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commercial litigation finland

Commercial Litigation in Finland (2026): a Practical Trial Guide for Foreign Businesses

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Foreign businesses that need to bring a commercial claim in Finland face a jurisdiction that is efficient, transparent and increasingly digital, but navigating it without local knowledge can be costly. Commercial litigation in Finland follows a structured three-tier court system, and since 1 January 2026 the Finnish Patent and Registration Office (PRH) has required mandatory online filing for all trade-register notifications, changing the way claimants verify defendants and serve process. This guide walks general counsel, finance directors and SME owners through every stage, from pre-litigation checks and filing at the district court, through evidence and hearings, to judgment enforcement domestically and across borders. It reflects the 2026 PRH/YTJ digitalisation reforms and is current as of 5 June 2026.

Key Takeaways, Decision Checklist

Before committing to litigation, use this quick checklist to decide whether suing a company in Finland is the right course of action:

  • Confirm jurisdiction. Check whether your contract contains a Finnish court jurisdiction clause or an arbitration clause. If neither exists, the defendant’s registered domicile (verifiable via the YTJ Business Information System at ytj.fi) usually determines the competent district court.
  • Verify the defendant. Use the PRH trade register and YTJ to confirm the company is active, identify its registered address and check authorised signatories, all now updated through mandatory online filings.
  • Assess realistic timelines. A typical district-court commercial dispute takes 12–18 months from summons to first-instance judgment. Complex cases or appeals extend that significantly.
  • Budget for costs. Court filing fees are modest (typically EUR 530–2,130 depending on claim value and hearing type), but legal fees and translation costs add up quickly. The losing party normally bears a substantial share of costs.
  • Consider interim relief early. If assets may be dissipated, apply for a precautionary seizure or injunction before or alongside filing the main claim.
  • Plan enforcement from day one. A Finnish judgment is directly enforceable domestically. For cross-border enforcement within the EU, the Brussels I Recast Regulation applies; outside the EU, bilateral treaties or the 1958 New York Convention (for arbitral awards) govern recognition.
  • Preserve evidence immediately. Secure electronic communications, contracts, delivery records and financial documents before notifying the counterparty of your intent to sue.

Commercial Litigation in Finland, Legal Framework and When to Choose Courts vs Arbitration

Finland’s civil justice system is well-regarded for independence, predictability and moderate cost by Nordic standards. Understanding the structural options at the outset is critical for any foreign claimant evaluating whether to bring a commercial claim in Finland.

When to Litigate vs Arbitrate in Finland

Public courts are the default forum unless the parties have agreed to arbitrate. Finland’s general courts operate on three levels: district courts (käräjäoikeus), courts of appeal (hovioikeus) and the Supreme Court (korkein oikeus). Arbitration, typically administered under the rules of the Finland Arbitration Institute (FAI), offers confidentiality and finality but at higher upfront cost. The following comparison highlights the practical differences that matter most to foreign claimants:

Feature Litigation (Public Courts) Arbitration
Typical duration 12–18 months to first-instance judgment; longer with appeals Potentially 6–12 months, but depends on tribunal availability
Interim relief Strong, courts can order precautionary seizure, injunctions and freezing measures Available via emergency arbitrator, but court assistance often still needed
Confidentiality Proceedings are generally public Private and confidential by default
Enforcement Domestic enforcement straightforward; EU cross-border rules (Brussels I Recast) apply New York Convention enforcement in 170+ states
Cost Court fees modest; legal fees are the main expense Arbitrator fees add significant cost, especially in multi-member tribunals
Appeal Full appeal on facts and law to court of appeal; leave required for Supreme Court Very limited grounds for challenge (procedural irregularity)

Jurisdiction and Choice-of-Law Basics

For disputes with an international element, jurisdiction is determined first by any valid choice-of-court agreement and then by applicable EU instruments. Where both parties are domiciled in EU Member States, the Brussels I Recast Regulation (1215/2012) governs jurisdiction. For EFTA-state counterparties, the Lugano Convention applies on equivalent terms. In the absence of an agreement, the general rule directs the claim to the district court of the defendant’s domicile, which for a Finnish company means the municipality of its registered office as recorded in the trade register maintained by PRH.

