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Last updated 14 May 2026
Commercial contracts in Finland face immediate redrafting pressure following the package of Employment Contracts Act amendments that took effect on 1 January 2026. The reforms, which lower the threshold for lawful dismissal and relax the rules governing fixed‑term contracts, do not merely change how employers manage their own staff; they reshape the risk profile of every service, supplier and contractor agreement that involves personnel working on a buyer’s premises or under a buyer’s direction. Companies that continue to operate under pre‑2026 contract language risk contractor reclassification, unexpected dismissal‑claim exposure, and procurement warranty gaps that can translate directly into financial liability.
This guide provides the clause‑level drafting playbook that in‑house counsel, procurement directors and HR leaders need to update contracts Finland‑wide before those risks crystallise.
Yes, companies need to update service, supplier and contractor agreements, and the work should already be underway. The Finnish Government confirmed that, effective 1 January 2026, the grounds for dismissing an employee were broadened so that a single serious breach of obligations may now be sufficient where previously repeated warnings were typically required (Valtioneuvosto, 2026). Simultaneously, the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment (TEM) introduced greater flexibility for fixed‑term employment contracts, allowing employers to enter into fixed‑term contracts of up to one year without a specific justification in certain circumstances (TEM, 2026). Together, these reforms change the factual matrix that Finnish courts use to distinguish a genuine B2B contractor relationship from a disguised employment relationship.
For commercial counterparties, particularly buyers of outsourced services, consulting engagements and staffing arrangements, the practical consequences are threefold. First, the relaxed fixed‑term rules make it easier for suppliers to rotate personnel on short contracts, which can blur the line between employee and contractor if contractual safeguards are absent. Second, the lower dismissal threshold means that termination clauses in service agreements may now inadvertently mirror employment‑law termination rights, increasing reclassification risk. Third, procurement obligations under the Act on the Contractor’s Obligations and Liability remain in force and have been supplemented by updated enforcement guidance, requiring buyers to verify supplier compliance documentation more rigorously (Helen procurement requirements, March 2026).
Industry observers expect the following five actions to be the most urgent:
The following twelve‑item checklist gives legal and procurement teams a prioritised action list. Each item is flagged as High, Medium or Low priority based on the immediacy of risk under the 2026 reforms.
The 2026 reform package amended several provisions of Finland’s Employment Contracts Act (Työsopimuslaki). The most significant change for commercial contracts is the lowered threshold for individual dismissal: an employer may now terminate an employment relationship on the basis of a single serious breach of an employee’s obligations, removing the previous expectation in many situations that warnings and an opportunity to correct behaviour must precede dismissal (Valtioneuvosto, 2026). In parallel, the Finnish occupational safety and health authority (Työsuojelu) updated its guidance on termination procedures and special cases for termination, reflecting the new statutory language (Työsuojelu, 2026).
The second pillar of reform concerns fixed‑term contracts. TEM’s amendment permits employers to conclude fixed‑term employment contracts of up to one year without the previously mandatory specific justification, a measure intended to increase labour‑market flexibility (TEM, 2026). While this flexibility primarily targets direct employment relationships, the likely practical effect extends to commercial agreements: suppliers and staffing agencies will use fixed‑term arrangements more freely, and buyers must ensure that the resulting personnel rotation does not create indicators of disguised employment within their own organisations.
| Date | Reform | Practical effect on commercial contracts |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Lower dismissal threshold, single serious breach sufficient | Service‑agreement termination clauses must diverge clearly from employment dismissal mechanics to avoid reclassification. |
| 1 January 2026 | Fixed‑term contracts permitted for up to one year without specific justification | Supplier personnel rotation increases; buyers must add contractual safeguards against cumulative fixed‑term reclassification risk. |
| March 2026 | Updated enforcement guidance on contractor obligations and liability | Procurement teams must verify expanded supplier compliance documentation and retain audit rights. |
Finnish courts assess the true nature of a working relationship by looking beyond the contractual label. The key factors that indicate an employment relationship, and therefore trigger contractor reclassification risk, are subordination (the worker acts under the buyer’s direction and control), personal service obligation (the individual cannot freely substitute another person), economic dependence (the supplier derives most revenue from a single buyer), and integration into the buyer’s organisation (shared premises, tools, email domain and reporting lines). Under the 2026 reforms, the lowered dismissal threshold narrows the gap between commercial termination rights and employment‑law termination rights, making it easier for a tribunal to conclude that the substance of the arrangement was employment all along.
