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Litigation vs Arbitration in Finland After the 2026 Reform: a Practical Guide for Businesses

By Global Law Experts
– posted 56 minutes ago

The choice between litigation vs arbitration in Finland has shifted decisively with the 2026 reform of the Finnish Arbitration Act, which aligns the country’s arbitration framework with the UNCITRAL Model Law and introduces emergency arbitrators, expanded electronic-hearing provisions, and shortened annulment deadlines. For any business negotiating commercial contracts with a Finnish nexus, or already facing a dispute, the reform demands a fresh look at forum selection before the next contract is signed. This guide provides a structured, practitioner-level decision framework covering the key differences, six real-world scenarios, interim-relief procedures, enforcement rules, and a ready-to-use arbitration clause checklist.

Quick decision summary, when to choose each forum:

  • Choose arbitration when confidentiality, specialist arbitrators, finality, or cross-border enforcement via the New York Convention matter most.
  • Choose litigation when you need public precedent, class-type or statutory relief, or when the dispute involves insolvency or administrative-law elements that courts must handle.
  • Choose arbitration with emergency-relief language when speed of interim measures is critical, the 2026 reform now gives this option real teeth.
  • Choose litigation when cost control on smaller-value disputes is paramount and the parties have no pre-existing arbitration clause.
  • Combine both by drafting a tiered clause (negotiation → mediation → arbitration) with explicit court-assistance language for interim measures.

What Changed in Finland’s 2026 Arbitration Reform

The arbitration reform in Finland represents the most significant update to the Finnish Arbitration Act in decades. The reform package modernises the statutory framework and removes practical obstacles that previously made commercial litigation Finland’s default forum in certain situations. Below are the key changes and their direct business impact.

  • Alignment with the UNCITRAL Model Law. The new Act structures Finnish arbitration law around the internationally recognised Model Law framework, making Finland a more familiar and predictable seat for cross-border parties.
  • Emergency arbitrator recognition. The statute now expressly recognises emergency arbitrators appointed before the full tribunal is constituted. Practical impact: parties can obtain binding interim relief within days rather than weeks.
  • Clarified interim measures. Tribunals, and emergency arbitrators, have explicit statutory authority to order conservatory and protective measures. Courts retain a parallel power to assist. Practical impact: reduced uncertainty about enforceability of tribunal-ordered interim relief.
  • Electronic hearings. The Act expressly permits hearings by videoconference or other electronic means unless a party demonstrates material prejudice. Practical impact: lower travel costs and faster scheduling for international participants.
  • Relaxed form requirements for arbitration agreements. An arbitration agreement no longer requires a specific written form to be valid under the new Act. Practical impact: arbitration clauses in email exchanges, click-through contracts, and framework agreements gain clearer enforceability.
  • Shortened annulment deadlines. The window for challenging an arbitral award in Finnish courts has been tightened. Practical impact: faster finality for awards, which reduces exposure to prolonged post-award litigation.

Industry observers expect these changes to accelerate Finland’s growing reputation as an efficient arbitration seat, particularly through the Finland Arbitration Institute (FAI), which administers the majority of institutional arbitrations in the country.

Quick Comparison, Litigation vs Arbitration in Finland

The following table provides a side-by-side comparison of the core features that matter most when deciding between commercial litigation and arbitration in Finland under the post-reform landscape.

Feature Litigation (Courts) Arbitration (Tribunal)
Decision-maker Public judge(s) in district courts, courts of appeal, and the Supreme Court Private arbitrator(s) selected by the parties or appointed under institutional rules
Speed (typical) 12–36+ months at first instance; appeals can add years 3–12 months for most commercial cases; complex disputes may take longer
Cost Court fees are modest; total costs driven by counsel fees and discovery Arbitrator fees and institutional administration fees add a layer; total cost varies significantly by case management
Confidentiality Hearings and judgments are public by default Proceedings are confidential unless parties agree otherwise
Interim measures Courts routinely grant injunctions and conservatory relief Emergency arbitrators and tribunals now have explicit statutory authority (2026 reform); courts retain parallel assistance power
Appeal / Annulment Judgments subject to appeal through the appellate court system Awards are final and binding; annulment only on narrow statutory grounds with shortened deadlines
Enforcement Domestic enforcement straightforward; cross-border enforcement depends on bilateral treaties or EU instruments International enforcement via the New York Convention, recognised in over 170 states

Speed and Timing

In Finland, arbitration ordinarily concludes within 3 to 12 months, according to practitioner guides and the FAI’s published case-management timelines. Litigation through Finnish district courts can take 12 months or more at first instance, and proceedings that reach the Supreme Court may span several years. The 2026 reform’s endorsement of electronic hearings is likely to compress arbitration timelines further by eliminating scheduling delays associated with physical attendance. For businesses that need a binding resolution within a single financial quarter, arbitration, particularly under expedited FAI rules, is the stronger option.