Choice-of-law clauses are generally respected by Finnish courts. Where no choice has been made, the Rome I Regulation determines the law applicable to contractual obligations, and the Rome II Regulation governs non-contractual claims. Foreign claimants should note that Finnish courts apply the jura novit curia principle: the court determines the applicable law, but parties must plead and prove the content of foreign law if relied upon.

Key 2026 Change: PRH/YTJ Mandatory Digital Filing and Practical Effects for Litigants

The most significant administrative change affecting commercial litigation in Finland in 2026 is the shift to mandatory electronic filing with the trade register. This reform, driven by a government proposal to improve the timeliness and reliability of trade-register data, has direct practical consequences for anyone preparing to sue a Finnish company.

What Changed on 1 January 2026

From 1 January 2026, all companies and organisations are required to submit trade-register notifications and applications to the PRH online, replacing paper-based filings. The PRH announced this change in late December 2025 and has since published guidance on special cases and exceptions. The reform aims to ensure that registered company data, including addresses, board members and authorised signatories, is updated more quickly and reliably.

Date Change Practical Effect for Litigants
23 December 2025 PRH publishes mandatory online filing announcement Foreign claimants are put on notice that paper-based register searches may become outdated
1 January 2026 Mandatory online filing comes into force Company data in PRH/YTJ is updated faster; registered addresses and signatories are more current
13 May 2026 PRH publishes special-cases guidance for online filing Clarifies exceptions and procedural edge cases relevant to foreign entities and unusual corporate structures

Practical Implications for Foreign Claimants

The trade register Finland 2026 reforms create both opportunities and obligations for litigants:

  • Faster address verification. The YTJ Business Information System now reflects online-filed changes more rapidly, making a PRH company search a more reliable first step before service.
  • Stronger service arguments. Courts are likely to place greater weight on the registered address shown in YTJ/PRH when assessing whether service was properly effected, given the expectation that companies keep details current electronically.
  • Electronic document availability. Certain filings (annual accounts, articles of association, board appointments) are accessible electronically from PRH, reducing the need for physical archive requests.
  • Foreign-entity considerations. The PRH special-cases guidance addresses situations where foreign branches or unusual structures may still require manual processing, claimants dealing with such defendants should verify filing status carefully.

Before You File, Pre-Litigation Workup and Evidence Gathering

Thorough preparation before filing is the single most important factor in the success of commercial litigation in Finland. Courts expect claimants to arrive with a fully documented case. Incomplete evidence at the outset is difficult to remedy later without significant delay and cost.

Commercial and Contractual Audit: Documents to Gather

Begin by assembling every document that supports your claim and anticipating what the defendant might produce in response. At a minimum, collect:

  • Contracts and amendments. The original agreement, all side letters, addenda and any correspondence that varies the terms.
  • Financial records. Invoices, payment confirmations, bank statements, credit notes and any calculations of the amount claimed.
  • Delivery and performance records. Shipping documents, acceptance certificates, inspection reports and service-level compliance data.
  • Communications. Email chains, instant messages, meeting minutes and recorded calls that evidence the parties’ intentions, representations or admissions.
  • Internal documents. Board minutes, internal memoranda and due-diligence reports that show reliance on the defendant’s conduct.
  • Expert materials. If the dispute involves technical, valuation or accounting issues, identify potential experts and begin assembling the data they will need.

Where documents are in a language other than Finnish or Swedish, certified translations will be required for submission to the court. Budget for translation costs early, they can be substantial in document-heavy cases.

