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Last updated: 28 April 2026
The new dismissal law in Finland 2026 represents the most significant shift in the country’s termination framework in over two decades. Amendments to the Employment Contracts Act that entered into force on 1 January 2026 replaced the longstanding “weighty grounds” requirement with a lower “proper reason” threshold for person-related dismissals, fundamentally altering the balance between employer flexibility and employee protection. Alongside this headline change, the government introduced adjustments to lay‑off notice rules, re‑employment obligations and proposals affecting fixed‑term contracts. For HR directors, general counsels and in‑house teams managing Finnish operations, understanding and operationalising these employment law changes in Finland 2026 is no longer optional, it is an immediate compliance priority.
This article is general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Employers should seek qualified legal counsel before acting on any information contained here.
The core message for employers is straightforward: the legal standard for terminating an employee on personal grounds has been lowered, but the procedural and documentation requirements remain demanding. A dismissal that meets the new “proper reason” test on substance can still be challenged, and overturned, if the employer’s process was deficient.
Three immediate actions define the employer response to the new dismissal law in Finland 2026. First, update internal HR policies and dismissal procedures to reference the “proper reason” standard and ensure every step is documented contemporaneously. Second, audit your fixed‑term contract portfolio for conversion risk under the evolving proposals. Third, review re‑employment obligation timelines and ensure your organisation’s post-layoff processes comply with the updated rules.
The practical checklist and sample wording later in this guide provide a framework for each of these actions. Industry observers expect the first wave of disputes under the new rules to reach Finnish courts by late 2026, making early compliance essential for limiting litigation exposure.
The Finnish Government announced amendments to the Employment Contracts Act that took effect on 1 January 2026, lowering the threshold for dismissal when an employee breaches their obligations. According to the Valtioneuvosto announcement and the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment (TEM), the previous requirement of “weighty grounds” (erityisen painava syy for summary dismissal; asiallinen ja painava syy, “proper and weighty reason” for ordinary termination) has been replaced by a “proper reason” (asiallinen syy) standard for person-related dismissals. This change applies to grounds based on the employee’s conduct or capability, not to collective redundancy grounds, which retain their existing framework.
In parallel, the government introduced staged changes to lay‑off notice and re‑employment obligations and put forward proposals affecting the use and renewal of fixed‑term employment contracts. The timeline below summarises the key dates and their practical impact on employers.
| Date | Change | Practical Employer Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | “Proper reason” replaces “weighty grounds” for person-related termination (Employment Contracts Act amendment) | Lower threshold for conduct- and capability-based dismissals; employers must strengthen documentation and procedural rigour |
| 1 January 2026 | Changes to lay‑off notice and re‑employment rules (staged implementation) | Adjust notice timelines and re‑employment offer procedures; verify applicability by contract type and employer size |
| 2026 (proposals under review) | Fixed‑term contract proposals and conversion triggers | Monitor legislative progress; audit fixed‑term workforce to avoid unintended permanent conversions |
Under the previous regime, an employer needed to demonstrate both that the reason for termination was “proper” and “weighty”, a dual requirement that, in practice, set a high bar. Courts frequently reinstated employees or awarded compensation where the employer could show misconduct but could not prove it rose to the level of “weighty.” The proper reason dismissal Finland standard effective from 1 January 2026 removes the “weighty” limb, leaving a single test: was there a proper reason connected to the employee’s person?
A proper reason may include serious or repeated breaches of employment duties, sustained underperformance after documented remedial measures, loss of trust caused by dishonest or negligent conduct, or a material change in the employee’s ability to perform the work. The amendment does not, however, eliminate the requirement to consider alternatives, redeployment, retraining or a written warning, before proceeding to dismissal. Employers who treat the lower threshold as a licence to dismiss without process will face the same litigation risks as before.
It is important to note that the threshold for summary dismissal, immediate termination without a notice period, remains distinct and was not lowered by the 2026 amendments. Summary dismissal still requires an especially serious breach that makes continuation of the employment relationship impossible.
