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Last updated: 7 May 2026
Two significant amendments to Finnish employment legislation took effect in the first quarter of 2026, and commercial agreements lawyers Finland‑wide are now fielding urgent questions from procurement teams, general counsel and HR directors about what needs to change in their contracts. On 1 January 2026, the threshold for dismissing an employee on personal grounds was lowered under an amendment to the Employment Contracts Act. On 1 April 2026, a separate reform relaxed the rules governing fixed‑term employment contracts, reducing the justification previously required for entering into successive fixed‑term engagements. Together, these employment law changes Finland has enacted reshape the risk profile of every services agreement, subcontractor arrangement and outsourcing contract that depends on a supplier’s workforce to deliver results.
This guide translates both reforms into concrete drafting steps, sample clauses and a contract compliance checklist designed for in‑house teams managing renewals, restructures and new supplier onboarding.
TL;DR, three actions to take now:
From 1 January 2026, the Finnish Employment Contracts Act was amended to lower the threshold for terminating an employment relationship on personal grounds. According to the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment, the change means that an employee’s conduct or capacity no longer needs to meet the previously established “weighty reason” standard in every case; the employer’s circumstances, including the size of the business and the overall situation, may now be weighed more flexibly. From 1 April 2026, a separate amendment increased flexibility for fixed‑term contracts by allowing employers to enter into a fixed‑term contract of up to one year without a specific justification, and by relaxing the restrictions on successive fixed‑term engagements.
The reforms directly amend employment contracts, but the practical effects reach far further. Any commercial agreement that references employee‑related termination events, allocates workforce risk between parties, or depends on a supplier maintaining specific personnel is in scope. The most exposed categories include managed‑service and outsourcing agreements, secondment and staff‑augmentation contracts, subcontractor workforce clauses within construction or IT delivery, and procurement framework agreements with key‑person provisions.
| Effective Date | Legislative Change | Practical Contract Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Lowered dismissal threshold (personal grounds) | Greater employer flexibility to dismiss, but higher termination exposure for commercial contracts referencing employee‑related termination events; counterparties may challenge performance‑based exits |
| 1 April 2026 | Relaxed fixed‑term contract rules (shorter justification; extended successive fixed‑terms) | Increased use of fixed‑term engagements, risk of disguised employment claims; impacts supplier resource clauses and continuity warranties |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Related procedural changes (negotiation timeframes, lay‑off notice, re‑employment duty) | Adjust notice and termination windows in supplier and service agreements to align with new statutory minimums |
The 2026 reforms create a dual pressure on commercial contracts. On one side, the lowered dismissal threshold makes it easier, in statutory terms, for an employer to terminate an individual employee. On the other, the practical result is that termination decisions are likelier to be challenged by employees and unions who view the lower bar as an invitation to test its limits. For buyers of services, the risk materialises when a supplier’s workforce disruption, caused by a contested dismissal or an improperly managed fixed‑term conversion, triggers a performance failure under the commercial agreement.
Industry observers expect several categories of contractual risk to intensify through the remainder of 2026: termination‑for‑cause disputes where a supplier’s definition of “cause” no longer aligns with the amended statutory standard; intellectual property and know‑how retention gaps when key personnel leave or are dismissed; business continuity failures tied to workforce instability; and increased redundancy and re‑engagement costs that must be allocated between contracting parties. The likely practical effect will be that service agreements without updated risk‑allocation provisions expose buyers to supply disruption and indirect liability.
| Clause | Risk from 2026 Changes | Mitigation / Change to Clause |
|---|---|---|
| Termination for convenience / for cause | Easier challenge to dismiss staff supporting performance‑based terminations; counterparties may claim wrongful termination of services | Tighten performance metrics; add mutual cure periods; require contemporaneous evidence; adjust notice periods |
| Subcontractor workforce warranties | Liability if subcontractor’s worker is dismissed and the action triggers a breach of the commercial agreement | Add warranty that subcontractor complies with the Employment Contracts Act; include indemnity for wrongful‑dismissal claims |
| Material adverse change / force majeure | Labour‑law‑driven workforce shortages may trigger supply disruption that neither party anticipated | Add specific labour‑law exception; define MAE thresholds and mitigation obligations |
From 1 April 2026, an employer may conclude a fixed‑term employment contract of up to one year without providing a specific reason, a change that the Finnish Government described as a measure to increase flexibility and lower the hiring barrier. The reform also extends the permissible use of successive fixed‑term contracts. For commercial agreements lawyers Finland counsel rooms are now seeing the downstream effects: suppliers are deploying more fixed‑term staff on project deliveries, increasing both operational flexibility and the risk that fixed‑term workers will later claim they should have been treated as permanent employees.
The drafting implications fall into two categories. First, when a buyer’s own delivery model relies on fixed‑term hires, for example, in project‑based statements of work, the agreement should set explicit caps on term length, renewal frequency and conversion triggers to prevent disguised‑employment claims. Second, when a buyer relies on suppliers who use fixed‑term staff, the commercial agreement should require the supplier to warrant employment‑law compliance and to notify the buyer of successive fixed‑term usage that approaches statutory limits.
The following is original illustrative language provided for guidance. It should be adapted to each transaction and reviewed by Finnish counsel before use.
“The Supplier warrants that all fixed‑term personnel assigned to the Services comply with the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001, as amended). The Supplier shall not renew a fixed‑term engagement beyond three successive terms, or beyond an aggregate duration of 24 months, without the Buyer’s prior written consent. If any fixed‑term engagement is reclassified as open‑ended by a court or authority, the Supplier shall bear all resulting costs and indemnify the Buyer against any claim, loss or expense arising from such reclassification.”
