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🇫🇮Tourist Guide

Driving in Finland

Complete guide for tourists and expats. Learn the road rules, speed limits, and essential information before you drive in Finland.

Right Side
Driving Side
120 km/h
Max Highway Speed
112
Emergency Number
Briefing

Finland's road system is defined by two structural realities most visitors miss until they're on it: dipped headlights have been compulsory at all times — day and night, every road — since 1997 (the rural-roads-in-winter mandate dates from 1972, making Finland one of the earliest movers on DRL), and the country runs a seasonal speed-limit swap. The 120 km/h motorway limit drops to 100 km/h roughly between late October/early November and March, and the standard 100 km/h on main expressways drops to 80 km/h.

Exact dates are set each autumn by ELY-keskus regional authorities, signed locally — there is no nationwide flip date.

The 2020 Tieliikennelaki (729/2018, in force 1 June 2020) is the regime still being bedded in. Two things changed for foreign drivers: winter tyres are now mandatory between 1 November and 31 March when conditions warrant, not on calendar dates alone (the old Dec 1 – end of February rule is gone, and the police assess whether tyres were appropriate after the fact); and handheld phone use was redefined so you may now hold the phone when the vehicle is genuinely stationary, but not at red lights with the engine running on a moving traffic queue.

Studded tyres (nastarenkaat) are permitted from 1 November to the week after Easter.

The famous Finnish quirk is real and worth respecting: the päiväsakko (day-fine) system bills serious speeders as a multiple of monthly disposable income. The benchmark case is Nokia board member Anssi Vanjoki, fined €116,000 in 2002 for 75 km/h in a 50 zone on his motorbike in Helsinki — the fine equalled 14 days of his 1999 income.

The fixed liikennevirhemaksu (traffic penalty fee, €140–200) covers minor over-limit driving up to about +20 km/h; anything beyond switches to day-fines and a likely licence suspension.

There are no general motorway tolls or vignette — Finland is one of the few EU countries where intercity motorway driving is entirely free. The practical hazards sit elsewhere.

Around 1,500 moose and 13,000+ total ungulate collisions are recorded each year nationally (Statistics Finland), peaking in September–October; in the poronhoitoalue (reindeer-herding area covering roughly the northern third of the country, ~36%), 4,000–5,000 reindeer are killed or injured by traffic annually, mostly Oct–Dec on the E75 and Kemijärvi roads. You are obliged to call 112 even after a glancing hit — the Finnish Motor Insurers' Centre compensates the herd, but only if you report.

PP

Reviewed by Pawan Priyadarshi

Founder of AutoviaTest · About the editor

Every figure on this page is cross-checked against the primary regulator listed in the Sources section below. We re-verify the page on the date shown above whenever a relevant law, fine, or toll changes.

Facts verified against primary sources on May 25, 2026

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Can You Drive in Finland?

Accepted Licenses From

EUEEASwitzerlandUKUSACanadaJapanAustralia

Validity Period: EU/EEA driving licences valid in Finland without time limit. Non-EU/EEA licences valid for tourist driving for up to 2 years from the holder's date of entry to Finland, provided the licence is in Latin script or accompanied by an International Driving Permit (1949 Geneva or 1968 Vienna). Once you become a registered resident (kotikunta), the foreign non-EEA licence must be exchanged within 2 years under bilateral agreements where they exist; otherwise a Finnish theory and practical test is required.

Important Note

IDP recommended for any non-EU licence not printed in Finnish, Swedish or English. Traficom enforces the Latin-script requirement strictly at roadside checks. The 2-year tourist window is calendar-based, not driving-days based.

What to Carry in Your Car

Mandatory Items

  • Valid driving licence (paper or card, Latin script or accompanied by IDP)
  • Vehicle registration certificate (rekisteriote, both parts I and II for foreign-registered vehicles)
  • Proof of compulsory motor third-party insurance (liikennevakuutus)
  • Warning triangle (varoituskolmio) — must be displayed if the vehicle stops on the carriageway
  • Dipped headlights on at all times, year-round, on all roads (Tieliikennelaki §36) — DRLs alone are not sufficient on vehicles without a separate dipped-beam DRL system
  • Winter tyres (talvirenkaat) or equivalent equipment between 1 November and 31 March when weather or road conditions require — police assess after the fact, minimum 3.0 mm tread depth, 3PMSF-marked or M+S studded

Recommended Items

  • Reflective high-visibility vest (heijastinliivi) — not legally mandated for car occupants but compulsory if you walk on the carriageway in poor visibility
  • First aid kit
  • Snow brush and ice scraper — practical necessity from October through April
  • Tow rope and jumper cables, especially for winter driving outside major routes
  • Spare bulbs for older vehicles (younger drivers and rental cars can rely on roadside assistance)

Speed Limits

50

Urban Areas

km/h

80

Rural Roads

km/h

120

Highways/Motorways

km/h

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Parking

Line Colors

White P on blue square: Permitted parking — always read the sub-signs (lisäkilpi) for time limits, days and disc requirements
Blue zone with disc symbol (pysäköintikiekko): Free parking with parking disc set to arrival time, typically 1–4 hour maximum
Yellow kerb stripe: No parking / no stopping — reserved for buses, loading or fire access
Paid zone (maksullinen pysäköinti): Pay at machine or via mobile app — typical in central Helsinki, Tampere, Turku, Oulu