The lowered threshold changes the legal test, but it does not change the procedural obligations that Finnish employment law imposes on employers. A termination of employment in Finland must still follow a structured process, and failure to do so remains the single most common basis for successful employee challenges. The following step-by-step process reflects best practice under the amended rules.
Employers who follow these seven steps and maintain a contemporaneous paper trail will be in the strongest position to defend a dismissal challenge. The dismissal checklist for HR Finland below distils these steps into a document-by-document framework.
| Document | Why It Is Needed | Retention Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Written investigation report | Demonstrates a fair and thorough inquiry into the conduct or performance issue | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
| Witness statements | Corroborates the employer’s findings and shows objectivity | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
| Performance records and appraisals | Establishes a documented history of underperformance or conduct issues | Duration of employment plus 5 years |
| Written warning(s) with proof of delivery | Shows the employee was put on notice and given an opportunity to improve | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
| Hearing minutes and employee response | Proves the statutory right to be heard was respected | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
| Record of alternatives considered | Demonstrates compliance with the obligation to explore redeployment or retraining | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
| Formal dismissal letter (with reason stated) | Constitutes the legal instrument of termination and identifies the proper reason | Permanently |
| Legal counsel review memo | Confirms external or internal legal sign-off prior to delivery | Minimum 5 years from termination date |
Alongside the dismissal threshold reform, the Finnish Government has advanced proposals that increase scrutiny of fixed‑term employment contracts. While the precise conversion triggers remain subject to legislative finalisation, the direction of travel is clear: prolonged or repeated use of fixed‑term contracts without a genuine, objectively justified reason will face greater challenge.
Under the existing Employment Contracts Act, a fixed‑term contract requires a justified reason (such as a project, seasonal demand or substitution for an absent employee). Successive renewals without a clear justification already risk the relationship being reclassified as permanent. The 2026 proposals are expected to sharpen this risk by introducing stricter limits on the total duration or number of renewals permitted before an automatic conversion obligation arises.
For employers, the practical response involves three steps. First, audit all current fixed‑term contracts and identify any roles that have been filled on a rolling fixed‑term basis for more than 12 months. Second, ensure every fixed‑term contract states a specific, objectively justified reason for the fixed term. Third, establish an internal review trigger, such as a flag at the six-month mark, that prompts HR to decide whether to convert, end or genuinely re-justify the fixed‑term arrangement before renewal.
Early indications suggest that employers who proactively convert long-running fixed‑term roles to permanent contracts will avoid the most significant litigation exposure. Those who continue to roll over contracts without documented justification will likely face conversion claims with back‑dated entitlements.
The 2026 amendments also affect the notice period for lay‑offs and the employer re‑employment obligation in Finland. When an employer lays off employees on collective or economic grounds, Finnish law has long imposed an obligation to offer re‑employment to former employees if suitable vacancies arise within a defined period after termination. The 2026 changes adjust these rules, and employers must update their processes accordingly.
The comparison table below summarises the re‑employment obligation framework by employer size and contract type, reflecting the updated position following the 2026 amendments.
| Employer Size / Contract Type | Re‑Employment Obligation Period | Key Employer Duty |
|---|---|---|
| Employers with fewer than 50 employees (permanent contracts terminated on economic/production grounds) | Four months from end of notice period (standard) | Monitor vacancies and offer suitable roles to former employees before external recruitment |
| Employers with 50 or more employees (permanent contracts terminated on economic/production grounds) | Six months from end of notice period (extended under certain conditions) | Maintain a re‑employment register; actively notify former employees of suitable vacancies |
| Fixed‑term contracts not renewed on economic grounds | Obligation may apply where non-renewal is treated as a de facto dismissal on economic grounds | Assess whether non-renewal triggers re‑employment duties; document the business justification for non-renewal |
Notice periods themselves continue to be governed by the statutory minimums set out in the Employment Contracts Act, scaled by length of service, unless a collective bargaining agreement provides otherwise. The 2026 amendments did not fundamentally alter the statutory notice period schedule, but employers should verify that any collective agreements applicable to their workforce have not been separately renegotiated in light of the broader employment law changes Finland 2026.
