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Last updated: 30 April 2026
Finland’s criminal liability framework for sanctions violations underwent its most significant overhaul in decades when legislative amendments implementing the EU Sanctions Criminalisation Directive entered into force on 20 May 2025. The reforms introduced dedicated sanctions-offence provisions into the Finnish Criminal Code, created a new tier of corporate fines reported to reach as high as EUR 40 million, and extended personal criminal exposure to directors and officers who fail to prevent breaches. Finnish Customs recorded 43 regulation offences related to sanctions in 2025, with 17 cases investigated as suspected aggravated offences, a pace of enforcement that shows no sign of easing into 2026.
This guide explains the new rules, maps criminal liability for sanctions violations in Finland in 2026 across companies, boards and executives, and provides the practical checklists, investigation protocols and compliance steps that decision-makers need right now.
Understanding criminal liability for sanctions violations in Finland in 2026 requires a clear picture of the legislative sequence that created the current regime. The changes were driven by EU-level harmonisation and implemented through targeted amendments to the Finnish Criminal Code.
| Date | Legal Change | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| 28 November 2024 | EU Sanctions Criminalisation Directive adopted at EU level, requiring Member States to introduce criminal offences for sanctions violations | Set the legislative mandate for Finland to amend its Criminal Code |
| 13 May 2025 | Finnish Government announced new legislation implementing the Directive, including an increase in the maximum corporate fine | Companies put on notice of imminent criminalisation; compliance reviews became urgent |
| 20 May 2025 | Amendments to the Finnish Criminal Code entered into force, new dedicated sanctions-offence provisions added | Criminal offences and penalties for EU sanctions violations now distinctly defined in the Criminal Code, replacing the previous general regulation-offence approach |
| 2025–2026 (ongoing) | Enforcement ramp-up: Customs investigations and prosecutor activity increasing | Companies operating in sectors with Russia/Belarus exposure face heightened scrutiny |
The Finnish Criminal Code now distinctly defines criminal offences specifically for violating EU sanctions. Before 20 May 2025, sanctions breaches were typically prosecuted under general regulation-offence provisions, a framework that carried lower penalties and was less clearly defined. The new provisions create a standalone offence category within the Criminal Code, covering acts such as making funds or economic resources available to sanctioned persons, providing prohibited services, and circumventing asset-freeze or trade-restriction measures.
The amendments distinguish between intentional offences and negligent conduct. An aggravated sanctions offence applies where the violation involves particularly large values, is committed as part of organised activity, or causes especially serious harm. The distinction between basic and aggravated forms directly determines the severity of penalties, as outlined in the section below.
A central question for decision-makers is whether corporate sanctions liability in Finland extends to the company itself, to individual directors and officers, or to both. The 2025 amendments expand exposure on both fronts.
Under the Finnish Criminal Code, corporations and other legal entities are not treated as direct perpetrators of crimes, only natural persons can commit offences. However, a company can be subject to a corporate fine (yhteisösakko) where the offence was committed in the course of the company’s operations and where a person in a management or decision-making position has been complicit in the offence or has allowed it to occur. The 2025 amendments substantially increased the maximum corporate fine for sanctions offences, with practitioner commentary reporting a ceiling as high as EUR 40 million.
Board members, CEOs and other senior executives face personal criminal prosecution where a sanctions violation is connected to their intentional action or consent, or where they have negligently failed to supervise compliance. Board liability for sanctions is not theoretical: the new provisions are designed to reach individuals who approve, authorise or turn a blind eye to transactions that breach EU restrictive measures.
| Entity Type | Potential Criminal Exposure | Measures That Increase or Decrease Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Limited company (Oy) | Corporate fine (reported maximum up to EUR 40 million); potential forfeiture of proceeds; reputational harm from criminal proceedings | Increases risk: no compliance programme, lack of screening, ignoring red flags. Decreases risk: robust sanctions compliance programme, documented due diligence, self-reporting |
| Board of directors / CEO | Individual criminal prosecution for intentional or negligent conduct; imprisonment for aggravated offences; personal fines | Increases risk: direct involvement in approvals, failure to act on compliance warnings. Decreases risk: documented oversight, independent compliance function, prompt remediation |
| Subsidiary / branch / intermediary | Risk of aiding and abetting or facilitating evasion; transactional exposure to corporate fines | Increases risk: operating without parent-level screening, opaque intermediary chains. Decreases risk: transaction-level due diligence, third-party audit, contractual sanctions clauses |
The penalties framework under the amended Finnish Criminal Code creates a graduated scale tied to the severity of the offence. Criminal sanctions for companies in Finland now carry materially higher financial consequences than under the previous regime, and individuals face meaningful custodial sentences.
| Offence Type | Maximum Penalty (Individual) | Maximum Corporate Fine |
|---|---|---|
| Basic sanctions offence (intentional) | Imprisonment and/or fine (proportionate to the gravity and value involved) | Corporate fine under Finnish Criminal Code provisions |
| Aggravated sanctions offence | Imprisonment of up to several years; substantial personal fine | Reported maximum up to EUR 40 million (per practitioner analysis by Castrén & Snellman) |
| Negligent sanctions offence | Fine or shorter custodial sentence, depending on circumstances | Corporate fine applicable where management negligence established |
The EU Sanctions Criminalisation Directive set minimum harmonised thresholds across Member States: for individuals, a maximum penalty of at least five years’ imprisonment; for entities, fines of up to five per cent of total worldwide turnover or a fixed monetary amount. Finland’s implementation reflects these thresholds and, by enabling corporate fines reported at up to EUR 40 million, positions Finnish enforcement among the more robust in the EU.
