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Sue in Finland or Sue Abroad? How to Choose the Right Forum for Cross‑border Disputes Involving Finnish Parties

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

When a commercial dispute crosses Finland’s borders, the single most consequential decision you will make, before you draft a statement of claim or instruct counsel, is where to bring the case. Whether you sue in Finland or abroad determines what assets you can reach, how fast you can obtain interim relief, what the litigation will cost, and whether the judgment you win is actually worth the paper it is printed on. This guide provides a practitioner‑level decision framework for in‑house counsel, founders, and CFOs who need to choose the right forum for cross‑border disputes involving Finnish parties, with a focus on forum selection Finland requires in 2026.

Bottom‑line rule of thumb: If the defendant’s major assets sit in Finland, start in Finland. If not, choose the forum that gives the fastest enforceable remedy over the assets you can actually reach, then check the decision grid below.

Option A: Sue in Finland, What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

Finnish courts accept jurisdiction over a civil or commercial dispute in several well‑defined situations. Understanding these jurisdictional bases is the first step in deciding when to sue in Finland.

Primary jurisdictional grounds

  • Domicile or registered seat. A defendant domiciled or registered in Finland is subject to the general jurisdiction of its local district court (käräjäoikeus). This is the default rule and the strongest basis.
  • Contractual forum clause. An exclusive or non‑exclusive choice‑of‑court clause selecting a Finnish court will normally be upheld, provided it meets applicable formal requirements (including those under Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012, Article 25).
  • Place of performance or harmful event. Under Brussels I Recast, a claimant may sue in the EU member state where the contractual obligation was to be performed or where the tortious damage occurred. If either connects to Finland, Finnish courts have special jurisdiction.
  • Asset‑based jurisdiction. In limited circumstances, particularly against non‑EU defendants, Finnish procedural law permits jurisdiction where the defendant holds property in Finland, even without a domicile connection.

Who the Finland option suits

Litigation in Finland is the natural choice when the claimant needs to freeze or seize Finnish‑sited assets (bank accounts, real property, equity in Finnish companies), when the contract already contains a Finnish forum clause, or when the claimant is a Finnish consumer or employee invoking mandatory protective jurisdiction rules under Brussels I Recast. It also suits parties who need access to Finnish evidentiary procedures, such as court‑ordered disclosure of Finnish bank records, that a foreign court cannot compel directly.

Procedural milestones (summary)

  • Service of process: domestically, Finnish courts handle service directly. Cross‑border service follows the EU Service Regulation or the Hague Service Convention, coordinated through the Finnish Ministry of Justice.
  • Pre‑trial phase: written pleadings, followed by a preparatory hearing (valmistelukäsittely) aimed at narrowing issues and exploring settlement.
  • Enforcement within Finland: a final Finnish judgment is enforced directly through the Finnish Enforcement Authority (ulosotto), no separate recognition step required.

Option B: Sue Abroad, What It Is, When It Applies, and Who It Suits

The alternative to suing in Finland is bringing the claim in a foreign court, the defendant’s home jurisdiction, the jurisdiction chosen in the contract, or an entirely different forum selected for tactical advantage. A related alternative is international arbitration, which sits outside the court system entirely.

Common foreign‑forum routes

  • Defendant’s domicile (EU). Under Brussels I Recast, the default rule allows suit where the defendant is domiciled. If the defendant is a German GmbH, you can sue in Germany regardless of where the contract was performed.
  • Contractual choice of court. Many international commercial contracts select London, Stockholm, or another established commercial seat. A valid exclusive jurisdiction clause under Brussels I Recast (Article 25) or the Hague Choice of Court Convention 2005 will generally be honoured by Finnish courts, meaning Finland will decline jurisdiction in favour of the chosen foreign forum.
  • International arbitration. Arbitration under ICC, SCC, or LCIA rules is a distinct path. An arbitral award issued in a New York Convention signatory state is enforceable in Finland through the Finnish Arbitration Act, often more efficiently than a non‑EU court judgment.

Who the foreign‑forum option suits

Suing abroad, or invoking arbitration, is the better path when the defendant’s recoverable assets are concentrated outside Finland, when the contract mandates a foreign seat, when you need a specialist tribunal (e.g., the English Commercial Court or maritime arbitration in London), or when you expect to enforce the award in multiple jurisdictions simultaneously. It also suits defendants who want to resist a Finnish claimant’s choice of Finland by challenging jurisdiction under Brussels I Recast.

