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When buying or selling a Finnish business you face a structural fork: acquire the company’s shares (taking the entire legal entity, liabilities included) or acquire selected assets (cherry-picking what transfers and what stays behind). The choice between an asset purchase vs share purchase in Finland determines who bears transfer tax, how legacy liabilities are allocated, whether contracts and permits survive, and, ultimately, how much each side keeps after tax. Finnish transfer-tax rules and the practical handling of real-estate exposure make this decision more consequential here than in many other European jurisdictions.
This guide delivers a side-by-side comparison table, a tax-and-cost breakdown with Finnish transfer-tax figures, and a clear decision framework so buyers and sellers can choose the right deal structure in Finland before engaging counsel.
Last reviewed: 29 May 2026. This page provides general guidance, seek tailored legal advice for your transaction.
In a Finnish asset purchase the buyer acquires individually identified assets, and, if agreed, specific liabilities, from the target company. The company itself remains with the seller. This structure is common where the buyer wants only part of the business, needs to ring-fence legacy risk, or seeks a tax-basis step-up on depreciable assets.
An asset deal normally covers tangible property (machinery, inventory, vehicles), intangible assets (intellectual property, goodwill, customer lists), receivables, and selected contracts. Each contract typically requires counterparty consent or formal novation. Real estate may be included, but its inclusion triggers real estate transfer tax in Finland, a cost that often shapes the entire negotiation.
The buyer must identify every asset, negotiate novation of material contracts, and register title transfers for real estate and registered IP. Where a business or an independent part of it transfers, Finnish law applies TUPE-like rules: employees engaged in the transferred undertaking move to the buyer on existing terms under the Employment Contracts Act (työsopimuslaki). The seller must deliver clear title, assist with consents, and manage any retained liabilities. Both parties should agree on an allocation of the purchase price across asset categories, this allocation drives post-closing tax depreciation for the buyer and income characterisation for the seller.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
In a Finnish share purchase the buyer acquires the ownership shares of the target company. The entity, with all of its assets, contracts, permits, employees, and liabilities, continues to exist unchanged. Only the identity of the shareholder changes.
Because the legal entity persists, every liability the company has ever incurred travels with it: outstanding tax debts, pending litigation, environmental obligations, and contractual commitments. Contracts generally remain in force without counterparty consent (unless they contain change-of-control clauses). This continuity is operationally convenient but places the full burden of hidden risk on the buyer.
The buyer’s primary defence is thorough pre-closing due diligence combined with extensive seller warranties and indemnities in the share purchase agreement (SPA). Standard Finnish practice includes specific indemnities for tax liabilities and environmental exposure, warranty survival periods typically ranging from 12 to 24 months (longer for tax and title warranties), and escrow or holdback mechanisms to secure post-closing claims. The seller benefits from a cleaner exit: deliver the shares, collect the price, and limit ongoing exposure to the warranty package.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
The table below sets out the core dimensions every buyer and seller should evaluate when choosing a deal structure in Finland. Short answers are deliberate, detailed tax figures follow in the dimension-by-dimension analysis below.
| Dimension | Asset Purchase (buyer obtains selected assets / liabilities) | Share Purchase (buyer acquires company shares & entity) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical use case | Buyer wants to pick assets, avoid legacy liabilities, or exclude real estate / pension liabilities | Buyer wants continuity, simple transfer of business, tax-efficient sale for seller |
| Transfer of liabilities | Buyer only takes liabilities expressly assumed; unknown legacy risks can be excluded (but some liabilities follow assets by statute) | Buyer inherits all company liabilities (contractual, tax, tort) subject to indemnities |
| Employees / contracts | May need novation / consents; TUPE-like rules may apply to transfers of undertakings | Continuity of employment and contracts, easier operationally |
| Real estate exposure | If real estate transfers, transfer tax applies (higher cost); real estate can be left in seller | Real estate inside company stays with company (no real-estate transfer tax on share transfer) |
| Transfer tax (Finland) | 4 % on buildings / land; certain transfers taxed at lower rate for housing companies, see tax table | Transfer tax may apply to shares in housing / real-estate companies or in corporate stock transactions per Vero.fi, different rates and thresholds |
| Warranties & indemnities | Narrower seller warranties typically; buyer relies on asset-level seller indemnities and stronger reps on title | Buyer requests extensive warranties and longer survival periods; risk allocation via escrow / indemnities |
| Cost & timing | More time / transaction cost for novations, consents, registration (real-estate registration) | Faster transfer of ownership, simpler settlement mechanics (but higher DD cost to verify liabilities) |
| Enforceability | Easier to isolate assets for enforcement; some statutory successor liabilities still apply | Remedies against seller (usually via warranties / indemnities); claim enforcement may be post-closing and relies on seller balance sheet |
| Regulatory / licences | Many permits may require assignment / consent, may delay closing | Permits / authorisations often remain valid as entity continues, operational continuity |
| Typical buyer preference | Buyers seeking to limit legacy risk, tax-base step-ups for specific assets | Buyers seeking operational continuity or acquiring entire group (including real estate) |
The dominant theme across every dimension is the trade-off between control over risk (asset purchase) and operational simplicity (share purchase). In Finnish practice, industry observers note that the share purchase route is chosen in the majority of mid-market and larger transactions because the transfer-tax savings on real estate and the contract-continuity benefits outweigh the cost of broader DD and warranty packages. The asset purchase path is typically reserved for situations where legacy liabilities are genuinely toxic or where the buyer wants only a discrete business unit.
The tax-and-cost table below quantifies the most impactful financial differences.