The dismissal law 2026 Finland enacted has a direct bearing on how “termination for cause” provisions function in commercial agreements. Before the amendment, the “weighty reason” standard under the Employment Contracts Act meant that dismissing an employee on personal grounds required a high evidentiary threshold. The lowered threshold gives employers greater flexibility, but early indications suggest that trade unions and employee representatives intend to test the boundaries vigorously, meaning that contested dismissals may increase in frequency even as the statutory bar drops.
For in‑house teams reviewing termination clause drafting, the priority is to ensure that commercial‑contract definitions of “cause” are insulated from the uncertainty surrounding individual dismissal disputes. A supplier’s failure to deliver services because a key employee was dismissed, and that dismissal is later challenged, should not automatically entitle the buyer to terminate the commercial agreement without a cure process. Equally, a supplier should not be able to invoke workforce disruption caused by its own non‑compliant dismissal as an excuse for non‑performance.
Enhanced “for cause” definition with objective KPIs:
“‘Cause’ means a material and documented failure by the Supplier to meet two or more Key Performance Indicators set out in Schedule [X] for a continuous period of 60 days, provided the Buyer has delivered written notice specifying the failure and the Supplier has not remedied it within 30 days of receipt.”
Extended cure period with verification step:
“Before exercising any right of termination for cause, the terminating party shall (a) deliver a written cure notice specifying the breach in reasonable detail; (b) allow a minimum cure period of 30 days; and (c) participate in a joint review meeting with the other party’s project lead and HR representative to verify whether the breach has been remedied.”
Termination liability cap:
“The aggregate liability of either party for claims arising from or in connection with termination of this Agreement shall not exceed an amount equal to the fees payable during the 12‑month period immediately preceding the date of termination, or EUR [amount], whichever is lower.”
Subcontractor liability Finland buyers must now manage has grown more complex under the 2026 reforms. When a supplier dismisses an employee assigned to a buyer’s project, and that dismissal is subsequently challenged, the commercial question is which party absorbs the cost. Three allocation models are common in current market practice:
| Allocation Model | Who Pays | When Invoked |
|---|---|---|
| Risk‑light (buyer‑favourable) | Supplier bears 100 % of employee dismissal claims causing breach | Any wrongful‑dismissal claim by supplier’s staff that results in service disruption or third‑party liability for the buyer |
| Shared risk | Costs shared pro rata (e.g., 70/30 supplier/buyer) up to a cap | Dismissal challenge causes measurable service degradation exceeding a defined SLA threshold |
| Balanced with insurance | Supplier maintains employment‑liability insurance; insurer pays first; residual shared | Any employment claim exceeding a de minimis threshold; insurance must be maintained throughout the term and for 12 months after expiry |
“The Supplier shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Buyer from and against any loss, liability, cost or expense (including reasonable legal fees) arising from or in connection with any claim by a current or former employee of the Supplier that relates to the Services, including but not limited to wrongful‑dismissal claims, fixed‑term reclassification claims and collective‑agreement disputes. This indemnity shall survive termination or expiry of this Agreement for a period of 24 months.”
The following ordered checklist is designed for in‑house legal teams running pre‑renewal audits. Prioritise high‑risk agreements first: services with embedded staff, secondments, temporary‑workforce provisions and large supplier contracts with key‑person dependencies.
Sample A, Termination for Cause (Objective Standards + 30‑Day Cure)
“Either party may terminate this Agreement for cause upon 30 days’ written notice if the other party commits a material breach that remains unremedied at the expiry of such 30‑day period. ‘Material breach’ means a failure to achieve two or more of the KPIs listed in Schedule [X] for any consecutive 60‑day period, supported by contemporaneous written evidence delivered with the cure notice.”
Negotiation note: Buyers should resist reducing the cure period below 30 days; suppliers may seek 45 days for complex service environments. Both positions are defensible.
Sample B, Supplier Warranty: Employment Law Compliance
“The Supplier represents and warrants that it complies, and shall continue to comply throughout the term, with all applicable provisions of the Employment Contracts Act (55/2001, as amended), including without limitation the rules governing fixed‑term employment contracts and dismissal on personal grounds. The Supplier shall promptly notify the Buyer of any material employment claim, regulatory investigation or collective dispute that may affect the delivery of the Services.”
Negotiation note: Suppliers may request that “material” be defined by reference to a monetary threshold or a specific SLA impact. This is reasonable, provided the threshold is low enough to give the buyer meaningful early warning.
Sample C, Indemnity and Liability Cap
“The Supplier shall indemnify the Buyer against all losses arising from a breach of the warranty in clause [Sample B reference], subject to an aggregate cap equal to the total fees paid or payable in the 12 months preceding the claim. This indemnity shall survive termination for 24 months. The Buyer’s sole remedy for losses exceeding the cap shall be a right to terminate the Agreement on 60 days’ notice without further liability.”
Negotiation note: Suppliers often seek to reduce the survival period to 12 months. Buyers with long project cycles should resist unless the underlying employment claim limitation period has also expired.
The 2026 reforms will continue to generate new case law and regulatory guidance throughout the year. In‑house teams should act now rather than wait for interpretive certainty. First, run a clause audit across all active agreements using the checklist above, prioritising contracts up for renewal in the next six months. Second, identify high‑exposure suppliers, those with embedded staff, sole‑source dependencies or large fixed‑term workforces, and initiate renegotiation of termination, indemnity and insurance provisions. Third, engage experienced commercial agreements lawyers Finland practices can provide to draft bespoke clause language and to advise on negotiation strategy. A directory of qualified practitioners is available through the Finland lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pekka Kähkönen at LexAuctor Ltd, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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