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how to file court documents electronically in Finland

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How to File Court Documents Electronically in Finland, Step‑by‑step (mandatory E‑filing 2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to file court documents electronically in Finland is now essential for every law firm, corporate legal department and registered legal person involved in commercial litigation. The 2026 administrative reform made electronic filing mandatory for a broad category of civil and commercial cases heard by Finland’s district courts (käräjäoikeus), courts of appeal (hovioikeus) and the Supreme Court (korkein oikeus). This guide walks through the entire e‑filing procedure in Finland, from registration and document preparation to payment, service and post‑filing compliance, so that in‑house counsel, general counsel and external litigators can file correctly the first time and avoid rejections or sanctions.

Overview of the E‑Filing Process and Who It Applies To

Finland’s court system operates on three tiers for civil and commercial matters: district courts handle first‑instance cases, courts of appeal hear appeals, and the Supreme Court grants leave to appeal on points of law. Administrative disputes follow a parallel track through the administrative courts and the Supreme Administrative Court (korkein hallinto‑oikeus, KHO). The 2026 reform extends mandatory electronic filing Finland 2026 rules to all civil and commercial claims filed by law firms, companies and other registered legal persons in the general courts. Administrative courts have adopted comparable requirements for organisational filers.

To initiate proceedings, that is, to sue someone in Finland, a plaintiff must submit a written claim (haastehakemus) to the competent district court. Under the new rules, this claim and all subsequent filings must be submitted through the courts’ electronic service portal unless an exemption applies. The reform does not change the substantive requirements of a claim; it changes the channel through which documents reach the court.

Quick glossary

  • e‑ID / Suomi.fi. Finland’s national electronic identification framework. Suomi.fi provides strong authentication via bank credentials, mobile certificates or certificate cards, enabling individuals and organisations to log in to public e‑services, including the courts’ filing portal.
  • PDF/A. An ISO‑standardised archival variant of the PDF format. Finnish courts require filed documents in PDF/A (preferably PDF/A‑1a or PDF/A‑2a) to ensure long‑term readability and accessibility.
  • Plaintiff / defendant. The party initiating the claim (kantaja) and the party responding (vastaaja). Both must comply with the e‑filing procedure when represented by a lawyer or acting as a registered legal person.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Electronic Filing in Finland

Who must e‑file

The 2026 reform requires all law firms and licensed advocates (asianajaja), public legal aid attorneys, companies (whether Finnish‑registered or operating through a Finnish branch), government agencies and other registered legal persons to register to e‑file Finnish courts documents electronically. Self‑represented natural persons may still file on paper where they can demonstrate that electronic filing would impose a disproportionate burden, but industry observers expect courts to interpret this exemption narrowly.

How to register for court e‑services

  1. Obtain a personal or organisational e‑ID. Individuals authenticate through Suomi.fi using Finnish bank credentials, a mobile certificate issued by a Finnish telecom operator, or a certificate card. Foreign nationals with Finnish personal identity codes can use the same methods.
  2. Create an account on the courts’ e‑service portal. Navigate to the judicial administration’s e‑services hub (available via Oikeus.fi) and register as a new user. Accept the terms of use.
  3. Complete organisational verification. If filing on behalf of a company, link your personal e‑ID to the organisation’s registered details. The system cross‑references the Trade Register. This verification step typically takes 1–10 business days, though more complex corporate structures may take longer.
  4. Provide an electronic address for service. Enter a Suomi.fi Messages address or another approved electronic service address so the court and opposing parties can serve documents on you electronically.

Exemptions to mandatory e‑filing and special cases

Limited transitional exemptions apply. Self‑represented individuals without a Finnish personal identity code, for example, foreign natural persons, may request permission to file on paper. Legal aid recipients who are natural persons may also qualify for an exemption where accessibility constraints exist. However, where a legal aid attorney represents the party, the attorney must e‑file. Small claims pursued through the European Small Claims Procedure have their own electronic service rules under EU regulations, though the underlying document format requirements remain the same when filed in Finland.

Step‑by‑Step E‑Filing Procedure in Finland

The following numbered steps describe the complete e‑filing procedure Finland litigators must follow, from authentication through post‑filing monitoring. Each step includes the responsible party and actionable sub‑items.