Costs

The question of whether litigation vs arbitration in Finland is cheaper has no universal answer. Finnish court fees are comparatively low, which can make commercial litigation Finland’s more economical choice for smaller or straightforward claims. In arbitration, the parties bear arbitrator fees and institutional administration costs on top of counsel fees, which can increase total expense, especially with a three-member tribunal. However, arbitration’s condensed timeline and limited discovery often offset those front-loaded costs. The practical recommendation is to model total dispute costs (including management time, opportunity cost of delay, and appeal risk) before choosing a forum.

Confidentiality and Privacy

Court proceedings in Finland are public. Filings, hearing transcripts, and judgments are accessible to competitors, media, and the public. Arbitration, by contrast, is confidential by default. For disputes involving trade secrets, sensitive commercial terms, or reputational risk, this difference alone can justify selecting arbitration.

Court Involvement, Assistance and Annulment

Finnish courts play a supportive role in arbitration even after the 2026 reform. Courts may assist with the appointment or removal of arbitrators, grant interim measures where a tribunal is not yet constituted or where court enforcement is necessary, and handle enforcement of arbitral awards under Finland’s obligations as a New York Convention signatory. Courts also retain jurisdiction to annul awards, but only on the narrow grounds specified in the reformed Arbitration Act Finland, and within the new shortened time limits.

Decision Framework, When to Choose Arbitration or Litigation in Finland

Choosing between arbitration or litigation requires a structured analysis of the dispute’s characteristics, the parties’ commercial objectives, and the contract’s enforcement geography. The following decision tree and scenario matrix provide a practical starting point.

Step-by-step decision tree:

  1. Is there an existing arbitration clause? If yes, arbitration is almost certainly mandatory, Finnish courts consistently defer to valid arbitration agreements.
  2. Is the dispute cross-border? If the opposing party or key assets are outside Finland, arbitration’s New York Convention enforcement advantage is significant.
  3. Is confidentiality critical? If trade secrets, pricing data, or reputational exposure is at stake, arbitration is strongly favoured.
  4. Is specialist expertise needed? For technology, construction, energy, or complex financial disputes, a specialist arbitrator panel adds value over generalist judges.
  5. Is speed essential? If interim or emergency relief is needed within days, confirm the arbitration clause includes emergency arbitrator provisions, or consider parallel court applications.
  6. Are there statutory or public-law elements? For insolvency, employment-tribunal, administrative, or consumer-protection matters, litigation may be the only available forum.

Six Real-World Scenarios

  • Scenario 1: Cross-border supply contract dispute. Recommended forum: Arbitration (FAI rules, Helsinki seat). Why: Enforcement under the New York Convention, confidentiality protects commercial terms, and a specialist arbitrator understands supply-chain dynamics. First steps: (1) Verify the arbitration clause covers the dispute type; (2) File a request for arbitration with the FAI; (3) Consider appointing an emergency arbitrator if shipments are at risk.
  • Scenario 2: IP-heavy technology licensing dispute. Recommended forum: Arbitration with a technically qualified sole arbitrator. Why: Technical expertise, confidentiality of proprietary information, and finality avoid multi-year court appeals. First steps: (1) Confirm the arbitration clause is broad enough to cover licensing and infringement; (2) Identify arbitrator candidates with IP expertise; (3) Request interim relief to prevent ongoing infringement.
  • Scenario 3: Dispute with a state or administrative element. Recommended forum: Litigation in Finnish courts. Why: Administrative disputes and claims involving public procurement or state entities often have mandatory court jurisdiction. First steps: (1) Verify jurisdiction rules; (2) File a claim in the competent district court; (3) Seek injunctive relief if the administrative action is ongoing.
  • Scenario 4: Insolvency-related claim against a debtor. Recommended forum: Litigation. Why: Insolvency proceedings are governed by mandatory court rules in Finland and typically cannot be arbitrated. First steps: (1) File proof of claim in the insolvency proceeding; (2) Assess whether any related contract claims remain arbitrable; (3) Coordinate strategy between court and any parallel arbitration.
  • Scenario 5: Urgent cashflow emergency, need for immediate asset preservation. Recommended forum: Arbitration with emergency arbitrator, supplemented by court application for attachment if enforcement is needed immediately. Why: The 2026 reform gives emergency arbitrators clear authority; courts can enforce where the tribunal’s order needs compulsory execution. First steps: (1) Trigger the emergency arbitrator mechanism; (2) File a parallel court application for precautionary attachment; (3) Prepare evidence of dissipation risk.
  • Scenario 6: Public-interest dispute or request for injunctive relief with third-party impact. Recommended forum: Litigation. Why: Court orders have direct effect against third parties; arbitral awards bind only the parties to the agreement. First steps: (1) File a court claim; (2) Apply for an interim injunction; (3) Consider whether mediation could resolve the dispute faster.

