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This Finland dismissal law 2026 employer guide explains every practical step that general counsel, HR directors and foreign employers need to take following the Employment Contracts Act amendment that entered into force on 1 January 2026. The reform replaces the former requirement for “weighty and particularly weighty grounds” with a lower “proper reason” (asiallinen syy) threshold for termination on person‑related grounds, significantly reshaping employer obligations in Finland 2026. This article provides decision trees, procedural checklists, sample clauses and litigation‑risk scoring to help employers act with confidence while avoiding the costly missteps that can still arise under the new framework.
The Finnish Government confirmed the amendment in its December 2025 press release: as of 1 January 2026, an employment relationship may be terminated on less weighty grounds where the employee violates obligations arising from the employment relationship. The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment (TEM) characterises the change as a shift from the previous “weighty” (painava syy) standard to a “proper reason” (asiallinen syy) standard, a meaningful reduction in the evidential bar employers must clear when pursuing termination for person‑related grounds.
Crucially, the amendment does not alter dismissal rules for production‑related or financial grounds (redundancies). Co‑operation negotiation obligations, notice period rules and prohibited grounds for dismissal, including illness, union activity and pregnancy, remain fully intact. The practical effect is that employers now have broader discretion to terminate underperforming or non‑compliant employees, provided the correct procedure is followed and proportionality is demonstrated. Industry observers expect an increase in person‑related dismissals during 2026, making robust documentation and trained HR teams more important than ever.
| Issue | Before 1 Jan 2026 | After 1 Jan 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Legal threshold for person‑related dismissal | “Weighty grounds”, heavier evidential burden | “Proper reason” (asiallinen syy), lower threshold; broader employer discretion but still subject to proportionality |
| Employer investigation & documentation expectation | Important, but stricter test made many dismissals risky | Equally important, lower threshold increases likelihood of lawful dismissals only if process and documentation are robust |
| Fixed‑term conversion risk | Existing renewal rules with case‑law limits | Tighter scrutiny of serial fixed‑term use; employers should audit and document objective grounds |
| Co‑operation negotiations (yhteistoiminta) | Unchanged procedural obligations | Still mandatory where thresholds are met; negotiation content should address new dismissal test and selection criteria |
Understanding the statutory test and building the right evidentiary record are the two pillars of a lawful proper reason dismissal in Finland. The lower threshold does not eliminate the employer’s burden, it recalibrates it.
Under the amended Employment Contracts Act, an employer may terminate an indefinite employment contract on person‑related grounds where the employee has breached or neglected obligations arising from the employment relationship and a “proper reason” for termination exists. The term asiallinen syy replaces the former painava syy. According to the TEM Q&A, this means the employer no longer needs to demonstrate that the grounds are “weighty”, it is sufficient that the reason is objective, factual and proportionate to termination.
Examples of conduct that may constitute a proper reason include:
Prohibited grounds remain unchanged. The employer cannot dismiss on the basis of illness (unless work capacity is substantially and permanently reduced), pregnancy, family leave, political opinion, union membership or participation in lawful industrial action. The employee’s position within the organisation and the overall circumstances must still be assessed.
Even under the lower threshold, employers should follow a structured investigatory process. A termination supported by poor documentation remains vulnerable to challenge regardless of the statutory test.
The following decision pathway reflects the practical approach that industry observers expect Finnish courts to apply when reviewing dismissals under the new test:
Litigation risk scoring. Early indications suggest that cases involving a single minor infraction with no prior warning will remain high risk for the employer, even under the lower threshold. Cases involving repeated, documented breaches following a clear warning and a fair hearing present low risk. The middle ground, a serious single incident or a pattern of moderate issues, is medium risk and warrants specialist legal advice before proceeding.
The 2026 amendment does not change the rules governing dismissal on production‑related and financial grounds. However, employers planning restructurings should integrate the new person‑related threshold into their overall workforce‑reduction strategy, particularly when selecting individuals for redundancy.
Under the Act on Co‑operation within Undertakings, co‑operation negotiations are mandatory before an employer may dismiss, lay off or reduce the working hours of employees on financial or production‑related grounds. The obligation arises for employers that regularly employ at least 20 persons. Where the employer’s plan involves dismissing at least 10 employees, specific notification and enhanced procedural requirements apply, including written notice to the TE Office.
Key procedural steps include:
Finnish law does not prescribe specific selection criteria, but employers must apply objective, non‑discriminatory factors. A transparent scoring matrix reduces litigation risk. Typical criteria include:
Document the matrix, score each employee consistently and retain all scoring sheets. Employers should avoid using criteria that correlate with protected characteristics (age, disability, gender).