Step Who does it Typical duration
Register for court e‑services / obtain e‑ID and organisational verification Law firm IT / authorised signatory 1–10 business days (organisation verification may take longer)
Convert and prepare documents (PDF/A, bookmarks, index) Filing lawyer / paralegal 0.5–3 business days (depends on bundle size)
Create filing in court e‑service and attach documents Filing lawyer / paralegal 15–60 minutes
Sign submission and pay fees Filing lawyer / authorised payer Immediate (payment processed live)
Court receipt and docketing Court registry (automated) Immediate to 1 business day
Service on opponent via court or electronic address Court or party 1–3 business days (courts may serve within statutory window)
Corrections / supplements (if rejected) Filing lawyer 1–7 business days after notification

Step 1, Register and obtain e‑ID / organisation authentication

Before any filing can be made, the filing lawyer or authorised representative must hold a valid Suomi.fi‑compatible e‑ID. Log in to the courts’ e‑service portal and complete the registration workflow described above. Organisations should designate a primary filing contact and at least one backup to avoid bottlenecks during deadlines. Confirm that your organisational details match the Trade Register extract, mismatches will delay verification.

Step 2, Prepare documents: convert to PDF/A, combine exhibits, paginate

Convert all documents to PDF/A format before uploading. The courts’ e‑service portal accepts PDF/A‑1a and PDF/A‑2a as the preferred court filing formats PDF/A. Each individual file must not exceed 10 MB; larger evidence bundles should be split into clearly numbered volumes. Apply the following preparation checklist:

  • File naming. Use a consistent convention, for example, Exhibit_01_Contract_2024‑01‑15.pdf, that mirrors the exhibit index in the main pleading.
  • Bookmarks and pagination. Add PDF bookmarks corresponding to each exhibit or section heading. Paginate continuously across the entire bundle where practicable.
  • Metadata. Remove hidden metadata, track changes and comments from source Word documents before conversion. Courts may reject files containing embedded macros.
  • Redaction. If any exhibits contain confidential information, prepare two versions: a redacted public version and an unredacted confidential version. Mark the confidential version clearly in both the file name and the filing metadata.
  • Translations. Where exhibits are not in Finnish or Swedish, attach certified translations as separate PDF/A files and cross‑reference them in the exhibit index.

Step 3, Create the filing in the court e‑service portal

Log in to the e‑service portal with your Suomi.fi e‑ID. Select “New case” (uusi asia) for an initial claim, or navigate to the existing case docket number for subsequent filings such as responses, evidence supplements or appeals. Complete the mandatory metadata fields:

  • Parties. Enter the full legal names, identity codes (business ID or personal identity code) and electronic addresses for service of all parties and representatives.
  • Case type. Select the correct case category (civil claim, commercial dispute, appeal, etc.).
  • Claims and relief sought. Summarise the relief in the portal’s structured fields. The detailed claim is in the uploaded PDF/A.
  • Attachments. Upload each document in the correct order. The system confirms file format compliance upon upload. If a file is rejected at this stage, correct the format and re‑upload before proceeding.

Double‑check that every uploaded file shows a green “accepted” indicator in the portal. Incomplete or draft submissions are not transmitted to the court.

Step 4, Sign and verify submission

After attaching all documents, confirm the filing by authenticating through your Suomi.fi e‑ID. This authentication step serves as a qualified electronic signature for the purposes of Finnish procedural law. The portal generates a timestamped filing receipt (vastaanottokuittaus) upon successful submission. Download and save this receipt immediately, it is your proof that the filing was made within the applicable deadline. The timestamp is recorded in Eastern European Time (EET / EEST).

Step 5, Pay court filing fees

The e‑service portal directs filers to an integrated online payment module. Select the applicable court filing fees Finland schedule (district court, appellate court or Supreme Court) and pay by bank transfer or online payment. If you are entitled to a fee waiver, for example, where a legal aid decision has been issued, upload the legal aid certificate as a PDF/A attachment and select the fee waiver option instead. Payment is processed in real time; the filing is not complete until the fee is confirmed or waived.

Step 6, Serve the opponent

In Finnish civil proceedings, the court typically serves the claim on the defendant. Where both parties have registered electronic addresses for service, the court may serve documents electronically via Suomi.fi Messages. Retain evidence of service, either the court’s service confirmation or, where you serve directly, a delivery receipt. If the opponent has not provided an electronic service address, the court will arrange service by mail or other means, which may extend processing time by several business days.

