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finland arbitration reform

Finland Arbitration Reform 2026, Practical Guide for Businesses & In‑house Counsel

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The Finland arbitration reform now advancing through the legislative process represents the most significant overhaul of Finnish dispute resolution law in decades. On December 18, 2025, the Ministry of Justice working group published its report proposing a new Finnish Arbitration Act modelled on the UNCITRAL Model Law, a shift that would remove the strict written‑form requirement for arbitration agreements, introduce statutory recognition of emergency arbitrators, and modernise interim‑measure procedures. As of May 16, 2026, the bill is progressing through parliamentary consultation, and every business with Finnish‑law arbitration clauses needs to act now.

This guide provides the practical checklist, clause redlines, and enforcement analysis that in‑house counsel and contracting teams need to update their contracts and dispute strategies before the new Act takes effect.

What the Finland Arbitration Reform Proposes, Key Changes at a Glance

The working group report published on December 18, 2025 sets out a comprehensive proposal to replace the current Finnish Arbitration Act (välimiesmenettelylaki, 967/1992) with a modern statute aligned with the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. The proposed Finnish Arbitration Act would bring Finland into line with the arbitration frameworks already adopted by Sweden, Singapore, Hong Kong, and most other leading arbitration jurisdictions.

Major Legal Changes Under the Proposed Act

The reform proposals cluster around five areas of immediate practical concern for businesses and their legal teams:

  • Form‑free arbitration agreements. The current Act requires arbitration agreements to be in writing. The proposed law would accept arbitration agreements concluded by any means, including oral agreements, electronic communications, and conduct, provided there is sufficient evidence of the parties’ consent. This aligns Finland with Article 7 (Option I) of the UNCITRAL Model Law.
  • Full UNCITRAL Model Law alignment. The new Act would adopt the structure, terminology, and substantive rules of the Model Law, making Finnish arbitration immediately recognisable to international parties and their counsel. Industry observers expect this alignment to reduce jurisdictional objections and increase Finland’s attractiveness as an arbitral seat.
  • Emergency arbitrator recognition. For the first time, the Finnish Arbitration Act would include express statutory provisions for emergency arbitrators appointed under institutional rules (such as those of the Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Institute). Emergency arbitrator decisions would be given a clear procedural basis under Finnish law.
  • Modernised interim measures. The proposal expands the types of interim measures that arbitral tribunals may order and clarifies the interface between tribunal‑ordered interim relief and court‑ordered provisional measures. Finnish courts would retain the power to grant interim measures in support of arbitration.
  • Clarified court interaction and challenge grounds. The working group proposes aligning the grounds for setting aside awards with Article 34 of the Model Law, replacing the current, and at times ambiguous, Finnish provisions. Court intervention during pending arbitration proceedings would be more precisely defined.

Comparison Table, Current Rules vs. Proposed Rules

Area Current Finnish Arbitration Act (1992) Proposed New Act Practical Impact
Form of arbitration agreement Must be in writing (signed or exchanged documents) No mandatory written form; any evidence of consent sufficient E‑contracts, click‑wraps, and oral agreements can now contain enforceable arbitration commitments
Emergency arbitrator No statutory basis; enforceability uncertain Express statutory recognition of emergency arbitrator decisions Pre‑tribunal urgent relief becomes procedurally reliable under Finnish law
Interim measures by tribunal Limited provisions; scope unclear Expanded catalogue aligned with UNCITRAL Model Law Articles 17–17J Tribunals gain explicit authority for asset‑freezing, evidence‑preservation, and status‑quo orders
Court‑ordered interim measures Available but relationship with arbitral measures not defined Courts expressly authorised to act in support of arbitration; parallel competence preserved Parties can seek court relief without waiving their arbitration agreement
Setting aside / challenge grounds Finnish‑specific grounds with some ambiguity Aligned with UNCITRAL Model Law Article 34 International parties benefit from globally recognised, predictable challenge standards
Enforcement of awards Domestic rules plus New York Convention Model Law Article 35/36 framework; New York Convention continues to apply Streamlined enforcement procedures; reduced risk of procedural objections

Timeline and Next Steps, Legislative Process for the Finland Arbitration Reform

Understanding the legislative timeline is essential for planning contract updates and internal training. The table below summarises confirmed milestones and projected next steps as of May 16, 2026. In‑house counsel should monitor the Finnish Ministry of Justice and the Eduskunta (Parliament) for updates beyond this date.