In addition to fines and imprisonment, convicted individuals and entities may face forfeiture of the proceeds or instruments of the offence. Industry observers expect prosecutors to pursue forfeiture aggressively in high-value trade-sanctions cases, given the significant sums often involved in sanctioned commodity flows.
Enforcement of sanctions offences in Finland in 2026 is no longer a theoretical risk. Multiple authorities are actively investigating potential violations, and the pace of cases has accelerated significantly since the 2025 amendments took effect.
According to data published by the Finnish Tax Administration’s grey-economy unit, Finnish Customs recorded 43 regulation offences related to sanctions breaches in 2025, of which 17 were investigated as suspected aggravated offences. Separately, reporting by Duane Morris noted that 26 formal investigations into breaches of trade sanctions were commenced during 2025. The likely practical effect of the new Criminal Code provisions will be to convert a greater proportion of these investigations into prosecutions with higher penalty exposure than was possible under the old regime.
When Finnish Customs or the prosecution service initiates a formal investigation into a suspected sanctions offence, the first hours and days are critical. Missteps during this period, particularly around evidence, communications and governance, can materially worsen both corporate and individual criminal exposure.
First 24 hours:
First week:
Within 30 days:
A well-structured internal investigation for sanctions in Finland serves two purposes: it establishes the facts the company needs for decision-making, and it creates a defensible record that can support cooperation with authorities or be deployed in litigation. Getting the structure wrong, however, can destroy privilege, create additional liability, or undermine employee rights.
Before any interviews are conducted or documents reviewed, define the investigation scope in writing. The scope memorandum, prepared by external counsel, should identify the suspected conduct, the relevant time period, the individuals and business units in focus, and the key documents or data sources. The investigation plan should also address jurisdictional considerations: if the company operates across multiple EU states, determine which legal privilege rules apply to each data source and interview.
Finnish law does not recognise attorney–client privilege in the same way as common-law jurisdictions. Privilege attaches to communications between a client and an external lawyer (an asianajaja, a member of the Finnish Bar Association) in the context of legal advice or litigation, but it does not extend to in-house counsel in the same manner. This distinction is critical. To maximise protection, companies should ensure the internal investigation is directed by, and reported through, external counsel from the outset.
Digital evidence, email servers, enterprise resource planning systems, trade-compliance screening platforms and personal devices, must be preserved forensically. Engage a forensic IT provider to create verified copies before any review. Document the chain of custody meticulously. Any alteration or deletion of data after a company becomes aware of an investigation can constitute a separate offence and significantly worsen enforcement outcomes.
| Evidence Type | Preservation Steps | Privilege Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Emails and instant messages | Litigation hold; forensic imaging of relevant mailboxes; keyword search to scope review | Communications with in-house counsel may not be privileged, route through external counsel |
| Contracts, invoices, shipping documents | Secure originals; create verified digital copies; log custody transfers | Low privilege risk for underlying business documents; risk arises if mixed with legal-advice memos |
| Sanctions screening logs and compliance records | Export from screening platform; preserve audit trails and alert histories | May be disclosable; consider separating legal-analysis notes prepared by external counsel |
| Interview memoranda | Conduct under external counsel direction; provide Upjohn-style warnings adapted to Finnish law | Privileged only if prepared by or at the direction of external counsel for legal-advice purposes |
| Board minutes and management reports | Preserve all versions, including drafts; do not redact retroactively | Generally not privileged as business records; may become exhibits in proceedings |
Where investigations span multiple jurisdictions, as many sanctions cases do, companies must coordinate privilege protocols across legal systems. Information shared with counsel in one jurisdiction may not be protected in another. A cross-border privilege matrix, prepared at the outset by lead counsel, prevents costly mistakes. Data-transfer requirements under the GDPR add a further compliance layer when moving employee data or communications across borders for review.
Every material decision during an internal investigation, from the choice of scope to cooperation strategy, should be recorded contemporaneously under privilege. If the company later chooses to self-report or to present its cooperation to a court, this record demonstrates good faith and responsible governance. Failure to document creates a vacuum that prosecutors may fill unfavourably.
Companies that can demonstrate a genuine, functioning sanctions compliance programme may see materially different enforcement outcomes, both in terms of whether proceedings are initiated and in the severity of any penalties. Sanctions compliance reduces criminal risk in a direct and measurable way.
A credible programme should include, at minimum:
Criminal liability for sanctions violations in Finland in 2026 is broader, harsher and more actively enforced than at any previous point. The 2025 amendments to the Finnish Criminal Code, implementing the EU Sanctions Criminalisation Directive, have created dedicated offence categories, dramatically increased corporate fines and extended personal exposure to directors and officers who fail to act. With 43 regulation offences recorded by Finnish Customs and at least 26 formal investigations commenced in 2025 alone, the enforcement pipeline is growing. Boards, general counsel and compliance officers should treat sanctions compliance as an immediate governance priority: audit existing programmes, ensure screening and due-diligence protocols meet the new standard, establish privileged investigation protocols and document every oversight decision.
Companies and executives facing an investigation, or seeking to prevent one, should engage specialist criminal defence counsel without delay.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Annastiina Latvasaho at Salingre Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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