Tax is the single most influential factor in the asset purchase vs share purchase Finland decision. Finnish transfer-tax rules, governed by the Transfer Tax Act (varainsiirtoverolaki), create sharply different cost profiles depending on the structure chosen and the nature of the target’s assets. The tax implications of a share vs asset deal extend beyond transfer tax to corporate income tax, seller taxation, and VAT.
| Tax Item | Asset Purchase, Effect | Share Purchase, Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Real estate transfer tax (Finland) | 4 % of the purchase price on buildings and land included in the asset transfer. Example: a €1,000,000 building triggers €40,000 in transfer tax, payable by the buyer on registration. | No real-estate transfer tax on the share transfer of a company that owns the property. However, transfer tax can apply to shares in housing companies and certain real-estate companies, verify with Vero.fi. |
| Transfer tax on corporate stock (Finland) | Not generally applicable to an ordinary business-asset transfer. Special rules may apply if shares in housing or real-estate companies are among the transferred assets. | Buyer must file a transfer-tax return for corporate stock purchases where applicable. The buyer is responsible for filing per Vero.fi guidance. |
| Tax-basis step-up (buyer) | Buyer allocates the purchase price across acquired assets and obtains tax depreciation / deductions going forward, a significant long-term benefit on depreciable assets. | No step-up. The company’s existing tax book values persist unchanged; the premium paid by the buyer is reflected only in the share cost basis. |
| Seller tax outcome | Seller may face ordinary income or capital gains treatment depending on asset type. Potential double taxation: the company pays corporate income tax on the gain, and shareholders face further tax on distributed proceeds. | Seller often receives capital-gain treatment on the sale of shares, which can be more tax-efficient, particularly where the participation exemption applies to corporate sellers. |
| VAT | Sale of individual business assets (goods, equipment) may be subject to VAT. Transfer of a going concern may qualify for a VAT exemption if conditions are met. | Share transfers are not subject to VAT. |
The 4 % real estate transfer tax is the figure that most often tips the analysis. For a target holding a €5,000,000 property portfolio, an asset deal route would expose the buyer to €200,000 in transfer tax that a share deal avoids entirely, assuming the target is not classified as a housing company or a real-estate holding company whose shares themselves attract transfer tax. Buyers should confirm the target’s classification with counsel and review Vero.fi’s published guidance on corporate-stock transfer tax before committing to either structure.
Asset deals carry higher administrative closing costs because each asset must be individually transferred, contracts novated, and real-estate titles registered. Typical market observation in Finland puts asset-deal integration costs at roughly 10–30 % higher than share-deal equivalents, driven primarily by registration fees, third-party consent processes, and longer legal timelines.
Warranty and indemnity allocation in Finland follows predictable patterns shaped by whether the buyer is taking assets or the entity.
In both structures, specific tax indemnities and environmental representations warrant particular attention, especially where real estate is in scope.
Post-closing remedies differ by structure. In an asset deal, the buyer holds direct title to acquired assets and can enforce rights against them without relying on the seller’s balance sheet. In a share deal, claims against the seller flow through the SPA’s warranty and indemnity provisions, making the seller’s solvency and the escrow amount critical. Finnish M&A transactions typically include an arbitration clause (often under the Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Rules) and a choice of Finnish law. Cross-border buyers should confirm that any arbitral award is enforceable in their home jurisdiction.
Regulated industries, financial services, telecommunications, energy, healthcare, present a strong practical argument for the share purchase route. Licences and permits held by the target entity remain valid because the entity itself continues. An asset deal, by contrast, may require the buyer to apply for new permits or seek regulatory consent for assignment, introducing delay and approval risk.
Where the target holds a single critical permit (for example, a payment-institution licence from the Finnish Financial Supervisory Authority), losing that permit during an asset transfer could threaten the commercial rationale of the deal. In these cases, the share purchase is almost always the correct structure.
No major statutory overhaul to the Transfer Tax Act has taken effect during 2025–2026. The core rates, 4 % for real estate and the applicable rules for corporate-stock transactions, remain as published by Vero.fi. The likely practical effect of recent practice trends, however, is notable:
Buyers and sellers should confirm current rates and administrative filing requirements with Vero.fi or Finnish tax counsel before signing.
The decision framework below translates the dimension analysis into actionable triggers. Each bullet represents a single condition that should push the buyer or seller toward the indicated structure.
Choose an asset purchase when:
Choose a share purchase when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Minimising inherited liability exposure | Asset purchase |
| Avoiding real-estate transfer tax | Share purchase |
| Obtaining a tax-basis step-up for depreciable assets | Asset purchase |
| Preserving regulated permits and licences | Share purchase |
| Seller tax efficiency (capital-gain treatment) | Share purchase |
| Acquiring only part of the business | Asset purchase |
| Fastest possible closing timeline | Share purchase |
| Clean separation from seller’s remaining operations | Asset purchase |
Where priorities conflict, for example, the buyer wants to avoid legacy liability and avoid real-estate transfer tax, the standard Finnish solution is a share purchase with enhanced warranties, a meaningful escrow, and specific indemnities covering the identified risk areas. This hybrid approach preserves the transfer-tax advantage of the share route while contractually shifting legacy risk back to the seller.
Not every small business sale requires a full advisory team. But the following triggers should prompt immediate engagement of Finnish commercial-agreements counsel:
Documents to prepare for your first meeting with counsel:
If your transaction involves Finnish real estate, cross-border elements, or consideration above €500,000, a tailored recommendation from a Finland commercial agreements lawyer will almost always pay for itself in transfer-tax savings and risk reduction alone.
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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