Step 7, Monitor the case docket and correct rejections

After filing, monitor the case docket through the e‑service portal. The court registry may issue a deficiency notice (täydennyskehotus) if documents are incomplete, incorrectly formatted or missing required attachments. Respond within the timeframe specified in the notice, typically 7–14 days. Track all supplementary filing deadlines in your case management system. Failure to correct a deficiency within the given period may result in the filing being deemed incomplete or, in the worst case, dismissed.

Required Documents and Information for E‑Filing

The documents needed for filing depend on the case type and the filer’s role (plaintiff, defendant or intervener). The table below lists the core documents for a standard civil or commercial claim.

Document Notes (issuer, format, validity)
Claim / application form (haastehakemus) Main pleading in PDF/A. Must be signed by the authorised representative. Include case title, factual basis, legal grounds, and specific claims and relief sought.
Annexed evidence bundle (contracts, invoices, correspondence) Each exhibit as a separate PDF/A file or combined into a single indexed bundle. Include an exhibit index cross‑referenced in the pleading. Attach certified translations for any exhibits not in Finnish or Swedish.
Power of attorney / representation authorisation Scanned signed power of attorney as PDF/A. For companies: board minutes or trade register signature specification confirming the authorised representative. Must match the registered signatory.
Company extract / Trade Register excerpt Issued by the Legal Register Centre (Oikeusrekisterikeskus) or the Finnish Patent and Registration Office. Should be current, generally within 3 months of filing. Upload as PDF/A.
Payment proof or fee waiver application Online payment receipt generated by the portal, or a legal aid certificate uploaded as PDF/A if seeking a fee waiver.
Electronic address for service Suomi.fi Messages address or other approved e‑service address. Enter in the portal’s metadata fields so the court and opposing party can serve documents electronically.
e‑ID confirmation (self‑represented parties) Confirmation of identity via e‑ID login. Required where the filer is a self‑represented natural person (non‑lawyer). Lawyers are authenticated through their Suomi.fi login.
Confidentiality / ex parte motion (if applicable) Filed as a separate submission. Attach a redacted public bundle and an unredacted confidential bundle with secure‑handling instructions clearly marked in the file name and metadata.

Before uploading, run a pre‑flight check: confirm every file opens correctly, is in PDF/A format, does not exceed 10 MB, has clean metadata, and is named according to a consistent convention. A systematic document preparation workflow significantly reduces the risk of rejection at the portal stage.

E‑Filing Deadlines in Finland: Timeline and Key Dates

Statutory deadlines govern every stage of Finnish civil litigation. Missing a deadline can result in a claim being time‑barred or a default judgment being entered against a defendant. The following are the key e‑filing deadlines Finland litigators must track:

  • Limitation periods. The general limitation period for contractual claims in Finland is three years from the date the creditor became or should have become aware of the claim. Certain claims (e.g., claims based on negotiable instruments, tort claims) follow different limitation rules. Always verify the applicable limitation provision before filing.
  • Response deadlines. After a claim is served, the defendant typically has 14–30 days to file a written response (vastaus), depending on the court’s order. The 2026 reform did not change these statutory windows, but the response must now be submitted electronically through the portal.
  • Appeal filing windows. Appeals from district court judgments must generally be filed within 30 days of the date the judgment was made available. Leave‑to‑appeal applications to the Supreme Court follow a 60‑day window.
  • Business days and time zones. All deadlines are calculated in calendar days unless the statute specifies business days. The filing timestamp is recorded in Eastern European Time (EET/EEST). A filing submitted at 23:59 on the last day of the deadline is timely; a filing submitted at 00:01 the following day is not.

The likely practical effect of the 2026 reform is that filers who previously relied on delivering paper documents to the court’s physical office on the deadline day must now ensure the electronic submission is completed and confirmed by the portal’s timestamp, not merely initiated, before midnight. Early indications suggest courts are enforcing this strictly.

Court Filing Fees in Finland: Costs and Tax Considerations

Court filing fees in Finland are set by the Ministry of Justice and published on the Finnish Courts (Tuomioistuimet) website. The fees below are indicative and should be verified against the current official fee schedule before filing, as amounts may be updated annually.