Risks of the foreign‑forum route

  • Recognition and enforcement in Finland. An EU judgment benefits from near‑automatic cross‑border enforcement under Brussels I Recast. A non‑EU judgment faces a harder road: Finland has no general statute for recognising third‑country court judgments, meaning a judgment from, for example, the United States may not be enforceable in Finland at all without a bilateral treaty or re‑litigation.
  • Public‑policy refusal. Even within the EU framework, recognition can be refused on public‑policy grounds (Article 45, Brussels I Recast), although this is rare in practice.
  • Parallel proceedings risk. Filing abroad may trigger a race of jurisdictions if the opposing party also files in Finland, creating costly lis pendens disputes.

Sue in Finland vs Abroad, Side‑by‑Side Comparison

This comparison table is the centrepiece of the forum selection Finland decision. Use it as a quick reference before diving into the dimension‑by‑dimension analysis below.

Decision Dimension Option A, Sue in Finland Option B, Sue Abroad (Foreign Court / Arbitration)
Jurisdictional basis Defendant domiciled in Finland; Finnish forum clause; tort/performance in Finland; asset‑based (non‑EU defendant) Defendant domiciled abroad; foreign forum clause; Hague Convention choice; arbitration clause
Cost (court fees + legal fees) Court fees approx. €500–€2,000 for most commercial claims; legal fees moderate by Nordic standards Varies widely, English Commercial Court fees higher; arbitration institutional fees can exceed €50,000 for large claims
Typical timeline to judgment 12–24 months in district court; appeals add 12+ months 6–18 months (arbitration); 12–36 months (foreign courts); varies by jurisdiction
Enforceability within Finland Direct enforcement via Finnish Enforcement Authority, no recognition step EU judgments: near‑automatic under Brussels I Recast. Non‑EU judgments: very difficult without treaty. Arbitral awards: enforceable under New York Convention
Enforceability outside Finland EU member states: near‑automatic under Brussels I Recast. Non‑EU: limited bilateral treaties; country‑by‑country analysis required Depends on forum, judgments from major seats (UK, US) enforceable in many countries; arbitral awards most widely enforceable globally
Asset reach Strong for Finnish‑sited assets (bank accounts, real property, corporate equity); weak for foreign assets Strong for assets in the forum state; may require separate recognition to reach Finnish assets
Interim relief availability Precautionary seizure (turvaamistoimi) available pre‑action and during proceedings; swift process Available in most major forums; may require parallel application in Finland for Finnish assets
Liability exposure / damages scope Finnish courts follow compensatory‑damages principle; punitive damages not awarded; interest accrues from due date Depends on forum, US courts may award punitive damages; English courts follow compensatory model; arbitral tribunals apply chosen law
Confidentiality / PR risk Court proceedings are public by default; limited sealing for trade secrets Arbitration is private; foreign court publicity varies by jurisdiction
Practical complexity Low if both parties and witnesses are in Finland; language (Finnish/Swedish) may be a barrier for foreign parties Higher coordination cost if assets and witnesses are split across jurisdictions; language more flexible in arbitration (English common)

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis: Sue in Finland or Abroad

1. Enforceability and recognition of foreign judgments in Finland

Enforceability is the dimension that should drive your jurisdiction choice in cross‑border disputes more than any other. A judgment you cannot enforce is a pyrrhic victory.

Scenario Enforceability in Finland
Finnish judgment against Finnish assets Direct enforcement, no recognition step needed
EU member state judgment (Brussels I Recast) Enforceable without exequatur since 2015 under Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012; only limited grounds for refusal (public policy, default of appearance)
Hague Convention judgment Recognised if the originating court had jurisdiction under the Hague Choice of Court Convention 2005; Finland is party as an EU member state
Non‑EU / non‑treaty judgment (e.g., US) No general recognition mechanism in Finland; enforcement typically requires re‑litigation or reliance on a narrow bilateral agreement
Arbitral award (New York Convention) Enforceable in Finland under the Finnish Arbitration Act, implementing the 1958 New York Convention; limited refusal grounds

Key takeaway: If you need to enforce against Finnish assets and your claim originates outside the EU, arbitration under the New York Convention is generally a safer route than a non‑EU court judgment. The recognition of foreign judgments in Finland from non‑treaty states remains highly uncertain.