For a deeper discussion of the pre-existing framework, see our guide to termination of an employment agreement under the Finnish law.
The likely practical effect of the lowered dismissal threshold will be a short-term increase in employer confidence to terminate, followed by a corresponding rise in employee challenges as courts begin to interpret the “proper reason” standard. Understanding the remedies available to employees is essential for managing risk.
Under Finnish law, an employee who is dismissed without a proper reason may claim compensation equivalent to a minimum of three months’ and a maximum of 24 months’ pay, depending on the circumstances. In exceptional cases involving discrimination or retaliation, damages may exceed these ranges. Reinstatement is not a standard remedy in Finland but may be relevant where the dismissal is found to be void (for example, dismissal during pregnancy or based on trade union activity).
Courts will focus on several factors when assessing whether a proper reason existed: the severity of the conduct, whether the employer issued prior warnings, whether the employee was heard before the decision, whether alternatives to dismissal were explored, and whether the employer’s process was proportionate. Employers who can demonstrate a complete documentation trail, as outlined in the dismissal checklist for HR Finland above, will significantly reduce their exposure.
Settlement remains common in Finnish dismissal disputes. Industry observers expect that the lower threshold will lead to faster settlements at slightly reduced amounts compared with the pre-2026 regime, as the substantive bar for employers is now easier to meet. Nonetheless, procedural failings will continue to be the most frequent and most costly basis for claims. For further context on financial exposure, see compensation for dismissal or summary dismissal and our overview of severance package or termination, what you should know.
The following templates provide a starting framework. Each must be adapted to the specific facts and reviewed by qualified employment counsel before use. Finnish-language versions should be prepared for any employee whose working language is Finnish or Swedish.
“We write to confirm the termination of your employment with [Company], effective [date], subject to the applicable notice period of [X] months. Following a thorough investigation and a hearing held on [date] at which you were given the opportunity to respond, we have determined that your conduct on [date/description] constitutes a proper reason for dismissal under the Employment Contracts Act. Specifically, [brief factual description of misconduct]. Prior to this decision, we considered alternative measures including [redeployment/warning/other], which were not appropriate in the circumstances for the following reasons: [brief explanation]. You are entitled to [notice period details and any accrued entitlements].”
“Further to the written warning issued on [date] and subsequent performance review meetings on [dates], we confirm that your employment with [Company] is terminated with effect from [date], subject to the applicable notice period. Despite the remedial measures and additional support provided, your performance has not met the required standard in [specific areas]. This constitutes a proper reason for termination under the Employment Contracts Act. We have considered alternative arrangements including [redeployment/reduced responsibilities] but these are not feasible because [reason].”
“We regret to inform you that, due to [economic/production/reorganisation reasons], your position of [job title] is being made redundant. Your employment will terminate on [date] following the statutory notice period of [X] months. In accordance with the Employment Contracts Act and any applicable collective agreement, [Company] will fulfil its re‑employment obligation by notifying you of suitable vacancies that arise within the applicable period following your termination. You are entitled to [details of final pay, holiday compensation, and any applicable severance].”
The new dismissal law in Finland 2026 offers employers greater flexibility on person-related terminations, but that flexibility is meaningful only when supported by rigorous documentation and a lawful process. Employers who treat the lower threshold as an invitation to dismiss without proper procedure will face the same, or greater, litigation exposure as before. The practical checklist, templates and timeline in this guide provide a starting framework, but every dismissal case turns on its specific facts.
For tailored advice on a specific termination, restructuring or fixed‑term contract review, contact a Finland employment lawyer through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jani Pitkanen at Properta Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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