referenca države

Finska — Delovni koledar, referenca plač in DDV

Najhitrejši priup v počitniški koledar tega trga, načrtovanje plač in pravila DDV.

🇫🇮 EUREurope/Helsinki25.5% standardni DDV

Naslednji praznik

Midsummer Eve · pet., 26. jun. 2026

national

Delovni dnevi

254 delovni dnevi 2026

9 javni prazniki

Standarda DDV

25.5% standard

14% · 10%

primer plače

3600,00 € → 2530,00 € net

Primer povprečnega mesečnega

Osnovne poti za to tržišče

Odprite točan delovni tok, ki ga potrebujete, ne da bi napustili državo kontekst.

Prihajajoči javni prazniki

Naslednji prazniki so najpomembnejši za roke, kadre in časovanje plačevanja mezd.

DatumPraznikVrsta
pet., 26. jun. 2026Midsummer Evenational
sob., 7. nov. 2026All Saints’ Daynational
pet., 25. dec. 2026Christmas Daynational
sob., 26. dec. 2026Boxing Day / St. Stephen's Daynational

2026 mesečna zmogljivost

Hiter mesečni pogled, preden odprete stran s polnimi delovnimi dnevi.

1

20 delovni dnevi

2 prazniki v mesecu

2

20 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

3

22 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

4

20 delovni dnevi

2 prazniki v mesecu

5

20 delovni dnevi

1 prazniki v mesecu

6

21 delovni dnevi

1 prazniki v mesecu

7

23 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

8

21 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

9

22 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

10

22 delovni dnevi

0 prazniki v mesecu

11

21 delovni dnevi

1 prazniki v mesecu

12

22 delovni dnevi

2 prazniki v mesecu

referenca plačevalnega spiska

Posnetek načrtovanja plače

Povprečno bruto mesečno3600,00 €
Povprečno mesečno neto2530,00 €
Minimalna plača14,51 € / hourly
Leto modela plače2026

DDV referenca

Standardne in zmanjšane tarife

standardna stopnja24%
Reduced14%
Reduced10%
Reduced0%

regionalni kontekst

Nacionalna osnova, lokalni pregled kjer je potreben

Finska ima dodatni regionalni kontekst, ki lahko vpliva na operativno načrtovanje. Zgornje številke najprej kažejo nacionalno bazo.

UusimaaPirkanmaaSatakuntaSouth Karelia

Finska — referenca države

Najhitrejši priup v počitniški koledar tega trga, načrtovanje plač in pravila DDV.

Work culture and weekly rhythm in 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.

Public holiday landscape in Finland

Finland observes twelve public holidays per year, including New Year's Day, Epiphany, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Labour Day on 1 May, Ascension, Midsummer's Eve, Midsummer's Day, All Saints' Day, Independence Day on 6 December, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Boxing Day. Several of these fall consistently on a Saturday or Sunday in any given year (Midsummer's Day, All Saints' Day), and no substitute weekday is granted.

Midsummer is the most distinctive Finnish holiday and is observed similarly to Sweden as a near-total national shutdown. The Friday Midsummer's Eve typically becomes effectively non-working, and the country migrates to summer cottages (mökki) for the long weekend. International business communication should not expect any responsiveness during this window.

Independence Day on 6 December is a solemn national observance that closes most businesses. The combination with Christmas Eve on 24 December (a half-day or full day off in many sectors), Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year's Eve produces a long quiet stretch from early December through the first week of January in most office sectors.

Salary and payroll fundamentals in Finland

Finnish payroll combines progressive municipal income tax (kunnallisvero, varying by municipality between roughly seventeen and twenty-three percent), national income tax (valtion tulovero) on higher incomes, the church tax for members of the Finnish Lutheran or Orthodox church, and various social insurance contributions for pension, unemployment and health.

Employer-side contributions in Finland total approximately twenty to twenty-three percent on top of gross salary, primarily covering pension (TyEL), unemployment, health and accident insurance. The pension contribution is the largest component and is shared between employer (around 17.4 percent) and employee (around 7.2 to 8.7 percent depending on age).

Holiday pay (lomaraha or lomaltapaluuraha) of fifty percent of regular vacation pay is a near-universal expectation built into most collective agreements. It is paid alongside the vacation pay itself and means that an employee taking a four-week summer vacation typically receives both their normal salary for the period and an additional fifty percent on top, paid as the holiday bonus.