Parking Tips

  • EasyPark, Moovy and Parkman are the three dominant payment apps — most paid zones in Helsinki accept all three, with the zone code printed on the signpost
  • Parking disc (pysäköintikiekko) is mandatory in blue zones — set it to your arrival time rounded up to the next half hour; cheap discs available at any kiosk or petrol station
  • Disabled bay misuse, fire-lane parking and bus-stop obstruction attract the highest fines and instant towing — Helsinki tows aggressively in the city centre
  • Helsinki Ring I, II and III (Kehä I/II/III) have only park-and-ride at metro/commuter rail interchanges — no roadside parking on the rings themselves
  • Tampere central area has narrow one-way streets with kerb parking on alternating sides by day — check the sign direction carefully

Average Cost: €2–4/hour in central Helsinki (zones 1–2), €1–3/hour in Tampere, Turku and Oulu city centres. Most suburban paid zones €0.50–1.50/hour. Shopping-centre and out-of-town parking generally free. Helsinki on-street zones operate Mon–Fri 09:00–21:00 and Sat 09:00–18:00; free on Sundays unless signed otherwise.

Common Mistakes Tourists Make

  • 1Driving on summer tyres in November or March because the calendar says you should be fine — under Tieliikennelaki §105 since 2020, police judge whether tyres were appropriate to conditions, not to dates
  • 2Ignoring the seasonal speed-limit signs — the same stretch of motorway can be 120 km/h in July and 100 km/h in November, signed locally by ELY-keskus and changing year by year
  • 3Driving without dipped headlights in daylight — mandatory year-round since 1997 on all roads; DRLs alone are insufficient on older vehicles without a coupled dipped-beam DRL
  • 4Underestimating the day-fine system — anything more than ~20 km/h over the limit converts the ticket from a fixed €140–200 liikennevirhemaksu to an income-indexed päiväsakko that can run to five or six figures
  • 5Not calling 112 after even a minor reindeer or moose strike — Finnish Motor Insurers' Centre cover requires the report; insurance pays for vehicle damage regardless of fault
  • 6Hitting the brakes hard for moose at dusk — biology favours a controlled aim-for-the-tail manoeuvre when a collision is unavoidable, since the body sits at windscreen height on a passenger car
  • 7Assuming there's a toll booth somewhere — there isn't; Finland has no general motorway charging at all

Traffic Fines

Speeding

Fixed liikennevirhemaksu €140 (1–15 km/h over) to €200 (16–20 km/h over) on roads with limit above 60 km/h; €170 to €200 on roads up to 60 km/h. Above ~20 km/h over the limit, the offence converts to income-based päiväsakko (day-fines) — typically 12–20 day-units, calculated as (monthly net income − €255 basic allowance) ÷ 60. Famous benchmark: Nokia board member Anssi Vanjoki, €116,000 in 2002 for 75 km/h in a 50 zone on a motorbike.

No Seatbelt

€70 liikennevirhemaksu per unbelted occupant. Driver also responsible for ensuring child passengers under 135 cm are in approved restraints.

Phone Use

€100 liikennevirhemaksu for handheld phone use while driving (Tieliikennelaki §98). Since the 2020 reform, you may hold the device only when the vehicle is genuinely stationary — being stopped at a red light in moving traffic does not count.

Red Light

Above the fixed-fine threshold — issued as päiväsakko (income-based day-fine), typically 8–14 day-units, plus possible licence suspension if combined with speed.

Illegal Parking

€20–80 felparkering / pysäköintivirhemaksu depending on municipality; €60–80 in central Helsinki. Disabled bay misuse, fire-lane obstruction and bus-stop blockage attract the maximum and risk towing (lunastusmaksu up to €300).

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Emergency Contacts

Police

112 (single emergency number — covers police, ambulance, fire and rescue since 2007)

Ambulance

112

Fire

112

Roadside Assistance

Autoliitto (Finnish AA): 0200 8080 within Finland, +358 9 4767 8400 from abroad. Falck Finland: 0200 80 110. Most rental contracts include 24/7 breakdown via the rental company app.

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Sources

Every numeric and regulatory claim on this page is checked against the official Finland source listed below. Fines and fees in particular drift year to year — if a figure has changed since our last verification date, the linked source will reflect the current value.

  • Speed limits:Traficom — Tieliikennelaki 729/2018 §98–101 (speed limits, summer/winter)
  • Alcohol limit:Rikoslaki 23 luku §3–4 — rattijuopumus (0,5‰) and törkeä rattijuopumus (1,2‰)
  • Fines:Poliisi / Oikeusrekisterikeskus — liikennevirhemaksu and päiväsakko bands
  • Phone Fine:Liikenneturva — Using devices while driving (Tieliikennelaki §98)
  • Tolls:Visit Finland — No motorway tolls or vignette in Finland
  • In-car equipment:Poliisi — Winter tyres required in wintry conditions (Tieliikennelaki §105)
  • Winter Tyres:Ministry of Transport and Communications — Winter tyre season as of 1 November
  • Foreign licence:Traficom — Foreign driving licences in Finland
  • Emergency contacts:Hätäkeskuslaitos (ERC Finland) — 112 unified emergency number
  • Fuel:fuel-prices.eu — Finland national average (May 2026)
  • Daytime Running Lights:Daytime running lamp history — Finland: rural roads 1972, all roads year-round 1997
  • Reindeer:Paliskuntain yhdistys — Encountering reindeer on the roads (4,000–5,000/year)
  • MOOSE:Statistics Finland / Liikenneturva — moose-vehicle collisions 2022
  • Vanjoki Case:Irish Times — Nokia boss €116,000 speeding ticket (2002 Vanjoki case)

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AutoviaTest is an independent educational platform. Our content is based on official driving regulations and verified against government sources in each country. Practice materials are designed to help you prepare for your official driving test. For the most current requirements, always check with your local driving authority.

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