Effective co‑operation negotiations in Finland follow a structured timeline:
Minutes of every session should record attendees, topics discussed, alternatives proposed and the employer’s response. These minutes are the employer’s primary evidence in any subsequent challenge.
Although the 2026 amendment focuses on the dismissal threshold, employers should also audit their use of fixed‑term contracts. Finnish law permits fixed‑term employment only where there is a justified, objective reason, such as a specific project, seasonal demand or substitution for an absent employee. There is no statutory cap on the number of renewals, but serial renewals without a genuine objective basis risk reclassification as permanent employment.
Note: this is a sample clause provided for illustrative purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Employers should seek qualified counsel before incorporating it into any agreement.
“This employment contract is concluded for a fixed term from [start date] to [end date] for the following objective reason: [state reason, e.g., substitution for employee X during parental leave / completion of project Y]. The contract shall terminate automatically upon the expiry of the fixed term without separate notice. Any renewal shall require a new written agreement stating a separate justified reason.”
Statutory notice periods under the Employment Contracts Act are determined by the employee’s length of continuous service. The 2026 amendment did not change these periods, but employers must ensure they apply the correct notice period for every termination.
| Employee’s continuous service | Employer’s notice period | Employee’s notice period |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 1 year | 14 days | 14 days |
| Over 1 year, up to 4 years | 1 month | 14 days |
| Over 4 years, up to 8 years | 2 months | 1 month |
| Over 8 years, up to 12 years | 4 months | 1 month |
| Over 12 years | 6 months | 2 months |
Collective agreements may extend these periods. Employers should check the applicable collective agreement before issuing notice.
A lay‑off (lomautus) is a temporary suspension of work and pay, not a termination. The employer may lay off an employee for a maximum of 90 days where there is a temporary reduction in available work. If the lay‑off exceeds 90 continuous days, the employee may treat the employment as terminated and claim severance. Co‑operation negotiation obligations apply to lay‑offs in the same way as to dismissals for employers with at least 20 employees. The re‑employment obligation requires employers to offer available work to dismissed employees for a period following termination, where the former employee has registered as a jobseeker with the TE Office.
Foreign employers establishing Finnish operations or hiring senior executives should review and update all termination and severance clauses in light of the 2026 changes. The lower person‑related dismissal threshold affects how “cause” provisions interact with statutory rights.
Note: these are sample clauses provided for illustrative purposes only. They do not constitute legal advice. Employers should seek qualified counsel before using them.
Version A, Standard two‑track clause:
“The Company may terminate this agreement (i) for Cause, defined as a proper reason (asiallinen syy) under Chapter 7, Section 2 of the Employment Contracts Act, as amended, in which case the statutory notice period shall apply and no severance payment shall be due; or (ii) without Cause, in which case the Executive shall be entitled to a severance payment equal to [6/9/12] months’ base salary, payable in equal instalments over the notice period, subject to the Executive’s compliance with the post‑termination obligations set out in Clause [X].”
Version B, Enhanced severance with garden leave:
“In the event of termination without Cause, the Executive shall serve a garden‑leave period of [3] months during the notice period, during which the Executive shall remain available for handover duties but shall not be required to attend the workplace. The severance payment of [9] months’ base salary shall be payable upon the expiry of the garden‑leave period, net of any earnings from alternative employment commenced during the severance period (mitigation).”
The lower dismissal threshold does not eliminate litigation risk. Employees retain the right to challenge their dismissal in court, and the likely practical effect is that disputes will shift from “was there a weighty reason?” to “was the employer’s reason proper and was the process fair?”
| Scenario | Risk level | Typical outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Single minor infraction, no prior warning, no hearing | High | Dismissal likely found unlawful; compensation of 3–24 months’ pay |
| Repeated documented breaches, written warning, employee heard | Low | Dismissal likely upheld |
| Serious single incident (e.g., safety breach), hearing held but no prior warning | Medium | Outcome depends on severity and proportionality, specialist advice recommended |
| Performance‑based dismissal with documented improvement plan and review period | Low–Medium | Upheld if plan was specific, measurable and employee was given genuine opportunity |
If a dismissal is challenged, the employer should consider early settlement to limit cost and distraction. Key cost drivers include:
An effective incident‑response plan involves: (1) immediate suspension with pay pending investigation; (2) thorough investigation and contemporaneous documentation; (3) employee hearing with representative present; (4) coordination between HR and legal before issuing notice; and (5) early engagement with employee or union representative to explore settlement if grounds are borderline.
Employers operating in Finland should treat the 2026 amendment as a catalyst for a comprehensive review of employment practices. The following checklist provides a structured timeline:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Katja Halonen at Magnusson Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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