Date Event Practical Action for Counsel
18 December 2025 Working group report published (Finnish Arbitration Institute / Ministry of Justice) Begin contract audit; identify all agreements with Finnish‑law arbitration clauses
Q1–Q2 2026 Parliamentary consultation and government bill drafting (status as of May 16, 2026: in progress) Start clause redline program; prepare updated templates for new and renewing contracts
TBD, monitor MoJ / Eduskunta Enactment and entry into force of the new Finnish Arbitration Act Implement redlined clauses across the contract portfolio; update dispute playbooks; train commercial teams

Last checked: May 16, 2026. No specific enactment date has been publicly confirmed. The working group report did not propose transitional provisions in its summary; the likely practical effect is that the new Act will apply to arbitration agreements and proceedings commenced after its entry into force, though this remains subject to the final legislative text.

Deep Dive, Arbitration Agreement Validity and Drafting Under the New Finnish Arbitration Act

The most immediate drafting impact of the Finland arbitration reform concerns the form requirements for a valid arbitration agreement in Finland. Under the current 1992 Act, an arbitration agreement must be in writing. The proposed law would eliminate this mandatory written‑form requirement, following the broader UNCITRAL Model Law approach adopted by most modern arbitration statutes.

What the Form‑Free Rule Means in Practice

An arbitration agreement concluded orally, by electronic communication, by exchange of statements of claim and defence where one party alleges the existence of an arbitration agreement and the other does not deny it, or even through conduct, would be valid under the proposed Act, provided there is sufficient evidence of mutual consent. This has three practical implications for contracting teams:

  • E‑contracts and digital platforms. Arbitration clauses embedded in online terms of service, click‑wrap agreements, or electronically signed contracts will gain a clearer legal basis under Finnish law. Parties relying on e‑signatures should nonetheless ensure they retain evidence of acceptance.
  • Incorporation by reference. A reference to a document containing an arbitration clause (such as standard terms and conditions or a framework agreement) will more readily satisfy the agreement requirement, provided the reference is sufficiently clear to constitute consent.
  • Non‑signatory issues. The reform opens the door to arguments that non‑signatories, such as group companies, assignees, or agents, may be bound by arbitration agreements based on conduct, assumption of obligations, or other recognised doctrines. Businesses with complex corporate structures should review their contract chains to identify exposure.

Clause Redlines, Before and After

The table below illustrates how a standard arbitration clause should be updated to reflect the proposed reforms. While the old clause remains enforceable, the updated version addresses the new statutory environment and removes unnecessary formalism.

Current Sample Clause Recommended Updated Clause
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be finally settled by arbitration in accordance with the Arbitration Rules of the Finland Chamber of Commerce. The arbitration shall take place in Helsinki. This agreement to arbitrate must be in writing and signed by both parties. “Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity, or termination, shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by the Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Institute under its Rules in force at the date of commencement of the arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be Helsinki, Finland. This arbitration agreement shall be valid regardless of the form in which it is concluded, provided there is evidence of the parties’ consent.

Recommended Contract Language for Specific Scenarios

  • Multi‑party contracts. “This arbitration agreement binds all parties to this contract and any party that has expressly consented to be bound by its terms, whether by signature, electronic acceptance, or conduct.”
  • Assignment clauses. “Upon valid assignment of this contract, the arbitration agreement contained herein shall be binding on the assignee to the same extent as on the original party.”
  • E‑signature and electronic communications. “For the avoidance of doubt, this arbitration agreement may be concluded and evidenced by electronic communications, including e‑mail exchange, electronic signature platforms, or acceptance through digital contracting systems.”

Interim Measures, Emergency Arbitrators, and Court Interaction Under the Finland Arbitration Reform

The proposed Finnish Arbitration Act introduces a comprehensive framework for interim measures in Finland, replacing the limited and at times unclear provisions of the 1992 Act. This section explains the three routes to urgent relief now available to parties and the critical drafting steps required to preserve access to each route.