2. Cost and recoverable fees

Litigation cost is a function of court fees, counsel fees, and the prospect of recovering those costs from the losing party. The jurisdiction choice cross‑border parties face directly affects each variable.

Cost element Finland (approx.) Foreign court / Arbitration (approx.)
Court / filing fees €500–€2,000 (district court civil claim) Varies: UK Commercial Court fees £10,000+; ICC arbitration admin fees scaled to amount in dispute
Legal fees (counsel) €250–€450/hour (Helsinki commercial litigation) €300–€800/hour (London, New York); Nordic arbitration counsel comparable to Finnish courts
Cost recovery (loser pays) Partial, Finnish courts award reasonable legal costs to the prevailing party, but caps and discretionary reductions are common Varies by forum, English courts follow full indemnity in principle; US follows American Rule (each side bears own costs); arbitration tribunals have broad discretion
Cross‑border service / translation €500–€3,000 depending on destination country and translation needs Similar range; additional costs if Finnish enforcement of foreign award requires separate proceeding

Key takeaway: Finnish court fees are low by international standards, and partial cost recovery is available. If cost containment is a priority and assets are in Finland, litigating in Finland is the cheaper path in most scenarios.

3. Timing and interim relief

Speed matters in cross‑border disputes, not just to final judgment, but to interim relief that prevents the defendant from moving or dissipating assets.

  • Finland: Precautionary measures (turvaamistoimi) are available on an ex parte basis in urgent cases. District court proceedings to main judgment typically take 12–24 months.
  • Foreign courts: Timelines range from 6 months (summary proceedings in some Nordic or Dutch courts) to 3+ years (Italian or Indian courts). Arbitration typically delivers a final award within 12–18 months under institutional rules (ICC, SCC).
  • Parallel interim relief: Even if main proceedings are abroad, a party can apply to a Finnish court for interim measures protecting Finnish‑sited assets. This is expressly permitted under Brussels I Recast (Article 35).

Key takeaway: If you need to freeze Finnish assets urgently, apply for a turvaamistoimi in Finland, regardless of where the main case is filed.

4. Liability exposure and scope of remedies

The choice of forum can materially change the type and quantum of damages you can claim, or face.

  • Finland: Finnish courts apply a strict compensatory‑damages model. Punitive damages are not available. Pre‑judgment interest runs from the date the obligation fell due, governed by the Finnish Interest Act.
  • Foreign forums: US courts may award punitive damages; English courts may order account of profits in IP disputes; arbitral tribunals apply whatever substantive law the parties have chosen, which may include punitive or exemplary damages.

Key takeaway: If you are the claimant seeking an aggressive damages remedy (e.g., punitive or treble damages), a foreign forum that allows such awards may be worth pursuing, provided you can enforce the resulting judgment.

5. Tax and cross‑border fee implications

Litigation awards and settlements can trigger tax consequences in Finland. Under Finnish tax rules administered by the Finnish Tax Administration (Vero), a settlement or judgment payment may be treated as taxable income, capital gain, or a tax‑neutral return of capital depending on its characterisation.

  • Finnish‑resident claimants receiving a damages award from a foreign court face Finnish income tax on the award (subject to any applicable double‑tax treaty credit for withholding tax deducted at source abroad).
  • Non‑residents receiving a Finnish court judgment payment may owe Finnish withholding tax if the payment is characterised as Finnish‑source income.
  • The 3‑year rule: Finland’s tax residency rules deem a Finnish citizen who moves abroad as tax‑resident until the end of the third calendar year following departure, unless they demonstrate that essential ties to Finland have been severed. This can affect the tax treatment of litigation proceeds received abroad.

Key takeaway: Always obtain tax advice before choosing to settle or litigate in a particular forum. The gross award is irrelevant if a significant slice is lost to double taxation.

