Tarn-et-Garonne is one of the smaller French departments, created by Napoleon in 1808 from parts of neighbouring departments. Montauban, the prefecture, is a handsome brick-built city on the Tarn river, known as the birthplace of the painter Ingres. The city's Place Nationale, a double-arcaded square, is one of the oldest in southern France.
The department's economy is heavily agricultural: fruit orchards (particularly Chasselas grapes from Moissac, which have AOC status), melons, garlic, and cereals. Moissac's abbey cloister, a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Routes of Santiago de Compostela, contains some of the finest Romanesque sculpture in Europe. The population sits around 265,000. The Tarn and Garonne rivers converge near the department's western edge.
Tarn-et-Garonne is one of the smaller French departments, created by Napoleon in 1808 from parts of neighbouring departments. Montauban, the prefecture, is a handsome brick-built city on the Tarn river, known as the birthplace of the painter Ingres. The city's Place Nationale, a double-arcaded square, is one of the oldest in southern France.
The department's economy is heavily agricultural: fruit orchards (particularly Chasselas grapes from Moissac, which have AOC status), melons, garlic, and cereals. Moissac's abbey cloister, a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Routes of Santiago de Compostela, contains some of the finest Romanesque sculpture in Europe. The population sits around 265,000. The Tarn and Garonne rivers converge near the department's western edge.
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Escort services are legal and explicitly regulated by law.
This reflects national law. Local/municipal rules or enforcement can differ; always follow local regulations.
France moved to a buyer-penalty system in 2016, joining a small group of European countries with this approach. The buyer risks a fine of EUR 1,500 (EUR 3,750 if repeated). The person selling is not criminalised. Proxenetisme (pimping) and human trafficking are treated severely, with base sentences of seven years and fines of EUR 150,000, escalating for organised crime involvement. Enforcement is split between the Police Nationale (cities) and the Gendarmerie (countryside). The OCRTEH leads centralised anti-trafficking efforts.
Content about Tarn-et-Garonne on this page was sourced by Escortservice.com from publicly available data. No brokering, introductions, or compliance checking is performed.
The legal position on online advertising is ambiguous. While soliciting was decriminalised in 2016, platforms that systematically facilitate prostitution may face prosecution for proxenetisme.
Buyers of sexual services in Tarn-et-Garonne, as in all of France, face a fine of EUR 1,500 for a first offence and EUR 3,750 for repeat offences under the 2016 Nordic-model law.
The Police Nationale handles enforcement in urban areas of Tarn-et-Garonne, while the Gendarmerie covers rural zones. Nationally, the OCRTEH coordinates anti-trafficking operations.