Three Routes to Urgent Relief, Compared

Feature Arbitral Tribunal Interim Measures Emergency Arbitrator (Finland) Finnish Court Provisional Measures
Availability After tribunal constituted Before tribunal constituted (if institutional rules permit) At any time, before, during, or after arbitration
Typical speed Days to weeks Hours to days Hours (ex parte) to weeks (inter partes)
Types of relief Asset preservation, evidence preservation, status quo, anti‑suit Same as tribunal, but usually limited to preserving status quo or preventing irreparable harm Seizure, attachment, injunction, freezing orders
Enforcement Enforceable under proposed Act (Model Law basis) Statutory recognition proposed; enforcement pathway clarified Directly enforceable under Finnish procedural law
Risk to arbitration agreement None None None, the proposed Act expressly preserves court assistance without waiver of arbitration

Practical Steps for Drafting Interim Relief and Emergency Arbitrator Clauses

To ensure full access to all three routes, in‑house counsel should take the following steps when drafting an arbitration clause under the proposed Act:

  • Incorporate institutional rules that include emergency arbitrator provisions. The Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Institute rules already include emergency arbitrator procedures. Expressly referencing these rules in the arbitration clause ensures the emergency arbitrator route is available.
  • Do not exclude court‑ordered interim measures. Some older boilerplate clauses include language that may inadvertently waive the right to seek court‑ordered provisional measures. Remove or revise any such language.
  • Include an express court‑assistance carveout. Add language such as: “Nothing in this arbitration agreement shall prevent any party from seeking interim or conservatory measures from any court of competent jurisdiction. Any such application shall not be deemed a waiver of the arbitration agreement.”
  • Specify the seat carefully. The seat of arbitration determines the procedural law governing interim measures. Choosing Helsinki ensures that the new Finnish Arbitration Act governs the tribunal’s interim powers.

Enforcement and Challenging Awards, Practical Effects of UNCITRAL Alignment

Aligning the Finnish Arbitration Act with the UNCITRAL Model Law has direct consequences for how parties enforce arbitral awards in Finland and the grounds on which losing parties may seek to challenge them. Finland is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which continues to govern the enforcement of foreign awards. The proposed Act would harmonise domestic enforcement and challenge procedures with the Model Law framework, making Finnish enforcement proceedings more predictable for international parties.

Key Changes to Enforcement and Challenge Procedures

  • Challenge grounds aligned with Article 34. The grounds for setting aside a Finnish award would mirror Model Law Article 34: incapacity, invalid agreement, lack of proper notice, award beyond scope of submission, improper tribunal composition, non‑arbitrability, and public policy. This replaces the current Finnish‑specific provisions, which have at times generated interpretive uncertainty.
  • Enforcement of foreign awards. Foreign awards will continue to be enforced under the New York Convention. The proposed Act would add a Model Law Article 35/36 recognition regime for awards rendered in jurisdictions not party to the Convention, broadening enforcement options.
  • Time limits. Early indications suggest the proposed Act will maintain a defined time limit for setting‑aside applications, consistent with Model Law practice. Counsel should confirm the final statutory deadline once the bill text is published.

Checklist for Post‑Award Enforcement in Finland

  1. Obtain the original award or a certified copy, together with the original arbitration agreement or a certified copy.
  2. If the award or agreement is not in Finnish or Swedish, prepare a certified translation.
  3. File an enforcement application with the competent Finnish district court.
  4. Identify potential challenge grounds early, review tribunal composition, notice records, and scope of submissions.
  5. Monitor the time limit for setting‑aside applications and calendar key deadlines immediately upon receipt of the award.
  6. Consider parallel enforcement in other jurisdictions if the losing party’s assets are located outside Finland.

Operational Checklist for In‑House Counsel, What to Do Now

The following ten‑point checklist translates the Finland arbitration reform proposals into concrete, immediate actions for legal departments and commercial teams. These steps can be implemented now, well before the new Act enters into force, to avoid disruption and capture drafting improvements.