PRH and YTJ Checks, Confirming Company Status and Service Details

Before filing, verify the defendant’s current status through the official registers. This step is essential to confirm you are suing the correct legal entity and to identify the proper address for service. The process is straightforward:

  1. Visit the YTJ Business Information System and search by company name or Business ID (Y-tunnus).
  2. Confirm the company is registered and active (not dissolved, in liquidation or struck off).
  3. Note the registered address, this will be the primary address for service of process.
  4. Check board members and authorised signatories via the PRH extract to identify who can accept service on the company’s behalf.
  5. Where the defendant is a foreign branch registered in Finland, review the PRH special-cases guidance to understand any differences in registration requirements.

This pre-filing verification step is also where you confirm whether the defendant has recently changed its registered address or board composition, changes that, under the 2026 reforms, should now be reflected in near real-time.

Filing the Claim, District Court Procedure, Forms, Costs and Timelines

Once your evidence is assembled and the defendant verified, the next step is to file the claim. The district court Finland procedure is governed by the Code of Judicial Procedure (oikeudenkäymiskaari) and follows a structured sequence from written pleadings through to oral hearings.

Where to File

The general rule is that a civil claim is filed with the district court of the defendant’s domicile. For a Finnish company, this means the district court in the municipality of the company’s registered office. Contractual jurisdiction clauses may direct the case elsewhere, and certain claims (such as those relating to immovable property) have exclusive jurisdiction rules. Finland currently has 20 district courts, and the filing can be submitted electronically via the court’s online service.

What to Include in the Summons Application

The claimant files a summons application (haastehakemus) with the district court. This document must contain:

  • Identification of the parties. Full names, Business IDs (Y-tunnus), registered addresses and contact details for both claimant and defendant.
  • Statement of claim. A clear description of the factual basis, the legal grounds and the specific relief sought (monetary damages, declaratory relief, specific performance).
  • Itemised claim calculation. Where damages are claimed, a detailed calculation showing how the amount is derived, including interest claims and their basis.
  • Evidence list. A list of all documentary evidence the claimant intends to rely on, together with the documents themselves (or an indication of when they will be produced).
  • Witness list. Names and contact details of witnesses, with a summary of the facts each witness is expected to address.
  • Costs claim. An indication that the claimant seeks recovery of legal costs.

The application must be in Finnish or Swedish (the official court languages). If the underlying documents are in another language, certified translations must accompany them.

Court Fees and Estimated Litigation Costs

Litigation costs in Finland comprise court fees, legal fees and ancillary expenses. Court fees are set by statute and are modest compared to many jurisdictions:

Stage Typical Fee Range (EUR) Notes
Filing fee (district court, contested matter) 530–2,130 Varies by claim value and whether case proceeds to main hearing
Appeal fee (court of appeal) 530–2,130 Payable by appellant
Supreme Court leave to appeal 530 Payable on application; rarely granted
Legal fees (claimant’s counsel) 15,000–150,000+ Depends on complexity, hearing days and expert involvement
Translation and expert costs 2,000–20,000+ Document-heavy, multi-language cases at the higher end

The losing party is typically ordered to pay a reasonable portion of the prevailing party’s legal costs, though full indemnity is not guaranteed. Industry observers expect courts to apply cost-shifting pragmatically, taking into account the complexity of the case and the reasonableness of the positions taken.

Timeline: Submission to First Hearing

After the summons application is filed, the court serves it on the defendant and sets a deadline for the written response (typically 2–4 weeks). A preparatory hearing (valmisteluistunto) is usually scheduled within 2–4 months of filing. The main hearing follows, and a straightforward commercial dispute can reach first-instance judgment in 12–18 months from the filing date. Complex, multi-party or technically intensive cases may take longer.

Service of Process and Substituted Service, Practical Tips for Foreign Claimants

Proper service of process is a precondition for any valid judgment. Getting this wrong can add months to the timeline and may render a judgment unenforceable abroad.

Service Domestically vs Internationally

When the defendant is a Finnish company with a registered address in Finland, the district court arranges service directly, typically by post to the address recorded in the PRH/YTJ registers. If the defendant does not respond, the court may arrange personal service through a process server.