Contract Drafting Considerations, the Arbitration Clause

The decision between litigation and arbitration is typically locked in at the contracting stage. Under the reformed Arbitration Act Finland, an arbitration clause no longer requires a specific written form, but clear drafting remains essential. A well-drafted arbitration clause for Finland should specify the institutional rules (FAI or another named institution), the seat of arbitration, the number and method of selecting arbitrators, the language of proceedings, an emergency arbitrator opt-in, electronic-hearing consent, and confidentiality terms. Vague or “pathological” clauses, those that reference non-existent institutions, omit the seat, or create contradictory forum-selection language, remain a common source of expensive satellite litigation.

Interim and Emergency Measures in Finland after the Reform

The 2026 arbitration reform in Finland directly addresses one of the traditional weaknesses of arbitration: the gap between dispute onset and tribunal constitution, during which assets can be moved or evidence destroyed. The emergency arbitrator mechanism and clarified interim-measure provisions are designed to close that gap.

How the emergency arbitrator works: Under the reformed Act and FAI rules, a party may apply for the appointment of an emergency arbitrator before the tribunal is fully constituted. The emergency arbitrator is typically appointed within days and can issue binding interim orders, including asset freezes, evidence-preservation orders, and anti-dissipation injunctions, on an expedited basis.

When courts still step in: Finnish courts retain the power to grant interim measures in support of arbitration. This parallel jurisdiction is particularly important when (a) the opposing party has not agreed to emergency arbitrator provisions, (b) the order needs to bind third parties such as banks or registrars, or (c) compulsory enforcement is needed immediately.

Step-by-step checklist for securing interim measures in Finland:

  1. Confirm whether your arbitration clause includes an emergency arbitrator provision.
  2. Identify the applicable institutional rules (FAI, ICC, or ad hoc) and their emergency-relief timelines.
  3. Prepare evidence demonstrating urgency, risk of irreparable harm, and prima facie case on the merits.
  4. File the emergency application with the institution and, if needed, a parallel court application for precautionary measures.
  5. Serve the emergency order on the counterparty and any relevant third parties (via the court process if needed).
  6. Transition the interim order to the full tribunal once constituted.

Enforcement of Arbitral Awards and Annulment, What Courts Still Do

Even after the arbitration reform in Finland, courts play an indispensable role at the award stage. Understanding enforcement and annulment rules is essential to any litigation vs arbitration Finland analysis.

Enforcement: Finland is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Domestic awards are enforceable through Finnish district courts, and foreign awards benefit from the Convention’s streamlined recognition process. The grounds for refusing enforcement are narrow, limited to procedural defects, lack of jurisdiction, and public-policy violations.

Annulment: Finnish courts may set aside an arbitral award only on grounds specified in the reformed Act, which mirror the UNCITRAL Model Law’s limited list: incapacity of a party, invalid arbitration agreement, lack of proper notice, excess of jurisdiction, irregular tribunal composition, or conflict with Finnish public policy. The 2026 reform shortens the deadline for filing an annulment application, which accelerates finality and reduces the window for tactical delay.

Stage Key Deadline / Rule Practical Implication
Award rendered Final and binding upon delivery to parties No appeal on the merits, plan post-award strategy immediately
Annulment application Shortened statutory deadline under the 2026 reform (check Finlex for the exact period) Parties must act quickly if annulment is contemplated; missed deadline forecloses the claim
Enforcement application (domestic) Filed with the competent Finnish district court Straightforward process; court verifies formal requirements
Enforcement of foreign award New York Convention procedure; narrow refusal grounds Finland’s Convention membership ensures wide international enforceability

Practical Checklist and Sample Arbitration Clause for Finland

The following 12-item checklist is designed for in-house counsel and contracting managers drafting or reviewing dispute-resolution clauses for contracts with a Finnish nexus.