  1. Audit existing arbitration clauses. Identify every contract in the portfolio that contains a Finnish‑law arbitration clause or designates Finland as the seat of arbitration. Flag clauses that reference the 1992 Act by name or impose written‑form requirements.
  2. Prepare clause redlines. Using the templates in this guide, draft updated arbitration clauses that reflect the proposed form‑free environment, include emergency arbitrator access, and preserve court‑assistance rights.
  3. Distribute updated templates. Push revised templates to all business units, procurement teams, and external counsel who negotiate contracts on the company’s behalf. Ensure template management systems are updated.
  4. Train commercial teams. Conduct brief training sessions explaining why the arbitration clause is changing, what the form‑free rule means for negotiations, and when to escalate drafting questions to legal.
  5. Update the dispute playbook. Revise internal dispute resolution protocols to account for emergency arbitrator availability, the expanded interim‑measure toolkit, and the new challenge grounds.
  6. Review litigation strategy for pending and anticipated disputes. For any disputes currently governed by Finnish arbitration, assess whether the reform affects forum selection, interim relief strategy, or enforcement planning.
  7. Revise notice and consent processes. Where agreements are concluded electronically or through conduct, implement record‑keeping processes that capture evidence of consent to arbitration, email confirmations, system logs, acceptance records.
  8. Update signature procedures. Confirm that e‑signature platforms used by the company generate records sufficient to evidence consent to arbitration under the proposed form‑free standard.
  9. Build an escalation matrix. Designate a point person for monitoring the legislative process and disseminating updates to affected teams. This person should track Ministry of Justice announcements and Eduskunta proceedings.
  10. Monitor legislation. Subscribe to updates from the Finnish Arbitration Institute, the Ministry of Justice, and the Eduskunta. Adjust implementation timelines as the bill progresses.

Sample internal memo subject line: “Action Required: Update Arbitration Clauses, Finland Arbitration Reform 2026”

Draft Clause Templates and Redlines

The three templates below are designed for immediate use in contract drafting under the proposed Finnish Arbitration Act. Each template addresses a specific aspect of the reform and includes a short rationale explaining why the language has been updated.

Template A, International Commercial Arbitration Clause (Form‑Free / E‑Signature Friendly)

“Any dispute, controversy, or claim arising out of or in connection with this contract, or the breach, termination, or invalidity thereof, shall be finally settled by arbitration administered by the Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Institute under its Arbitration Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be Helsinki, Finland. The number of arbitrators shall be [one/three]. The language of the arbitration shall be [English/Finnish]. This arbitration agreement is valid regardless of the form in which it is concluded, including by electronic communication or e‑signature.”

Redline rationale: The final sentence expressly acknowledges the form‑free standard proposed by the working group, reducing the risk of challenges based on form defects in digital or cross‑border contracting environments.

Template B, Emergency Arbitrator Clause

“The parties agree that the Emergency Arbitrator Provisions of the Finland Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Institute Rules shall apply. Any party may apply for emergency relief before the constitution of the arbitral tribunal. The emergency arbitrator shall have the power to order any interim measures that the arbitral tribunal could order under the applicable rules.”

Redline rationale: Express incorporation of the emergency arbitrator provisions ensures statutory recognition under the proposed Act and eliminates any ambiguity about enforceability of pre‑tribunal orders.

Template C, Interim Measures and Court‑Assistance Clause

“Nothing in this arbitration agreement shall prevent any party from applying to any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures at any time before, during, or after the arbitral proceedings. Any such application shall not constitute a waiver of the right to arbitrate and shall not affect the powers of the arbitral tribunal, including any emergency arbitrator.”

Redline rationale: This clause preserves parallel access to court intervention in support of arbitration, critical for urgent asset seizures, evidence preservation, and freezing orders where the tribunal cannot act quickly enough.

Risk Scenarios and Practical Advice

The Finland arbitration reform creates specific risk points that in‑house counsel should address proactively. The following scenarios illustrate the most common concerns and recommended responses.

  • Scenario 1, Cross‑border group contracts. A Finnish parent company enters into a framework agreement with an arbitration clause, and a subsidiary performs the contract. Under the proposed form‑free rules, the subsidiary may be argued to be bound by the arbitration agreement through conduct. Recommended step: Include express joinder or consent language in the framework agreement specifying which group entities are bound, and maintain records of each entity’s participation.
  • Scenario 2, Non‑signatory disputes. A counterparty argues that a company’s agent or affiliate consented to arbitration through oral negotiations or email exchanges. Recommended step: Implement authority controls so that only designated individuals can consent to arbitration on behalf of the company, and document these controls in board resolutions or powers of attorney.
  • Scenario 3, Urgent asset preservation. A party discovers that the opposing party is dissipating assets in Finland. The arbitral tribunal has not yet been constituted. Recommended step: Apply simultaneously for an emergency arbitrator under institutional rules and for a court freezing order from the competent Finnish district court. The proposed Act preserves both routes without waiver risk. Refer to the preparation and conduct of arbitration hearings guide for procedural steps once the tribunal is constituted.