The employment risk in commercial contracts is not confined to one‑person consultancies. Any arrangement that places supplier personnel under the buyer’s day‑to‑day direction should be reviewed. Typical high‑risk structures include individual management consultants working exclusively on‑site, IT contractors integrated into agile development teams, outsourced service providers whose staff follow buyer shift patterns, and temporary agency workers on repeated fixed‑term assignments. The PAM trade union has specifically highlighted that workers on successive short‑term contracts may now be more vulnerable to employment‑status challenges under the relaxed fixed‑term rules (PAM, 2026).
| Entity type | Typical contract features | Reclassification risk level |
|---|---|---|
| Individual consultant (sole trader) | Personal service, on‑site, single client | High |
| Outsourced service provider (staff on buyer premises) | Buyer supervision, shared tools, shift roster | High |
| Temporary agency worker (repeated fixed‑term) | Multiple short assignments, same buyer | Medium–High |
| Professional services firm (team‑based) | Deliverable‑driven, own tools, substitution rights | Low–Medium |
| Software / SaaS vendor (remote delivery) | No on‑site presence, output‑based pricing | Low |
The core of any contract‑review exercise is clause‑level analysis. The following subsections identify the provisions most affected by the 2026 reforms and set out the recommended drafting approach. For foundational guidance on structuring contract definitions, see our guide on how to use definitions in an agreement.
Every supplier contract in Finland should contain an express statement that the relationship is commercial and that neither party intends to create an employment relationship. However, a bare “no employment” recital has limited value if the operational reality contradicts it. Strengthen the clause by including specific factual indicators: the supplier maintains its own business premises, carries professional indemnity insurance, invoices through its own registered business (Y‑tunnus), and is free to provide services to other clients without restriction. These markers track the factors Finnish courts weigh when assessing substance over form.
Draft the scope of work around outputs and deliverables rather than hours, attendance or availability. Where KPIs are necessary, express them in terms of milestones, quality benchmarks or service‑level targets, not in terms of how, when or where the work is performed. Avoid language that specifies start times, requires attendance at internal meetings or mandates participation in the buyer’s performance‑review processes. Each of these operational controls can tip the factual assessment toward employment.
Control is the single most important reclassification factor. Remove or restructure any clause that grants the buyer authority to direct the manner in which services are performed. Instead, reserve the buyer’s rights to define the desired outcome and to conduct quality assurance reviews at defined intervals. If health‑and‑safety or security requirements necessitate on‑site compliance rules, draft those obligations as site‑access conditions rather than management instructions.
A genuine right of substitution is one of the strongest indicators of a commercial, not employment, relationship. Include a clause expressly permitting the supplier to assign suitably qualified substitute personnel or to subcontract portions of the engagement, subject to reasonable prior notice and agreed competency thresholds. Avoid requiring buyer approval of named individuals, which suggests that the contract is for personal service. A robust substitution clause can read: “The Supplier may, at its discretion, engage substitute personnel or subcontractors to perform the Services, provided such persons meet the competency requirements set out in Schedule [X] and the Supplier gives the Buyer not less than [5] business days’ prior written notice.”
Intellectual property assignment and invoicing arrangements should reinforce the B2B character of the relationship. IP clauses should assign deliverable ownership upon payment of an invoice (not upon creation, which resembles the employer‑owns‑all default under Finnish copyright law for employed creators). Invoicing must be through the supplier’s own VAT‑registered entity, with payment terms typical of commercial trade (for example, 14–30 days net) rather than payroll‑style periodic transfers. Where withholding‑tax questions arise, structure the contract so the buyer is paying for a defined commercial output, not compensating an individual for personal effort.
For further context on cross‑border contract structures, consult our international commercial agreements guide.
The lowered dismissal threshold under Finland employment law 2026 makes it critical that service agreement termination clauses are unmistakably commercial in character. A termination‑for‑convenience right should specify a reasonable commercial notice period (typically 30–90 days depending on contract value) tied to project milestones, not to employment‑law notice periods. For termination for cause, define material breach by reference to commercial deliverables, failure to meet SLA targets, insolvency, or breach of compliance warranties, and include a cure period of no fewer than 14 days. These mechanics diverge clearly from the employment‑law framework, where dismissal grounds are now assessed by reference to a single serious breach of obligation.
Early indications suggest that the reform will encourage some buyers to insert “hair trigger” termination clauses that mirror the new employment‑law standard. This is precisely the wrong approach: aligning commercial termination with employment dismissal narrows the factual gap between the two relationships and increases reclassification risk. Instead, ensure that the service agreement termination clause includes features that only a commercial contract would contain, step‑down fees, wind‑down obligations, transition‑assistance periods and handover requirements. These elements have no analogue in employment law and serve as structural firewalls.
Variant A, Low‑control (recommended for most arrangements): “The Supplier shall be entitled, at any time and without the prior consent of the Buyer, to substitute any individual engaged in performing the Services with another individual of comparable qualification and experience. The Supplier shall notify the Buyer in writing within [5] business days of any such substitution.”
Variant B, Higher‑control (where regulatory or security requirements apply): “The Supplier may substitute Key Personnel listed in Schedule [Y] with the Buyer’s prior written consent, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed. The Supplier may substitute all other personnel without the Buyer’s consent, provided reasonable notice is given and the substitute meets the competency criteria in Schedule [X].”