6. Regulatory and public‑policy risks

Cross‑border enforcement can be blocked on public‑policy grounds. Finnish courts will refuse recognition of a foreign judgment or arbitral award that conflicts with Finnish ordre public, for example, a judgment imposing punitive damages at a level deemed grossly disproportionate, or one obtained in proceedings that violated due process.

  • Within the EU: Public‑policy refusal under Brussels I Recast (Article 45) is exceedingly rare but has been invoked in cases involving fundamental procedural fairness violations.
  • Outside the EU: Finland’s limited recognition framework for non‑treaty judgments means public‑policy analysis is often moot, the judgment may simply not be recognisable at all.

Key takeaway: If there is any risk that the remedy you seek (e.g., US‑style punitive damages) would be considered contrary to Finnish public policy, factor in the enforceability discount before choosing that forum.

What Changes in 2026 That Affect This Forum Choice

Two developments in 2026 sharpen the calculus for anyone deciding whether to sue in Finland or abroad:

  • Finnish Small Claims Procedure, 1 September 2026. Finland’s new small claims procedure enters into force on 1 September 2026, offering a simplified and faster track for lower‑value civil claims. Industry observers expect this to make Finland a more attractive forum for cross‑border small claims previously routed through the European Small Claims Procedure (which applies to cross‑border EU claims up to €5,000). Claimants with modest commercial claims against Finnish‑domiciled defendants should evaluate this new route.
  • Ongoing EU enforcement harmonisation. The European Commission continues to refine cross‑border enforcement mechanisms, and early indications suggest further practical guidance on digital service of documents and electronic enforcement certificates will make intra‑EU enforcement faster. The likely practical effect will be to reduce friction for enforcing Finnish judgments in other EU states, strengthening the case for litigating in Finland when cross‑border enforcement within the EU is needed.

Decision Framework: When Do I Sue in Finland or Abroad?

Use this decision framework to map your dispute to the right forum. Each trigger condition is designed to be actionable, if you can answer “yes” to the condition, follow the recommendation.

Choose Finland when:

  • The defendant’s principal assets (bank accounts, real property, corporate equity) are located in Finland.
  • Your contract contains an exclusive Finnish forum clause.
  • You need urgent interim relief (turvaamistoimi) over Finnish‑sited assets.
  • You are a Finnish consumer or employee invoking mandatory protective jurisdiction under Brussels I Recast.
  • The claim value is below €5,000 and the new Finnish Small Claims Procedure (from 1 September 2026) provides a faster track than cross‑border alternatives.
  • Cost containment is critical, Finnish court fees and counsel rates are among the lowest in northern Europe.
  • You want a directly enforceable judgment without any cross‑border recognition step.

Choose a foreign forum (or arbitration) when:

  • The defendant’s recoverable assets are concentrated outside Finland (and outside the EU if using court proceedings).
  • Your contract mandates a foreign exclusive jurisdiction clause or an arbitration seat.
  • You need a specialist bench (e.g., English Commercial Court for complex financial disputes, or a maritime arbitration tribunal).
  • You want a globally enforceable outcome, an arbitral award under the New York Convention is enforceable in over 170 states, far exceeding the reach of any single national court judgment.
  • Confidentiality is essential, arbitration proceedings are private; Finnish court proceedings are public.
  • You seek punitive or exemplary damages unavailable in Finland.
  • You need multi‑jurisdictional enforcement simultaneously and an arbitral award is the most practical single instrument.

Three practical scenarios

Scenario Recommended Forum Rationale
Finnish tech company sues German distributor for unpaid invoices; distributor’s main assets are in Finland (Finnish subsidiary bank accounts) Finland Assets in Finland; direct enforcement; low cost; Finnish forum clause in supply agreement supports jurisdiction
UK investor disputes breach of a shareholders’ agreement with a Finnish startup; agreement contains SCC (Stockholm) arbitration clause SCC Arbitration (Stockholm) Contractual arbitration clause binding; SCC award enforceable in Finland under New York Convention and in UK; confidentiality preserved
Finnish manufacturer’s product causes injury in the US; US claimant sues in US state court and seeks punitive damages; manufacturer’s assets are solely in Finland Challenge US jurisdiction / defend in US but prepare for re‑litigation in Finland US punitive‑damages judgment is unlikely to be enforceable in Finland (no general recognition, public‑policy risk); claimant may ultimately need to re‑litigate in Finland to reach Finnish assets