Conclusion, Act Now on the Finland Arbitration Reform

The Finland arbitration reform is not a distant prospect, it is an active legislative process that demands immediate attention from every business with Finnish arbitration exposure. The shift to form‑free agreements, the introduction of emergency arbitrator recognition, and the alignment with the UNCITRAL Model Law will reshape how disputes are commenced, managed, and enforced under Finnish law. In‑house counsel who begin their contract audit and clause redline programme now will be positioned to capture the benefits of the new regime from day one, while avoiding the enforcement risks that outdated clauses may create. Monitor the legislative process, implement the operational checklist, and seek specialist dispute resolution advice to ensure your organisation is fully prepared.

Connect with experienced Finland dispute resolution counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for tailored guidance.

Last reviewed: May 16, 2026. This article will be updated as the legislative process progresses and the final bill text is published.

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. Finnish Arbitration Institute, Working Group Report Announcement
  2. EDILEX, The Finnish Arbitration Act Reform
  3. UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration
  4. DLA Piper, Finnish Arbitration Act Being Reformed
  5. HPP Attorneys, Reforming the Finnish Arbitration Act
  6. TheCIMA, Finland Moves to Modernize Arbitration Law
  7. Waselius, Chambers Global 2026 Finland Dispute Resolution Overview

FAQs

What are the main changes introduced by the Finland Arbitration Act 2026?
The proposed Act removes the mandatory written‑form requirement for arbitration agreements, introduces statutory recognition of emergency arbitrators, modernises interim‑measure rules, and aligns challenge and enforcement procedures with the UNCITRAL Model Law (Working Group report, December 18, 2025).
No. The proposed Act adopts a form‑free approach aligned with UNCITRAL Model Law Article 7 (Option I). Arbitration agreements concluded orally, electronically, or through conduct will be valid, provided there is sufficient evidence of consent.
The reform expands the types of interim measures arbitral tribunals may order and provides express statutory recognition for emergency arbitrator decisions. Finnish courts retain parallel authority to grant provisional measures in support of arbitration.
Businesses should immediately audit their contract portfolios, prepare updated clause templates reflecting the form‑free standard, train commercial teams, and update dispute playbooks. See the ten‑point operational checklist above for a full action plan.
UNCITRAL alignment will make Finnish enforcement and challenge procedures more predictable and internationally recognisable. The grounds for setting aside awards will mirror Model Law Article 34, and enforcement of foreign awards will continue under the New York Convention with an additional Model Law recognition pathway. For a broader comparison, see the guide to top countries for international arbitration and dispute resolution.
No specific enactment date has been publicly confirmed as of May 16, 2026. The bill is progressing through parliamentary consultation. Counsel should monitor the Ministry of Justice and the Eduskunta for updates on the legislative timetable and any transitional provisions.
The form‑free approach makes it more likely that non‑signatories, such as group companies, assignees, or agents, could be found to have consented to arbitration through conduct, assumption of obligations, or other recognised doctrines. Businesses should implement clear authority controls and maintain records of consent.
Yes. The seat determines the procedural law governing the tribunal’s interim powers. Choosing Helsinki ensures that the modernised interim‑measure framework under the proposed Act applies, including the expanded catalogue of tribunal‑ordered measures and statutory emergency arbitrator recognition.
The proposed Finnish Act draws on the UNCITRAL Model Law, as does Swedish arbitration law. Industry observers expect the two regimes to converge significantly on form requirements, interim measures, and challenge grounds, making the Nordic region a more coherent arbitration environment for cross‑border transactions. For a foundational comparison of dispute mechanisms, see the guide to key differences between arbitration and litigation.

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Finland Arbitration Reform 2026, Practical Guide for Businesses & In‑house Counsel

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