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what is the resignation period in finland

What Is the Resignation Period in Finland? Statutory Notice, Collective Agreements & Probation

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding what is the resignation period in Finland is essential for every employee contemplating a job change and every employer managing workforce transitions. Finnish law sets clear statutory minimum notice periods through the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001), yet those minimums are routinely modified by collective agreements, individual employment contracts, and special rules that apply during probation. This guide breaks down the exact notice lengths by service band, explains who can extend or shorten them, walks through the practical steps for resigning, and flags the situations where professional legal advice is strongly recommended. For a companion piece focused on the employer’s side of the process, see our overview of termination of an employment agreement under the Finnish law.

Quick Answer, What Is the Resignation Period in Finland?

Under the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001), the period of notice in Finland depends on two variables: who is giving notice (employee or employer) and how long the employment relationship has lasted. The employee’s statutory notice period is shorter than the employer’s at every service band, a deliberate policy choice that gives workers greater mobility.

At-a-Glance Statutory Table

Length of employment Employee notice (resignation) Employer notice (dismissal)
Up to 1 year 14 days 14 days
More than 1 year, up to 4 years 14 days 1 month
More than 4 years, up to 8 years 1 month 2 months
More than 8 years, up to 12 years 1 month 4 months
More than 12 years 1 month 6 months

Source: Employment Contracts Act 55/2001, Chapter 6, Sections 2–3; Suomi.fi Period of notice guidance.

Lawyer’s note: These are minimum periods. Your employment contract or applicable collective agreement may specify longer notice, always check both documents before submitting your resignation.

Detailed Statutory Notice Periods Under the Employment Contracts Act 55/2001

The table above captures the headline numbers, but two further details matter for employees and HR professionals calculating exact dates.

Employer Notice Periods by Service Band

An employer terminating a permanent (indefinite) contract must observe the following minimum periods of notice in Finland, as laid out in Chapter 6, Section 3 of the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001) and confirmed by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Tyosuojelu.fi):

  • Up to 1 year of service: 14 days.
  • 1–4 years: 1 month.
  • 4–8 years: 2 months.
  • 8–12 years: 4 months.
  • Over 12 years: 6 months.

These periods are non-negotiable downward, an employment contract clause that shortens an employer’s notice below the statutory floor is void. However, a collective agreement may agree a different framework, and where such an agreement applies, its terms prevail over an individual contract that provides less favourable conditions for the employee.

Employee Notice Periods (Statutory Baseline)

An employee resigning from a permanent position is bound by somewhat simpler bands under Chapter 6, Section 2 of the same Act:

  • Up to 4 years of service: 14 days.
  • Over 4 years of service: 1 month.

An employee’s notice period may be extended by a written employment contract, but the Employment Contracts Act sets an upper limit: the employee’s contractual notice period may not exceed the employer’s notice period. In practice, industry observers note that many employment contracts simply defer to the applicable collective agreement notice period rather than specifying bespoke durations. According to guidance from Boundless HQ, the practical ceiling for an agreed notice period in Finland is generally six months, contractual clauses that go beyond this risk being viewed as unreasonable and potentially unenforceable.

Lawyer’s note: If your contract states a notice period but you are also covered by a collective agreement, compare both carefully. The rule of thumb is that whichever instrument gives the employee the more favourable treatment will normally apply, unless the collective agreement explicitly permits deviation.

How Collective Agreements and Contracts Modify the Resignation Period in Finland

Finland has one of the highest collective agreement coverage rates in Europe. As a result, the statutory notice periods described above function as a safety net rather than the day-to-day standard for most workers. Collective agreements, known in Finnish as työehtosopimus (TES), frequently set their own notice period schedules, which may be longer or, in limited cases, shorter than the statutory baseline.

The Legal Hierarchy

The Employment Contracts Act establishes a clear order of priority:

  1. Mandatory statute, sets the absolute floor for employer notice periods.
  2. Collective agreement, may modify both employee and employer notice periods, provided the employee is not placed in a worse position than the statute allows.
  3. Individual employment contract, may agree notice periods at or above the collective agreement level, but may not go below the collective agreement minimum if one applies.

This hierarchy means an employee covered by a collective agreement cannot simply rely on the statutory table; the agreement’s notice schedule takes precedence and may require a longer resignation period.

Typical Collective Agreement Deviations

  • Service-sector workers (PAM collective agreement): The Service Union United PAM notes that notice periods for its members follow the collective agreement schedule, which may differ from the statutory bands, particularly for employees with longer tenure.
  • Public sector: Municipal and government collective agreements commonly prescribe notice periods of one to three months for employees, depending on classification and years of service.
  • Technology and engineering sectors: Collective agreements in these fields often mirror statutory periods but may add extended notice requirements for specialist or senior roles.