Item Amount (indicative) Notes
District court filing fee, standard civil claim EUR 530 (verify against current schedule) Payable via the portal’s integrated online payment. Amount may vary depending on the nature of the claim. Confirm the 2026 schedule on the Tuomioistuimet website.
Small claims / simplified procedure fee EUR 270 (verify) A reduced flat fee applies to claims under the simplified procedure threshold. Check current thresholds.
Appeal fee (court of appeal) EUR 530 (verify) Appellate fees are paid separately upon filing the appeal. Administrative court appeals may follow a different schedule.
Supreme Court leave‑to‑appeal fee EUR 530 (verify) Payable when submitting the application for leave to appeal.
Service / process fee Included or minor additional fee (verify) Courts may apply a separate service fee for formal service on defendants who lack electronic addresses.
Electronic signature / qualified certificate Vendor‑dependent (if external) Most filers use their existing Suomi.fi e‑ID at no additional cost. Qualified certificates from external vendors may carry annual licensing fees.
Lawyer / paralegal document preparation Market rates Not a court fee. Varies by firm; budgeting for PDF/A conversion and bundle preparation is recommended.
Translation / certified translation Per page (vendor pricing) Required where exhibits are not in Finnish or Swedish. Authorised translator rates vary.

Court filing fees are generally not subject to VAT. Costs awarded to the prevailing party at the conclusion of proceedings may include the court fees paid, but recovery is at the court’s discretion. Budget for both the mandatory court fees and the ancillary costs of document preparation and translation when planning litigation in Finland.

What Changed in 2026: The Mandatory Electronic Filing Reform

The 2026 reform represents the most significant change to the procedural filing framework in Finland in over a decade. The amendment to the Code of Judicial Procedure (oikeudenkäymiskaari) and related administrative regulations, published on Finlex, established mandatory electronic filing for all professional and corporate filers in the general courts. The key changes are:

  • Mandatory scope. Law firms, licensed advocates, legal aid attorneys and all registered legal persons must now file electronically. Paper filing is no longer accepted from these categories of filers except in narrowly defined emergency situations (e.g., total e‑service outage confirmed by the court).
  • Registration requirement. All obligated filers must register for court e‑services and complete organisational verification before their first filing. Organisations that have not registered cannot file and risk missing statutory deadlines.
  • Stricter format requirements. The reform codified PDF/A as the mandatory document format. Courts may reject non‑PDF/A files at the upload stage. Maximum single‑file sizes and metadata standards are enforced by the portal.
  • Authentication upgrade. Suomi.fi e‑ID (strong authentication via bank credentials, mobile certificate or certificate card) is the sole accepted authentication method. Username‑password logins previously tolerated by some courts are no longer sufficient.
  • Transitional exemptions. Self‑represented natural persons without Finnish personal identity codes and parties with documented accessibility constraints may apply for paper‑filing exemptions. These exemptions are granted case‑by‑case by the presiding judge and are intended to be temporary.
  • Sanctions. Filings that fail format or authentication requirements are rejected and returned to the filer with a deficiency notice. If the corrected filing is not resubmitted within the period specified by the court, the filing may be deemed not made, with potential consequences including dismissal of the claim or entry of default judgment.

For in‑house legal teams, the practical impact of electronic filing Finland 2026 rules is substantial. Teams should register their organisation’s e‑service account well before any anticipated litigation, revise internal document templates to output PDF/A by default, centralise exhibit preparation through a dedicated paralegal workflow, and ensure that fee payment authorisations are linked to the correct e‑service account. Organisations that prepare now will avoid the compliance scramble that early indications suggest has affected some filers in the reform’s first months.