When (and Why) to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

Forum selection for cross‑border disputes is high‑stakes and fact‑specific. While this guide provides a decision framework, you should engage a qualified litigation lawyer without delay in any of the following situations:

  • Asset location is uncertain or split across jurisdictions, you need a lawyer to conduct asset tracing and advise on the forum that maximises collectibility.
  • Urgent interim relief is needed, applications for precautionary seizure in Finland or freezing orders abroad must be prepared by experienced counsel, often on an ex parte basis.
  • The claim exceeds €50,000, the strategic and financial stakes justify a formal jurisdiction analysis and risk assessment before filing.
  • An arbitration clause is disputed, challenges to the validity, scope, or applicability of arbitration agreements require specialist advice.
  • Multi‑jurisdiction enforcement is anticipated, coordinating enforcement across two or more countries simultaneously demands a lead counsel who can instruct local agents and manage parallel proceedings.

Recommended first steps

  1. Compile all relevant contracts and identify any jurisdiction or arbitration clauses.
  2. Map the defendant’s known assets by country.
  3. Gather evidence of the claim and any urgency (e.g., risk of asset dissipation).
  4. Contact a Finland‑based litigation lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to schedule a case assessment.

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. Ministry of Justice (Finland), Service of Documents
  2. Finnish Courts, Small Claims Procedure
  3. EUR‑Lex, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast)
  4. Hague Conference on Private International Law, Choice of Court Convention (2005)
  5. European Commission / Your Europe, European Small Claims Procedure
  6. Finnish Tax Administration (Vero), Residency and Tax Rules

FAQs

Should I sue in Finland or in the foreign country where the defendant is based?
It depends on where the defendant’s enforceable assets are located. If the defendant’s key assets are in Finland, sue in Finland, you get direct enforcement without a cross‑border recognition step. If assets are abroad, sue where the assets sit or use arbitration for global enforceability under the New York Convention.
EU member state judgments are enforceable in Finland under Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast) without exequatur. Judgments from Hague Convention states can also be recognised. However, non‑EU, non‑treaty judgments, such as those from US state courts, generally cannot be enforced in Finland. Arbitral awards from New York Convention states are enforceable.
Bring the claim in Finland when the defendant is domiciled there, when Finnish assets are at stake, when Finnish court fees and counsel costs offer savings, or when you have a valid Finnish forum clause. Finland is also the better choice when you need a turvaamistoimi (interim injunction or seizure) over assets located in Finland.
Yes. A Finnish judgment is directly enforceable through the Finnish Enforcement Authority with no recognition step. A foreign judgment must go through recognition first, automatically within the EU under Brussels I Recast, but potentially impossible for non‑EU judgments without a bilateral treaty.
Generally, no. Once a court has accepted jurisdiction and proceedings have advanced beyond initial motions, switching forums is not a matter of right. You would need to discontinue the first action (potentially with adverse cost consequences) and commence fresh proceedings elsewhere. Lis pendens rules under Brussels I Recast can also block a second action if one is already pending in another EU member state.
The worst outcome is obtaining a judgment you cannot enforce. For example, a US judgment for punitive damages against a Finnish company whose assets are entirely in Finland may be unenforceable there. You would face the cost of re‑litigating the claim in Finland. Forum selection is the most cost‑effective risk‑mitigation step you can take, always analyse enforceability before filing.
A foreign company suing a Finnish‑domiciled defendant can rely on Finnish general jurisdiction (domicile) or on Brussels I Recast special jurisdiction rules. A Finnish company suing abroad must satisfy the foreign court’s jurisdictional requirements and should immediately assess whether a resulting foreign judgment can be brought back to Finland for enforcement, or whether arbitration would be a safer vehicle.
The European Small Claims Procedure applies to cross‑border civil and commercial claims up to €5,000 between parties in different EU member states. It is available in Finland and provides a simplified, largely written procedure. From 1 September 2026, Finland’s new domestic Small Claims Procedure will offer an additional streamlined track for lower‑value claims filed in Finnish courts.

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Sue in Finland or Sue Abroad? How to Choose the Right Forum for Cross‑border Disputes Involving Finnish Parties

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