For defendants located outside Finland, the Hague Service Convention applies where the receiving state is a party. The claimant (or the court) transmits the documents through the designated Central Authority. For service within the EU, the EU Service Regulation (2020/1784) provides a parallel and often faster route. In both cases, the documents typically need to be translated into the language of the receiving state or a language the defendant understands.

When Courts Allow Substituted Service

Finnish courts may permit substituted service where ordinary methods have failed, for example, where the defendant cannot be located at its registered address. Under the 2026 trade register reforms, the likely practical effect will be that courts place particular emphasis on whether the address shown in the PRH/YTJ records was current at the time service was attempted. If a company has failed to update its registered address as now required electronically, the court may accept service at the last registered address as valid. Claimants should document every service attempt carefully and retain copies of the PRH/YTJ extracts relied upon.

Evidence, Document Production and Witness Evidence, What Courts Expect

Finnish civil procedure follows the principle that each party bears the burden of proving the facts on which its claim or defence rests. There is no broad Anglo-American-style discovery, but the court has tools to compel production of specific documents.

Document Bundles, Translations and Electronic Evidence

All documentary evidence must be submitted in Finnish or Swedish, with certified translations of foreign-language documents. In practice, courts accept bundles organised chronologically or by issue, with a clear index cross-referenced to the statement of claim.

Electronic evidence, emails, instant messages, e-invoices, system logs, is routinely admitted in Finnish commercial cases provided its authenticity can be established. Courts apply a free-evidence principle (vapaa todistusharkinta): there are no rigid rules of admissibility, and the judge assesses the probative value of each piece of evidence. That said, electronic evidence is stronger where it is accompanied by metadata showing chain of custody, timestamps and absence of tampering.

If a specific document is in the possession of the opposing party or a third party, the court can order its production on application. The requesting party must identify the document with reasonable precision and explain its relevance. Fishing expeditions, broad requests for categories of documents, are not permitted.

Witness Statements and Expert Evidence

Witnesses give oral testimony at the main hearing. There is no formal written-witness-statement procedure as in English litigation, though the party calling the witness must indicate in advance the facts to which the witness will testify. Expert evidence may be submitted by party-appointed experts or, where the court considers it necessary, by a court-appointed expert. In technical or valuation disputes, expert evidence is often decisive, and early identification of strong experts is a practical priority.

Hearings, Judgment and Appeals, What to Expect in Court

Finnish district-court proceedings in commercial cases typically involve a preparatory phase (written pleadings and a preparatory hearing) followed by a concentrated main hearing.

Typical Hearing Structure and Judgment

The main hearing (pääkäsittely) normally takes one to several days depending on complexity. Both parties present opening statements, examine witnesses and make closing submissions orally. The judgment is delivered in writing, usually within 2–4 weeks of the hearing. It includes a detailed statement of reasons, findings of fact and the costs order. The costs order typically requires the losing party to reimburse a reasonable proportion of the winner’s legal fees.

Appeal Routes and Timelines

A dissatisfied party may appeal to the competent court of appeal within 30 days of the judgment. The appeal is heard on the written record and, in most commercial cases, with a renewed oral hearing of key witnesses. An appeal to the Supreme Court requires leave, which is granted only where the case raises a point of legal principle or there is a compelling reason to review the decision. The entire appellate process can add 12–24 months.

Interim Relief and Emergency Measures, How to Get Freezing Orders

Interim relief is available and frequently used in commercial litigation in Finland. Courts have broad discretion to grant provisional measures designed to safeguard the claimant’s position pending final judgment.

Types of Interim Relief Available

The principal forms of interim relief are:

  • Precautionary seizure (turvaamistoimi). The court may order the seizure or freezing of the defendant’s assets where the claimant demonstrates a probable claim and a real risk that the defendant will dissipate, conceal or remove assets.
  • Injunction. Courts can prohibit the defendant from taking specified actions (or require positive steps) where necessary to prevent irreparable harm.
  • Security for costs. A defendant may request that a foreign claimant without assets in Finland provide security for the defendant’s potential costs award, although this is rarely ordered within the EU/EEA.

