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Last reviewed: 4 May 2026
The amendments to Finland’s Employment Contracts Act (Työsopimuslaki) that took effect on 1 January 2026 represent the most significant shift in individual termination law in over two decades, replacing the former “particularly weighty reason” standard with a lower “proper reason” threshold for person‑related dismissals. For HR directors, in‑house counsel and employer representatives, the practical question is no longer whether the law has changed but how to operationalise it without exposing the organisation to unfair‑dismissal claims. This Finland dismissal process 2026 checklist distils the reformed rules into a concrete, step‑by‑step workflow, covering investigation, warnings, notice obligations and post‑termination duties, so that every decision is documented, defensible and compliant.
Use it alongside the downloadable templates referenced throughout to build an evidence pack that can withstand scrutiny from unions, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Työsuojelu) and, if necessary, a Finnish court.
The numbered steps below form the core of any employer checklist for dismissal in Finland after the 2026 reforms. Each step specifies what to document, who to involve and what evidence to preserve. Where a step is marked ⚠ STOP, seek legal advice, the risk profile is high enough that proceeding without qualified counsel materially increases litigation exposure.
| Evidence type | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Written witness statements (dated, signed) | First‑hand accounts are the strongest evidence in misconduct cases; contemporaneous notes carry more weight than retrospective recollections. |
| Performance metrics / KPI reports | Objective data demonstrates capability shortfall and shows the employee was aware of targets. |
| Prior warning letters and acknowledgements | Prove the employee was given an opportunity to correct behaviour, a procedural prerequisite under the Employment Contracts Act. |
| Email / system‑log extracts | Corroborate timeline of events; must be collected in compliance with privacy rules. |
| Medical / occupational‑health reports (if capability) | Establish whether reasonable adjustments were explored before dismissal on health grounds. |
⚠ STOP, seek legal advice if the conduct is so serious that it may justify summary termination (cancellation) without a warning period. Summary cancellation under Chapter 8 of the Employment Contracts Act requires an “extremely weighty reason” and carries elevated litigation risk.
⚠ STOP, seek legal advice if the employee is a union representative, is pregnant or on family leave, is on extended sick leave or disability, or is subject to a collective agreement with enhanced protections. Dismissal law in Finland 2026 still prohibits termination on discriminatory grounds, and these categories carry heightened scrutiny.
Understanding how to dismiss an employee in Finland in 2026 starts with the legal threshold. The amendments to the Employment Contracts Act fundamentally recalibrated the balance between employer flexibility and employee protection for person‑related terminations. Below is a plain‑English comparison of the old and new standards, followed by the main categories of lawful termination grounds.
Before 1 January 2026, an employer needed a “particularly weighty reason” (erityisen painava syy) to dismiss an employee on person‑related grounds. The 2026 amendment replaced this with a “proper reason” (asiallinen syy) standard. According to TEM guidance, the change is intended to bring the Finnish threshold closer to the mainstream European norm while retaining core procedural safeguards. Grounds that may constitute a proper reason include:
The amended law still expressly prohibits termination on the basis of illness (unless the incapacity is substantial and permanent), political opinion, participation in lawful industrial action, or the exercise of legal rights. PAM (Service Union United) has emphasised that these protections remain unchanged, and employees retain the right to challenge any dismissal they consider unfounded.
Where the ground is diminished work capacity due to health, the employer must demonstrate that the incapacity is not temporary, that occupational health services have been consulted, and that reassignment was explored. For deeper analysis of the intersection between long‑term disability and termination, see our guide to firing on long‑term disability, legal considerations.
Termination on financial, production‑related or reorganisational grounds follows the existing framework under Chapters 7 and 9 of the Employment Contracts Act and the Act on Co‑operation within Undertakings. The 2026 reforms did not alter the substantive threshold for collective redundancies, but employers must still satisfy the re‑employment obligation and, for companies meeting the headcount threshold, complete co‑operation negotiations before issuing notices. For a detailed overview, consult our existing guide on termination of an employment agreement under the Finnish law.
The 2026 package also introduced greater flexibility for concluding fixed‑term contracts. Industry observers expect this will reduce employers’ reliance on indefinite contracts in project‑based industries. However, fixed‑term contracts still cannot ordinarily be terminated before expiry unless the contract contains an express termination clause or the grounds for summary cancellation are met. Employers should review existing fixed‑term templates to ensure termination clauses are included where appropriate.
Even where proper grounds exist, a procedurally defective dismissal can be declared unfair. The steps below expand on the quick checklist and provide the operational detail HR teams need.
