Finland is the furthest point north in the EU and the most isolated of the major Nordic markets from a road freight perspective. It shares no land border with another EU member state, its ports are the only practical entry point for most non-EU inbound freight, and winter conditions create genuine operational constraints that no other EU country imposes on logistics at the same scale. For non-EU brands targeting Finland specifically, or using Helsinki as a gateway to the Baltic states and northwestern Russia-adjacent markets, the compliance setup is manageable but the physical and operational realities of Finnish logistics require careful planning from the outset.
Download the Finland 3PL List →Finland is an island logistics market in practical terms. It shares a land border only with Norway, Sweden, and Russia, none of which are EU members. The only road freight route into the EU without a sea crossing goes south through Sweden and then into Denmark or Germany, adding significant distance and transit time relative to any continental European hub. This geographic reality means the Port of Helsinki, the Port of HaminaKotka, and the Port of Turku are not supplementary to road freight: for most non-EU inbound shipments, they are the only viable entry point.
Helsinki Airport handles Finland's air cargo volumes and serves as the primary gateway for time-sensitive freight. Finnair Cargo operates the airport's main freight services and has historically offered a significant advantage on Asia-Helsinki routes due to Helsinki's position on the great-circle flight path between Europe and East Asia, making it one of the shortest transoceanic air freight routes available from any EU airport. For brands shipping by air from Asia, this routing advantage is a genuine operational consideration.
English is widely used in Finnish business at a professional level and presents no meaningful barrier for non-EU brands sourcing providers. Finnish and Swedish are the two official languages and both appear in government filings, but most operators of any significant scale are comfortable with English across all commercial and operational communication. VAT filings with the Finnish Tax Administration (Verohallinto) and customs declarations with Finnish Customs (Tulli) are conducted in Finnish or Swedish, so your fiscal representative and customs broker will need Finnish-language capability, but day-to-day 3PL communication rarely creates friction on language grounds.
Finland's 3PL market is consolidated around a small number of large operators, reflecting the country's limited population and the high fixed costs of operating in a geographically dispersed, seasonally challenging market. Posti (Finnish Post) and DB Schenker dominate the domestic parcel and freight network. DHL and PostNord handle significant volumes. Ecommerce-focused fulfilment capacity is concentrated in the Greater Helsinki area, particularly around Vantaa near Helsinki Airport and in the logistics parks along the Ring III motorway corridor.
For non-EU brands, Finland's market is accessible in language and compliance terms but comes with a cost structure that is among the highest in the EU. Warehouse costs, labour, and last-mile delivery rates in Finland are materially higher than most other EU markets. This is the correct trade-off for brands whose primary customers are Finnish or whose strategic case involves the Helsinki-Tallinn ferry corridor as a gateway to Estonia and the Baltic states, but it is the wrong base for brands seeking low-cost pan-EU fulfilment.
EuroSOR's Finland 3PL file covers vetted operators across each tier, mapped against these criteria. The file is updated quarterly and includes providers from ecommerce-native fulfilment centres to contract logistics operators with port-zone inbound capability and Baltic distribution reach.
Operators mapped by hub location, minimum volumes, ecommerce integrations, and non-EU inbound capability. Updated quarterly.
The following obligations must be in place before stock enters Finland. They are your brand's legal responsibilities. Your 3PL does not handle them, and leaving them unresolved until after a warehouse contract is signed will delay your go-live.
| Requirement | What it involves | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Finnish VAT registration (ALV) | Storing inventory in Finland creates an ALV (arvonlisavero) registration obligation regardless of where your company is incorporated. Non-EU companies must appoint a fiscal representative jointly liable for filings with the Finnish Tax Administration (Verohallinto). OSS registration in another EU member state does not replace Finnish ALV registration when stock is physically held in Finland. Finland's standard ALV rate of 25.5% is among the highest in the EU. | Before stock ships |
| Fiscal representative | Finland requires non-EU businesses to appoint a Finnish-resident fiscal representative to register for ALV. The representative is jointly liable for your VAT obligations and is a mandatory part of the registration process with Verohallinto. Filings are conducted in Finnish or Swedish. This appointment is separate from a GPSR Responsible Person. | Before stock ships |
| GPSR Responsible Person | Mandatory across the EU since 13 December 2024. Any non-EU brand placing consumer products on the EU market must appoint an EU-established Responsible Person. Their name and contact details must appear on the product or its packaging. This applies in Finland as across all EU member states. Amazon and major marketplaces enforce this before EU listings go live. | Before first sale |
| EORI number | Required before any non-EU shipment can enter Finland. Used in all customs declarations processed by Finnish Customs (Tulli). Without an EORI, a freight forwarder cannot complete an import declaration on your behalf at Finnish ports including Helsinki and HaminaKotka. | Before first inbound |
| Importer of Record | Agree in writing with your 3PL who acts as Importer of Record. This determines who declares goods with Tulli, who pays import ALV, and who can subsequently reclaim it through ALV filings with Verohallinto. Given that most non-EU freight enters Finland by sea, an unresolved IOR agreement causes port holds that are particularly disruptive given the limited frequency of vessel calls at Finnish ports. | Before first inbound |
| PYR packaging registry (Pakkausalan Ymparistoorekisteri) | Finland's packaging EPR scheme is coordinated through PYR (Pakkausalan Ymparistoorekisteri). Companies placing packaged goods on the Finnish market above a defined tonnage threshold must register with PYR and join a producer responsibility organisation. The primary approved organisations include Rinki. Registration must be completed before your first sale if you meet the threshold, and is your brand's obligation. PYR registration operates in Finnish. | Before first sale |
| WEEE registration (Tukes / approved producer organisation) | Finland's WEEE framework is overseen by the Finnish Safety and Chemicals Agency (Tukes). Producers of electrical and electronic equipment must register with an approved producer organisation before placing products on the Finnish market. If your product category includes any powered devices, chargers, cables, batteries, or battery-operated items, this registration is mandatory. The scope aligns with EU WEEE Directive categories. | Before first sale |
A 3PL contract covers physical operations: receiving, storage, pick and pack, carrier handover, and returns. It does not cover the legal and compliance layer that makes those operations valid under EU and Finnish law.
That layer covers ALV registration, fiscal representation with Verohallinto, GPSR Responsible Person appointment, EORI setup, PYR packaging registration, and the Seller of Record structure that determines who is the legal entity of record for transactions in Finland. For non-EU brands, establishing this structure before the warehouse agreement is signed avoids the delays and port-hold complications that arise when compliance is treated as a post-launch task.
EuroSOR operates as the EU Seller of Record for non-EU brands entering Finland and the wider European market. Rather than arranging fiscal representation, GPSR appointment, PYR registration, and EORI separately, EuroSOR consolidates the legal and compliance layer into a single managed structure. Your 3PL handles the physical operations. EuroSOR handles what makes those operations legally valid.
The correct sequence is to establish the compliance structure before signing a warehouse contract, not after. Learn how EuroSOR's Seller of Record service works for brands entering Finland.