Applications for interim relief can be made before or after filing the main claim. In urgent cases, the court may hear the application ex parte (without notice to the defendant) and issue an order within days. The claimant is typically required to provide security for any damage the defendant may suffer if the interim measures are later found to have been unjustified.

Enforcement, Domestic Enforcement and Cross-Border Routes

A judgment is only as valuable as the ability to enforce it. Foreign claimants should plan their enforcement strategy from the outset, not as an afterthought.

Enforcing a Finnish Judgment in Finland

Once a Finnish court judgment becomes final (or is declared provisionally enforceable), the claimant applies to the National Enforcement Authority (Ulosottolaitos) for enforcement. The process is straightforward:

  1. Submit the enforcement application with a certified copy of the judgment to the enforcement office in the district where the debtor has assets.
  2. The enforcement officer identifies and seizes assets, bank accounts, receivables, movable and immovable property.
  3. Seized assets are liquidated and proceeds distributed to the claimant.

Enforcement typically takes 2–6 months for liquid assets and longer where real property or contested assets are involved. Enforcement fees are modest and are borne primarily by the debtor.

Enforcing a Finnish Judgment Abroad and Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Finland

Cross-border enforcement within the EU is governed by the Brussels I Recast Regulation (1215/2012), which abolished the requirement for exequatur (a declaration of enforceability) for judgments issued after 10 January 2015. A Finnish judgment can be enforced directly in another EU Member State by presenting the judgment and a certificate issued by the Finnish court under Article 53 of the Regulation.

For enforcement in non-EU states, bilateral treaties between Finland and the relevant country may apply. Where no treaty exists, enforcement depends on the domestic law of the state where enforcement is sought, and reciprocity may be required.

Conversely, a foreign judgment can be enforced in Finland under the Brussels I Recast Regulation (if from an EU Member State), the Lugano Convention (if from an EFTA state) or, in limited cases, Finnish domestic law. Without a treaty basis, Finnish courts have historically been reluctant to recognise foreign judgments.

Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Finland

Finland is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. A foreign arbitral award is enforceable in Finland upon application to the competent district court, provided the applicant submits the original award (or a certified copy) and the arbitration agreement. Refusal is limited to the narrow grounds set out in Article V of the Convention. In practice, enforcement of New York Convention awards in Finland is efficient and predictable.

Practical Risk Matrix, Should You Litigate?

Before committing resources, assess your case against these six factors. Each should score favourably before proceeding:

Factor What to Assess
Likelihood of enforcement Does the defendant have identifiable assets in Finland or in a jurisdiction where enforcement is straightforward?
Speed Can you afford 12–18 months (or longer with appeals)? Is interim relief needed to preserve the status quo?
Cost Are the legal fees proportionate to the amount in dispute? Is there a risk of adverse costs if you lose?
Commercial relationship Will litigation destroy a relationship you need to preserve? Is settlement or mediation a better route?
Urgency Is there a limitation period about to expire or evidence at risk of destruction?
Reputational impact Court proceedings in Finland are generally public. Consider whether confidential arbitration better protects sensitive business information.

Early indications suggest that cases scoring strongly on enforcement likelihood and proportionality of costs produce the best outcomes for foreign claimants. Where two or more factors are weak, negotiation or alternative dispute resolution may be a more sensible path.

Checklist and Next Steps

Use this summary checklist to prepare for commercial litigation in Finland:

  1. Verify the defendant via YTJ and the PRH trade register, confirm active status, registered address and authorised signatories.
  2. Assemble all contracts, invoices, communications and supporting documents. Arrange certified translations into Finnish or Swedish.
  3. Identify the competent district court (defendant’s domicile or contractual forum).
  4. Draft the summons application with a clear statement of claim, itemised damages calculation and evidence list.
  5. Assess the need for interim relief, if assets are at risk, prepare a precautionary-seizure application simultaneously.
  6. Engage Finnish counsel with commercial litigation experience and agree a realistic budget and timeline.
  7. Plan enforcement from day one, confirm where the defendant’s assets are located and which enforcement route applies.
  8. Consider whether mediation or arbitration offers a faster, more confidential resolution.