For related discussion of how different jurisdictions handle contract termination mechanics, see our article on terminating a property contract in Dubai, which illustrates the importance of jurisdiction‑specific drafting.
Every supplier contract in Finland should now include an express warranty that the supplier complies with the Employment Contracts Act (as amended), applicable collective agreements and the Act on the Contractor’s Obligations and Liability. The warranty should cover the supplier’s obligation to maintain proper employment contracts with its own personnel, to pay wages and social‑security contributions on time, and to provide evidence of compliance upon the buyer’s reasonable request. The updated procurement requirements published by Helen (March 2026) offer a practical market benchmark: they require suppliers to furnish certificates from the tax authority, pension insurance providers and the trade register, and to keep those documents current throughout the contract term.
Include a specific indemnity under which the supplier agrees to hold the buyer harmless against any claim, liability, fine or cost arising from a determination by a Finnish court or authority that the supplier’s personnel are, in fact, employees of the buyer. The indemnity should cover back‑pay, social‑security arrears, penalties, legal fees and any compensation for wrongful dismissal. Cap the indemnity at a commercially realistic level, industry observers expect caps of between 100 % and 200 % of annual contract value for Tier 1 (on‑site personnel) arrangements, and specify a survival period of at least 24 months after contract expiry.
As a practical procurement rule, require suppliers whose contract value exceeds a defined threshold (a common market benchmark is €100,000 per annum) to carry employer’s liability insurance and professional indemnity insurance with minimum coverage levels. This transfers residual reclassification risk to an insured pool and creates an additional commercial incentive for the supplier to manage its workforce compliantly. Below the threshold, a combination of warranties, audit rights and a right to withhold payment pending compliance verification may provide adequate protection.
To update contracts Finland‑wide within a manageable timeframe, adopt the following eight‑week sprint approach, prioritised by supplier risk category. Tier 1 suppliers (on‑site personnel, individual consultants) should be addressed first; Tier 2 (advisory firms, professional services) in weeks three to five; and Tier 3 (remote SaaS vendors, commodity suppliers) from week six onwards.
| Week | Task | Owner | Deliverable |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Inventory all active service, supplier and contractor agreements | Procurement | Master contract register with risk‑tier flags |
| 2 | Clause‑gap analysis against the commercial agreements checklist | Legal | Red‑flag report per Tier 1 supplier |
| 3 | Draft amendment templates (status, substitution, termination, warranties) | Legal | Approved clause bank |
| 4 | Issue amendment proposals to Tier 1 suppliers | Procurement / Legal | Sent amendment letters |
| 5 | Negotiate and close Tier 1 amendments; begin Tier 2 outreach | Procurement | Signed Tier 1 amendments |
| 6 | Complete Tier 2 negotiations; issue Tier 3 amendment proposals | Procurement | Signed Tier 2 amendments |
| 7 | Close Tier 3 amendments; update procurement templates for new contracts | Legal / Procurement | Completed register; updated templates |
| 8 | Post‑implementation audit; brief C‑suite on residual risk | Legal / HR | Risk summary and escalation memo |
Pushing contract amendments through an existing supplier relationship requires a clear negotiation strategy. Lead with the shared risk: both buyer and supplier face liability if a reclassification claim succeeds, so the amendment protects both parties. Where suppliers resist substitution clauses, offer a compromise: limit the unrestricted substitution right to non‑key personnel while retaining a “not unreasonably withheld” consent mechanism for named key staff. If a supplier refuses to provide procurement warranties, treat that refusal as a material red flag and escalate to a competitive re‑tendering process. In all negotiations, document the commercial rationale for each clause, that audit trail strengthens the buyer’s defence in any subsequent reclassification challenge.
For dispute‑resolution planning in the event negotiations fail, consult the practical guidance in our article on preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.
| Date | Reform summary | Recommended contract action |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Lowered threshold for dismissal, a single serious breach of obligation may now suffice | Review termination triggers, notice and cure periods; ensure service agreement termination clauses diverge clearly from employment dismissal mechanics. |
| 1 January 2026 | Fixed‑term contracts of up to one year permitted without specific justification | Audit fixed‑term supplier arrangements; add maximum cumulative‑term caps, renewal limits and non‑renewal language. |
| March 2026 | Updated enforcement guidance on contractor obligations and liability | Add supplier compliance warranties; require proof of worker status, tax certificates and pension documentation; retain contractual audit rights. |
The 2026 employment‑law reforms have moved the legal ground beneath commercial contracts in Finland. Every service, supplier and contractor agreement that involves personnel, whether on‑site consultants, outsourced teams or rotating temporary staff, must now be reviewed against the new dismissal threshold, the relaxed fixed‑term rules and the updated enforcement guidance on contractor obligations. The clause playbook, checklists and model language set out above provide a starting framework. For tailored drafting support and a full contract audit, organisations should engage qualified commercial‑agreements counsel through our lawyer directory to ensure their agreements are compliant, defensible and commercially fit for purpose.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pekka Kähkönen at LexAuctor Ltd, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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