  1. Specify the seat of arbitration (e.g., Helsinki, Finland).
  2. Name the institutional rules (e.g., FAI Arbitration Rules).
  3. State the number of arbitrators (one or three) and selection method.
  4. Include an express emergency arbitrator opt-in.
  5. Consent to electronic hearings unless material prejudice is demonstrated.
  6. Define the language of proceedings.
  7. Include a confidentiality clause covering proceedings, submissions, and awards.
  8. Specify the substantive governing law of the contract.
  9. Confirm that the clause covers all disputes “arising out of or in connection with” the contract.
  10. Permit court-ordered interim measures in support of arbitration.
  11. Address allocation of arbitration costs and counsel fees.
  12. Avoid contradictory forum-selection language elsewhere in the contract.

Sample arbitration clause (for discussion, local counsel review required):

“Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this contract, or the breach, termination or invalidity thereof, shall be finally settled by arbitration in accordance with the Arbitration Rules of the Finland Arbitration Institute. The seat of arbitration shall be Helsinki, Finland. The arbitral tribunal shall consist of [one/three] arbitrator(s). The language of the proceedings shall be [English/Finnish]. The parties expressly consent to the appointment of an emergency arbitrator and to the conduct of hearings by electronic means. The proceedings and any award shall be confidential.”

Three “dangerous clause” patterns to avoid:

  • Naming a non-existent institution (e.g., “The Helsinki Chamber of Arbitration”, no such body exists), which forces expensive court proceedings to determine the correct forum.
  • Omitting the seat, which creates uncertainty about the applicable procedural law and the court with supervisory jurisdiction.
  • Contradictory forum clauses, for example, an arbitration clause in the general terms and an exclusive court-jurisdiction clause in a schedule, which can render both provisions unenforceable.

Conclusion, Recommended Next Steps for Businesses Weighing Litigation vs Arbitration in Finland

The 2026 arbitration reform in Finland strengthens the case for arbitration in most cross-border, confidential, or specialist commercial disputes while leaving commercial litigation Finland’s appropriate channel for public-law, insolvency, and precedent-setting matters. The practical effect is that businesses can no longer rely on pre-reform assumptions when choosing a forum or drafting dispute-resolution clauses.

Three immediate next actions:

  1. Audit existing contracts. Review all current commercial agreements with a Finnish nexus and assess whether existing dispute-resolution clauses reflect the new statutory landscape, particularly emergency arbitrator provisions and electronic-hearing consent.
  2. Insert emergency relief language. For new contracts, ensure arbitration clauses expressly opt in to emergency arbitrator procedures under the applicable institutional rules.
  3. Pre-select institutional rules and consider arbitrator candidates. Specifying FAI rules (or another recognised institution) and maintaining a shortlist of qualified arbitrators can save weeks when a dispute arises.

Businesses that choose arbitration or litigation based on a structured analysis, rather than contractual inertia, will gain a meaningful advantage in the speed, cost, and enforceability of dispute resolution in Finland.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tuomas Talvitie at Mittslaw, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Finland Arbitration Institute, Information on Arbitration
  2. Global Law Experts, Finland Arbitration Reform 2026
  3. Waselius, Chambers Global 2026: Finland Dispute Resolution
  4. Chambers Practice Guides, Litigation 2026 Finland
  5. ICLG, International Arbitration Laws and Regulations: Finland
  6. Jus Mundi, Finland Arbitration Overview
  7. DLA Piper, Litigation and Arbitration in Finland
  8. LKOS Law Office, Arbitration in Finland: Complete Legal Overview

FAQs

What are the main changes in Finland's 2026 Arbitration reform?
The reform aligns Finland with the UNCITRAL Model Law, recognises emergency arbitrators, permits electronic hearings, relaxes arbitration-agreement form requirements, and shortens annulment deadlines, together broadening and accelerating arbitration options.
Choose arbitration for confidential, specialist, or cross-border commercial disputes where finality and New York Convention enforcement matter. Choose litigation for public-law, insolvency, or precedent-setting matters.
The 2026 reform gives emergency arbitrators and tribunals explicit statutory authority to grant interim relief. Courts retain parallel power to assist, especially for enforcement against third parties.
Yes. Courts retain supervisory jurisdiction to annul awards on narrow grounds mirroring the UNCITRAL Model Law, but within a shortened deadline that accelerates finality.
Arbitration is typically faster, often concluding within 3 to 12 months, but not always cheaper, as arbitrator and administration fees can be significant. Model total costs before choosing.
Specify the seat, institutional rules, emergency arbitrator opt-in, electronic-hearing consent, number and selection of arbitrators, language, and confidentiality terms.
Finland is a New York Convention state. Foreign awards are generally enforceable subject only to narrow public-policy and procedural defences recognised by Finnish courts.
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Litigation vs Arbitration in Finland After the 2026 Reform: a Practical Guide for Businesses

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