For a deeper dive into how labour rights and worker protections operate across different types of employment contracts in Finland, see our related analysis.

Lawyer’s note: Always request a copy of the applicable collective agreement from your employer or union representative before resigning. Many employees discover too late that their collective agreement notice period is longer than they assumed.

Probation Period in Finland, The “No Notice” Exception

One of the most significant modifications to the standard resignation period in Finland applies during the probation period (koeaika). Under Chapter 1, Section 4 of the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001), the employer and employee may agree on a trial period of up to six months at the start of employment. During this period, either party may terminate the employment relationship without a notice period, the termination takes effect immediately.

Key rules and limitations on the probation period:

  • Maximum length: Six months, unless the collective agreement specifies a shorter maximum.
  • Fixed-term contracts: For employment contracts shorter than 12 months, the probation period may not exceed half the duration of the contract.
  • Grounds for termination: Although no notice is required during probation, the employer may not terminate on discriminatory or otherwise improper grounds.
  • Written agreement: The probation clause must be agreed in writing (typically in the employment contract).

What to Check in Your Contract During Probation

Before assuming you can leave immediately, verify the following:

  • Is the probation period explicitly stated in writing?
  • Has the probation period already expired? (Count from your first day of work.)
  • Does your collective agreement cap probation at less than six months?

If any of these answers is unclear, the statutory notice period may already apply, and leaving without serving notice could expose you to a compensation claim.

Employer vs Employee Notice, Practical Steps and Examples

Knowing the correct notice period is only half the equation. How you deliver notice, and what you do during the notice period, matters just as much.

Step-by-Step Guide for Employees Resigning

  1. Check your notice period. Review your employment contract, collective agreement, and the statutory table above. The longest applicable period is typically the one you must observe.
  2. Draft your resignation in writing. Finnish law does not require a specific format, but written notice (email or signed letter) creates a clear record. The Työelämään.fi guidance portal recommends delivering notice in a form that can be verified.
  3. Deliver to the right person. Address your resignation to your direct supervisor or the HR contact specified in your contract.
  4. Confirm the last working day. Your notice period begins the day after your employer receives the resignation, not the date you wrote or sent it.
  5. Work through the notice period. Unless your employer agrees to release you early or places you on garden leave, you are expected to fulfil your duties until the last day.

Sample Resignation Email

A resignation email in Finland need not be elaborate. A clear, professional message is sufficient:

“Dear [Supervisor’s name], I hereby resign from my position as [Job title] at [Company]. In accordance with [my employment contract / the applicable collective agreement], my notice period is [X days/months], and my last working day will be [Date]. I am happy to discuss the handover of my responsibilities. Kind regards, [Your name].”

Practical Steps for Employers Receiving Notice

  • Acknowledge receipt in writing and confirm the last working day.
  • Process final pay, accrued holiday pay, and any bonuses due by the termination date.
  • Issue a certificate of employment (työtodistus) promptly upon request, you are legally required to do so.
  • Consider garden leave. Finnish law does not have a standalone “garden leave” statute, but employers may release employees from their duties during the notice period while continuing to pay salary.

For further guidance on the financial consequences of termination, including compensation for dismissal or summary dismissal, see our detailed analysis.

Special Cases: Executives, Fixed-Term Contracts, and Collective Redundancy

Not all employment relationships follow the standard resignation-period framework. Three categories deserve special attention.

Executive and Senior Contracts

Executives and managing directors in Finland frequently negotiate bespoke employment agreements with notice periods that exceed the statutory minimum, commonly three to six months on both sides. These agreements may also include severance clauses, non-compete restrictions, and accelerated termination mechanisms. The likely practical effect is that departing executives need to factor in not just the notice period but any post-employment obligations that survive termination. For general principles on these financial arrangements, see our guide on severance packages and termination.

Fixed-Term Contracts

A fixed-term employment contract in Finland ordinarily ends on the agreed date without notice from either party. However, if the contract includes a specific notice clause, the agreed period must be observed. Where no such clause exists, the contract cannot be terminated early unless both parties agree or there are grounds for immediate cancellation under the Employment Contracts Act.

Maximum Contractual Notice

While the Employment Contracts Act does not state an explicit numerical cap, industry practice and employment law commentary suggest that contractual notice periods exceeding six months face scrutiny. Courts are expected to assess reasonableness, and early indications from case practice suggest that extremely long notice clauses, particularly those binding employees, may be found disproportionate.