Begin every potential dismissal case with a structured investigation. Assign an impartial investigator, define the scope in writing, and set a target completion date. Under Työsuojelu guidance, the employer should act without undue delay once it becomes aware of a potential ground for termination, an unreasonable gap between discovering misconduct and taking action may be interpreted as the employer condoning the behaviour. A reasonable investigation timeline for straightforward cases is typically one to three weeks; complex matters involving multiple witnesses or external data may require longer.
Interview the employee concerned and any relevant witnesses using a consistent template. The template should capture the date, attendees, questions asked, answers given and any documents shown. Offer the employee the right to have a support person present at any investigatory interview, this is distinct from the formal hearing required before the termination decision but builds procedural fairness into the record.
The formal hearing (Step 7 in the checklist) should follow a structured script:
All evidence must be collected and stored in compliance with the GDPR and Finland’s Data Protection Act. Inform the employee if monitoring data (email logs, access records) is being used, and ensure that data is retained only for as long as necessary for the purpose, typically until the expiry of any statutory limitation period for challenging the dismissal. Consult data‑protection counsel if the investigation requires accessing private communications or health data.
Getting the notice period wrong is one of the most common, and most avoidable, errors in Finnish dismissals. The table below sets out the statutory minimums under the Employment Contracts Act, but employers must always cross‑check the applicable collective bargaining agreement and individual employment contract, both of which may impose longer periods.
| Length of employment | Employer’s notice period (statutory minimum) | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 1 year | 14 days | Check CBA, many agreements set a minimum of one month regardless of tenure. |
| 1–4 years | 1 month | Most common bracket; confirm contract does not specify a longer period. |
| 4–8 years | 2 months | Consider whether garden‑leave clause applies. |
| 8–12 years | 4 months | Longer periods increase the cost of errors, ensure grounds are solid before issuing notice. |
| More than 12 years | 6 months | High‑tenure employees are often union members; early engagement with the union is advisable. |
Where the termination is based on redundancy grounds, the employer’s re‑employment obligation requires offering suitable vacancies to the dismissed employee before hiring externally. According to TEM guidance on lay‑offs and termination, this obligation runs for a defined period after the employment relationship ends. Employers should maintain a log of all vacancies arising during the re‑employment period and document the assessment of whether the former employee’s qualifications match.
Finnish law does not mandate a general statutory severance payment for lawful dismissals. However, if a court finds the dismissal unfair, compensation of three to 24 months’ pay may be awarded under the Employment Contracts Act. For further detail on calculating potential exposure, see our guide to compensation for dismissal or summary dismissal. Many employers choose to offer a voluntary settlement package to secure a clean exit, see the risk‑reduction section below.
A well‑documented, procedurally fair process is the single most effective way to reduce dismissal litigation in Finland. The steps below supplement the checklist with strategic risk‑mitigation measures.
Assemble a complete evidence pack before issuing notice. The pack should contain the investigation memo, all witness statements, performance data, the warning letter and acknowledgement, the hearing minutes, the decision memo and the termination notice. Store a copy in a secure HR archive and retain it for the full limitation period applicable to employment disputes.
A settlement agreement (sopimus työsuhteen päättämisestä) can eliminate litigation risk entirely if drafted correctly. Key elements include:
Industry observers expect that the lower threshold introduced by the 2026 reforms will, over time, reduce the volume of marginal unfair‑dismissal claims. In the interim, while case law under the new standard develops, the practical risk calculus may still favour offering a modest settlement in borderline cases, particularly where the employee has long tenure, union backing or the factual record is incomplete.
| Date | Reform element | Immediate employer action |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Employment Contracts Act amendments take effect, person‑related dismissal threshold lowered from “particularly weighty reason” to “proper reason”; fixed‑term contract flexibility introduced | Update all dismissal policies and template documents; retrain HR personnel; review any live disciplinary cases against the new standard |
| 19 December 2025 | Government and law‑firm advisory alerts published (Borenius, Castrén & Snellman, Hannes Snellman) | Review alerts; incorporate practical commentary into internal checklist and training materials |
| April–May 2026 | Union and authority guidance published (PAM, TEM, Työsuojelu) | Align internal procedures with authority guidance; update citations and evidence standards |
The following templates support each stage of the Finland dismissal process 2026 checklist. Each is designed to capture the minimum documentation required for a defensible termination under the amended Employment Contracts Act.
Certain dismissal scenarios carry significantly elevated risk and should not be managed without specialist employment counsel. Seek immediate legal advice where the dismissal involves a trade‑union representative, an employee on family or parental leave, a disability or long‑term health situation, cross‑border employment arrangements, executive‑level contracts with bespoke termination provisions, or any situation where an unfair‑dismissal claim appears likely. Qualified Finnish employment lawyers can be found through the Global Law Experts Finland lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jani Pitkanen at Properta Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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