VAT, invoicing and the business framework in Finland

Finland applies a standard VAT (arvonlisävero, ALV) rate of 25.5 percent (raised from twenty-four percent in 2024), reduced rates of fourteen percent (food, restaurant services excluding alcoholic beverages, animal feed) and ten percent (books, newspapers, accommodation, public transport, cultural and sporting events, pharmaceuticals). The increase to 25.5 percent makes the Finnish standard rate one of the highest in the EU.

Finnish invoice content rules align with the EU directive. The simplified invoice format is permitted for transactions below 400 euros gross. Invoices must be retained for six years from the end of the financial year in which they were issued.

The Finnish small business VAT relief (alarajahuojennus) provides a reduced VAT obligation for businesses with annual turnover below 30,000 euros, on a sliding scale that gradually phases out the relief between 15,000 and 30,000 euros of turnover. Above the threshold, full VAT registration applies with quarterly or annual returns depending on turnover.

Practical planning tips for Finland

Build Finnish project schedules with a clear written brief and an upfront agreement on milestones. The Finnish working culture rewards thorough preparation and disciplined execution; ambiguity in a brief is not absorbed informally as it might be in Mediterranean working cultures.

Treat the week of Midsummer and the last full week of December as essentially closed for any planning purpose. Critical commercial decisions should be moved outside these windows, and onboarding new hires immediately before either window typically produces a slow first month.

When pricing a Finnish hire, remember to add holiday pay at fifty percent of vacation pay to the standard payroll calculation. A monthly gross figure compounded only by the standard employer contributions will materially understate the annual cost.

Pogosto postavljena vprašanja

Kratki odgovori na najpogostejša vprašanja pred uporabo te strani kot referenco.

What is included on the Finska page?
The country page links together holidays, working days, salary planning, VAT references and the most relevant calculators.
How should I use the country page?
Use it as the starting point for that market, then open the holiday, salary or VAT route that matches your task.
Are regional differences covered?
The page highlights regional considerations where they matter, but local verification may still be needed for final decisions.
Are the salary and VAT figures legal advice?
No. They are planning references and should be confirmed against official country sources before regulated use.
Kaj mi prikazuje stran države Finska?
Stran Finska združuje štiri stebre: koledar praznikov za tekoče in prihodnja leta, število delovnih dni na mesec, model načrtovanja plač z aktualnimi davčnimi razredi in prispevki ter okvir DDV z vsemi veljavnimi stopnjami in pravili izstavljanja računov. Vsak steber vodi do namenskega kalkulatorja ali letne podrobne strani.
Kako se Finska primerja s sosednjimi državami?
Razdelek Bližnje države na dnu strani neposredno povezuje do bližnjih trgov. Najuporabnejše primerjave so običajno razlika bruto-neto, DDV in število praznikov.
Ali so podatki o plačah Finska zanesljivi za ponudbo?
Kalkulator odraža aktualne razrede in stopnje ter daje smiselno oceno za načrtovanje ponudbe. Za dejansko plačilno listo v zavezujoči pogodbi potrdite pri lokalnem računovodji za plače.
Od kod prihajajo datumi praznikov Finska?
Podatki sledijo uradnim publikacijam vlade in ministrstev. Regionalni prazniki se beležijo ločeno, da lahko HR načrtovalci sestavijo natančne koledarje za razpršene ekipe.
Ali lahko načrtujem rok projekta s številom delovnih dni Finska?
Da. Mesečno število že odšteje državne praznike in standardne vikende. Za projekte odvisne od mesta ali regije preverite tudi regionalni razdelek.
Ali stran Finska prikazuje pravila DDV za čezmejno prodajo?
Standardne in znižane stopnje so neposredno vidne; kalkulator pokriva običajne scenarije. Pravila B2B in B2C v okviru evropske enotne kontaktne točke so razložena v povezanih virnih člankih.

Kalkulatorji plač

Raziščite vsa plačna orodja te države: bruto-neto, neto-bruto in stroški delodajalca.

Leta praznikov

Oglejte si praznike skozi več let za celovito načrtovanje počitnic.

Delovni dnevi po mesecih

Vrtajte v katerikoli mesec za natančen seznam delovnih dni, državnih praznikov in celoten pregled načrtovanja.

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