Cultura laboral y ritmo semanal en Finland
Finland operates a forty-hour standard workweek under the Working Hours Act, with most collective agreements setting practical full-time hours between thirty-seven and thirty-eight per week. The 2020 reform of the Working Hours Act gave employees a stronger right to flexible working time arrangements, and a high proportion of office work in Finland is now organised around results rather than hours of presence.
Statutory paid leave starts at two-and-a-half working days per month worked, accruing to thirty working days per year for an employee with at least one full year of service (or twenty-four working days for those with less than one year). The Finnish working-day count includes Saturdays for leave purposes, so thirty working days corresponds to approximately five weeks of calendar leave.
Finnish workplace culture is famously direct, low-context and punctual. Decisions are usually well-prepared in writing before meetings, meetings start exactly on time and end exactly on time, and small talk is brief. Trust is built through reliability rather than rapport, and a Finnish counterpart who delivers what was agreed is usually considered a strong partner regardless of the social temperature of the relationship.