon
Lift the Flap First FrenchToddler bilingual discovery2–4 yrsAmazon
100 First Words in FrenchToddler vocabulary1–3 yrsAmazon

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Best music books in French

This is the book you buy when you want your baby to go to sleep, and you don’t trust your own singing voice. Each page has a button that plays a classic French lullaby with female vocals. Beautifully sung. Calming. Dreamlike illustrations.

The genius of it is that the book does the French for you. You just press a button, dim the lights, and let it happen. Within two weeks, your child will recognise the songs. Within a month, they’ll be humming them. You’ll be humming them too. At 2am. Or into your cereal.

Perfect for: parents who want French in the bedtime routine without performing a one-person concert every night. One note: no volume control, so if your baby presses the button at 6am you’ll be awake. This is your warning.


Six classic French children’s songs. Six buttons. One toddler who will press every button, all at once, repeatedly, with the energy of someone who has never been tired in their life.

And that’s great, actually. Every button press is another round of language exposure. The songs are sung clearly with full vocals, lyrics are printed on the page so you can follow along, and the whole thing is compact enough to live on the buggy strap permanently.

Perfect for: active play, morning routines, or any time you need a French soundtrack that isn’t you desperately Googling the words to Frère Jacques because it sounds so familiar.


Best French board books for babies

Ten pages. Sliders that move. Jellyfish. Dolphins. One baby who will absolutely squeal.

This is the book you hand to a six-month-old and watch as they figure out that the fish moves when they push the tab. The text is minimal, which means you are the narrator. You name the animals in French. Or English. Or whatever language you’ve got in you at that moment, because this book genuinely works in any language, and that’s rare.

Bonus: it’s thick, wipeable, and built to survive the sort of enthusiastic handling that destroys normal books in a week.

Perfect for: babies from about 4 months, bilingual families where you want flexibility on which language leads, and anyone who needs a present that looks like they tried very hard.

A little fox wanders through the woods and meets other animals. It’s a gorgeous, calm, beautifully illustrated story, and exactly what you need at 7pm when everyone is slightly feral.

Each double-page spread has one or two short, rhythmic sentences with tactile textures woven into the illustrations — fox fur, tree bark, autumn leaves. The kind of detail that makes babies stop and go oh. Then go back and touch it again. Language is landing the whole time, even when it looks like they’re just poking a fox.

The sentences are short and almost lullaby-like in rhythm, which means even parents whose French is running on fumes can read it aloud confidently. Your brain doesn’t need to be fully operational. The book does the heavy lifting.

Perfect for: babies from 6–12 months (and sometimes beyond), bedtime or wind-down reading, and anyone who wants a French book that feels like a proper story rather than a vocabulary exercise.


Best French vocabulary book for toddlers

Your toddler has entered the “what’s that?” phase. They want to know the word for everything. They will ask about the same object fourteen times in a row. This book is made for exactly that energy.

Real photographs of familiar objects — food, animals, toys, things around the house — each labelled in both French and English. There’s also a QR code that takes you to audio pronunciation, which is quietly brilliant for parents who want to get the sounds right without accidentally inventing their own dialect.

The move from page to real life happens fast. Read “pomme” on Tuesday, your toddler spots an apple on Wednesday and announces it in French at full volume. This is what winning looks like.

Perfect for: toddlers aged 1–3, families with one French-speaking parent, and parents whose French is functional but whose confidence needs a nudge.

Best French vocabulary book for toddlers

Each page covers a familiar slice of toddler life — mornings, getting dressed, family, emotions — with flaps that reveal the French and English words underneath. Lift one and you get the little “aha” moment: Je me réveille… I wake up. Then they lift it again. And again. Fourteen more times. Learning is happening, even if it doesn’t look like it.

Usborne also provides free audio on their website, so you can hear the phrases spoken by a native speaker, which is brilliant for parents who want correct pronunciation without the guesswork.

Perfect for: toddlers aged 2–4, families where one parent speaks French, and one doesn’t, families where French is not the native language, and anyone who wants a book that also counts as fine motor skills practice.

How to use these books if your French is… let’s say, a work in progress

You don’t need to be fluent. The music books sing for you. The slider books let you narrate freestyle. The vocabulary book has phonetics and a QR code.

What matters is consistency and warmth. Your child needs to hear French regularly and associate it with something good (you, cuddles, storytime, not flashcards). These books make that easy, even on the days when your French vocabulary peaks at “croissant.”

If you want more on building a French environment at home from day one, we’ve written a full guide here: How to set up a bilingual home environment for a newborn.

FAQ

Where can I buy French children’s books in the UK?
What age should I start reading French books to my baby?
Do bilingual books actually help children learn a language?
What are the best French board books for babies under one?

I earn a commission if you purchase through the links in this post, at no extra cost to you. I only recommend books I’ve personally reviewed.

About Author

Maria Ivanova is a bilingual parent raising a two-year-old in multiple languages in the UK. She’s not a qualified professional, and everything here comes from her real experience. The content provided here is for informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be considered professional advice. If you have concerns about your child’s language development or any developmental milestones, please consult with qualified professionals.

By reading this blog, you acknowledge that you are responsible for your own parenting decisions and that this site is not liable for any outcomes resulting from information shared here.

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