Comparison Table: Notice and Obligations by Scenario

Situation Employee obligation Employer obligation
Resignation during probation Usually no notice required (immediate effect) May also end immediately; must confirm in writing and avoid discriminatory grounds
Ordinary resignation (post-probation) Serve statutory or contractual notice period Accept resignation; process final pay, holiday compensation, and certificate of employment
Employer dismissal for redundancy N/A, employee does not initiate Follow co-operation negotiation procedure; observe statutory/collective notice; pay compensation where applicable
Fixed-term contract expiry None (contract ends automatically) None (unless early termination clause or mutual agreement)

Practical Checklist: Calculate Your Last Working Day and Pay Implications

Use the following method to determine your final date of employment:

  1. Identify notice receipt date: The day your employer receives your resignation.
  2. Add the notice period: Count 14 days or 1 month (or whatever period applies) starting the day after receipt.
  3. Result: The final date is your last working day.

Example: You have worked for 3 years (statutory employee notice: 14 days). Your employer receives your resignation on 2 June. Your notice period runs from 3 June. Your last working day is 16 June.

During the notice period, you are entitled to your full salary and employment benefits. Accrued but unused annual leave must be compensated either as time off during notice (if agreed) or as a monetary payout with your final salary. If your employer places you on garden leave, your pay continues, you simply do not attend the workplace.

When to Get Legal Advice, Red Flags

While many resignations proceed smoothly, the following situations warrant professional legal guidance:

  • Contradictions between your contract and the collective agreement on the applicable notice period.
  • Ambiguous or missing probation clauses where you want to leave immediately.
  • Constructive dismissal risk, you feel pressured to resign rather than being formally dismissed.
  • Executive severance negotiations involving non-compete clauses, equity, or golden-parachute terms.
  • Immigration permit concerns, the so-called “3/6 month rule” relates to residence-permit validity when changing employers, not to the notice period itself, but incorrect timing can jeopardise your right to stay in Finland.

If any of the above apply, consulting a qualified employment law specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory is strongly advisable before you take action.

Conclusion

Answering what is the resignation period in Finland accurately requires looking beyond the statutory table to the layered system of collective agreements, contractual terms, and probation rules that apply in practice. For most employees, the headline periods, 14 days or 1 month depending on length of service, provide a reliable starting point, but the applicable collective agreement is often the decisive document. Probation periods offer the flexibility of immediate departure, while executive and fixed-term contracts introduce bespoke considerations that may significantly extend or limit your obligations. Whatever your situation, reviewing all three sources of regulation, statute, collective agreement, and individual contract, before you resign will protect your rights and help you leave on the strongest possible footing.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Suomi.fi, Period of Notice
  2. Finlex, Employment Contracts Act 55/2001
  3. Tyosuojelu.fi, Periods of Notice
  4. Työelämään.fi, Notice and Resignation
  5. InfoFinland, End of Employment
  6. PAM, Notice Periods
  7. Boundless HQ, Terminations in Finland

FAQs

What is the resignation period in Finland?
Under the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001), an employee’s statutory notice period is 14 days for employment lasting up to 4 years and 1 month for employment exceeding 4 years. Collective agreements or individual contracts may set longer periods.
Submit your resignation in writing, by email or signed letter, to your supervisor or HR contact. Your notice period begins the day after your employer receives the resignation, and you must work through the notice period unless released earlier.
Yes, but only through a written employment contract or an applicable collective agreement. The employee’s contractual notice period may not exceed the employer’s notice period under the Employment Contracts Act. Any clause that attempts to bind the employee to a longer notice than the employer faces enforceability risks.
No. During an agreed probation period (maximum six months), either party may terminate the employment immediately without a notice period, provided the grounds are not discriminatory or otherwise improper.
This refers to residence-permit rules for foreign workers, not to notice periods. Certain residence permits require the holder to find new employment within three or six months of leaving a job. It does not alter your notice obligations but affects how quickly you must secure a new position.
Yes. Collective agreements (työehtosopimus) frequently set notice periods that differ from the statutory baseline. Where a collective agreement applies, its notice schedule generally takes precedence over both the statute and the individual contract, provided the employee is not placed in a less favourable position than the statutory floor allows. The PAM union, for example, publishes sector-specific notice schedules for service industry workers.
The Employment Contracts Act does not impose a hard numerical cap, but the employee’s notice period may not exceed the employer’s. In practice, notice periods beyond six months are rare and may be challenged as unreasonable. Industry observers expect that courts would scrutinise any clause significantly exceeding six months, especially where it restricts the employee’s right to change jobs.
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What Is the Resignation Period in Finland? Statutory Notice, Collective Agreements & Probation

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