For a detailed document-preparation guide, see the companion resource: Checklist, what documents you need before filing a commercial claim in Finland.

Conclusion

Commercial litigation in Finland offers foreign businesses a reliable, transparent forum with predictable procedures and strong enforcement mechanisms. The 2026 mandatory digitalisation of trade-register filings has made pre-litigation verification faster and service of process more dependable. Success, however, depends on thorough preparation: assembling evidence early, verifying the defendant through PRH and YTJ, budgeting realistically for costs and timelines, and planning enforcement from the outset. For claimants who approach the process methodically, Finnish courts deliver outcomes that are both fair and enforceable across borders. Explore our Finland lawyer directory to connect with experienced dispute-resolution practitioners who can guide your case from first assessment through to final enforcement.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pekka Ylikoski at Justitum, Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. PRH, Trade Register Mandatory Online Filing
  2. PRH, Special Cases Guidance on Online Filing
  3. YTJ, Business Information System
  4. Valtioneuvosto, Government Proposal on Trade Register
  5. Waselius & Wist, Dispute Resolution
  6. DLA Piper, Finland Litigation and Arbitration
  7. Borenius, Litigation & Arbitration
  8. TEN, Q&A on Commercial Dispute Resolution in Finland
  9. Chambers & Partners, Dispute Resolution, Finland
  10. Svalner Atlas, Amendments to the Finnish Trade Register Act

FAQs

How do I sue a company in Finland?
You file a summons application (haastehakemus) with the district court in the municipality of the defendant’s registered office. The application must include identification of the parties, a statement of claim, an itemised damages calculation, an evidence list and a witness list, all in Finnish or Swedish. The court serves the application on the defendant and sets a deadline for a written response.
Search the YTJ Business Information System by company name or Business ID. YTJ shows the company’s registered address, line of business and status. For more detailed information, board members, authorised signatories, articles of association, order a trade-register extract from the PRH. Since 1 January 2026, mandatory online filing means this data is updated more rapidly.
A standard commercial dispute at the district court takes approximately 12–18 months from filing to first-instance judgment. Court filing fees range from EUR 530 to EUR 2,130 depending on claim value and hearing type. Total litigation costs, including legal fees, translations and expert evidence, vary widely but typically fall between EUR 20,000 and EUR 170,000 for a contested district-court case.
Domestically, apply to the National Enforcement Authority with a certified copy of the judgment. Within the EU, the Brussels I Recast Regulation allows direct enforcement in other Member States without exequatur. Outside the EU, enforcement depends on bilateral treaties or the domestic law of the target state. For arbitral awards, Finland applies the New York Convention.
Yes. Finnish courts can grant precautionary seizure (turvaamistoimi) of the defendant’s assets where the claimant shows a probable claim and a genuine risk of asset dissipation. The application can be made before or simultaneously with the main claim, and in urgent cases the court can act ex parte within days. The claimant is usually required to post security for potential damages.
If a company has been dissolved and struck off the trade register, it generally cannot be sued in its own name. However, if the company was dissolved while a debt or claim existed, Finnish law provides mechanisms to apply for the appointment of a liquidator or to pursue claims against former shareholders or directors who received distributions. Legal advice should be sought promptly, as limitation periods continue to run.
A Finnish judgment remains valid and can be enforced wherever the defendant holds assets. Within the EU, the Brussels I Recast Regulation facilitates cross-border enforcement. Outside the EU, bilateral treaties or local recognition procedures apply. If the defendant genuinely has no reachable assets in any jurisdiction, the practical value of litigation is limited, enforcement planning before filing is essential.
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Commercial Litigation in Finland (2026): a Practical Trial Guide for Foreign Businesses

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