Common Pitfalls When E‑Filing in Finnish Courts and How to Avoid Them

Rejected filings waste time, risk missed deadlines, and can undermine a party’s credibility with the court. The following are the most frequent causes of rejection or delay in the e‑filing process:

  • Wrong file format. Uploading standard PDF instead of PDF/A is the single most common error. Use a dedicated PDF/A conversion tool and verify compliance before uploading. Many word processors can export directly to PDF/A if the correct output setting is selected.
  • Exceeded file size. Individual files exceeding 10 MB are rejected at upload. Split large evidence bundles into numbered volumes and cross‑reference them in the exhibit index.
  • Missing or invalid power of attorney. The PoA must match the signatory details recorded in the Trade Register. Outdated PoAs or those naming a person who is no longer authorised will cause rejection. Verify before every filing.
  • Incomplete metadata fields. Leaving mandatory portal fields blank, particularly party identity codes and electronic addresses for service, prevents the submission from being finalised.
  • Embedded macros or hidden metadata. Files containing active macros, tracked changes, or embedded comments may be flagged as non‑compliant. Sanitise all documents before conversion to PDF/A.
  • Filing outside the deadline window. A filing initiated but not confirmed (timestamped) before the deadline expires is late. Allow buffer time, at least 30 minutes before midnight, to account for portal congestion or authentication delays.
  • No backup filing strategy. Portal outages, while rare, do occur. If you are unable to file electronically due to a confirmed system failure, contact the court registry by telephone immediately to document the outage and request permission for an alternative filing method. Save screenshots of any error messages.

A practical triage approach when a filing is rejected: review the deficiency notice, correct the identified issues, and refile within the court’s specified correction period. If the correction period overlaps with or is close to a statutory deadline, apply for an extension immediately and document the timeline of your filing attempts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tuomas Talvitie at Mittslaw, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Finnish Courts (Tuomioistuimet), Delivering documents to courts / e‑services
  2. Oikeus.fi, Electronic services (Judicial administration e‑services hub)
  3. Korkein hallinto‑oikeus (KHO), More detailed technical instructions
  4. Suomi.fi, e‑services and authentication
  5. Oikeusrekisterikeskus (Legal Register Centre), Forms and register extracts
  6. Finlex, Official legislation database (Code of Judicial Procedure and 2026 amendments)
  7. European e‑Justice Portal, Finland small claims and electronic addresses

FAQs

How do you sue someone in Finland?
To initiate a civil lawsuit, you file a written claim (haastehakemus) with the competent district court. The claim must set out the factual basis, legal grounds and the specific relief sought. Under the 2026 rules, law firms and corporate filers must submit this claim electronically through the courts’ e‑service portal. The court then serves the claim on the defendant, who has a set period, typically 14–30 days, to file a response.
Finland’s general court system has three levels: district courts (käräjäoikeus) as courts of first instance, courts of appeal (hovioikeus) and the Supreme Court (korkein oikeus). Administrative cases are handled by the administrative courts and the Supreme Administrative Court (korkein hallinto‑oikeus). An overview is available on the Finnish Courts website (Tuomioistuimet).
The e‑ID in Finland is a strong electronic identification mechanism provided through Suomi.fi. Three authentication methods are accepted for court e‑filing: Finnish bank credentials (online banking login), a mobile certificate issued by a Finnish telecom operator, and a certificate card (such as the Finnish electronic identity card). All three provide the level of strong authentication required by the courts’ e‑service portal.
A straightforward civil case at the district court level typically takes 6–12 months from filing to judgment, though complex commercial disputes can take 12–24 months or longer. Key deadlines to track include the response deadline (14–30 days after service), pre‑trial preparation deadlines set by the court, the main hearing date, and the 30‑day appeal window after judgment. The general limitation period for contractual claims is three years.
Yes. A foreign company can file electronically provided it has a Finnish business identity code and a registered e‑service account, or it is represented by a Finnish‑licensed advocate or law firm that files on its behalf. If the foreign company lacks a Finnish personal or business identity code, it should engage local counsel who can handle the e‑filing procedure through their own authenticated account. The company must still provide a valid power of attorney and a company extract from its home jurisdiction (with certified translation if necessary).
If a filing is rejected for a technical deficiency (wrong format, missing attachment, invalid PoA), the court issues a deficiency notice specifying the correction required and a period, typically 7–14 days, to refile. If you cannot correct the deficiency within the given period, apply for an extension before the period expires. If a statutory deadline is missed entirely and no extension is granted, the consequences depend on the nature of the filing: an expired limitation period bars the claim permanently, a missed response deadline may result in a default judgment, and a late appeal is dismissed. Document every filing attempt and any portal errors to support a possible application for restoration of a missed deadline.
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How to File Court Documents Electronically in Finland, Step‑by‑step (mandatory E‑filing 2026)

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