The 8th Signal Regiment () is a signal unit in the French Army. It is a part of the Signal Brigade.
Following the general mobilisation of 2 August 1914, the 8th Engineer Regiment had, by 30 September 1914, formed eight army telegraph companies, twenty-six corps or reserve group telegraph detachments, thirty telegraph detachments for isolated or reserve infantry divisions, and nine for cavalry divisions, as well as one telegraph and one radiotelegraph company in Morocco, for a total strength of about 12,000 men including 150 officers.
After the defeat of the French Army in 1940 many regiments were disbanded, including the 8th Engineer Regiment (many of whose personnel entered the French Resistance). The number âÂÂ8â reappears on 1 April 1946 at Fort Mont-Valérien with the formation of the 8th Signal Battalion. Exactly a year later, 1 April 1947, the battalion is transformed into the 8th Signal Regiment, inheriting the honors and traditions of the 24th Telegraph Sapper Battalion and 8th Engineer Regiment.