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Dispute Resolution in Finland 2026: Arbitration Act Reforms, Interim Measures, Emergency Arbitrator & 60‑day Annulment

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 minute ago

Dispute resolution in Finland is undergoing its most significant transformation in over three decades, as a government-appointed working group has proposed replacing the existing Arbitration Act with a new statute aligned to the 2006 UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration. The proposed Finnish arbitration reform introduces form-free arbitration agreements, codified tribunal interim-measure powers, statutory recognition of emergency arbitrators, and a strict 60‑day annulment deadline, changes that collectively reshape how counsel draft clauses, preserve evidence, seek urgent relief, and enforce awards. This guide provides the practical playbook that in-house counsel, arbitration practitioners, and corporate legal teams need to adapt their strategies before the new regime takes effect.

Three actions counsel should take immediately:

  • Redline existing arbitration clauses. Review all standard-form and bespoke arbitration agreements against the new form-free requirements and updated FAI model clauses.
  • Calendar the 60‑day annulment deadline. Build internal docketing protocols that trigger the moment an award notification is received, there will be no statutory fallback for missed deadlines.
  • Map interim-relief strategy. Determine whether tribunal-ordered interim measures, emergency arbitrator orders, or pre-arbitral court injunctions best serve pending or anticipated disputes.

Why Finland Is Reforming the Arbitration Act: Legal Background and UNCITRAL Model Law Alignment

Finland’s current Arbitration Act dates from 1992, predating the 2006 amendments to the UNCITRAL Model Law that most leading arbitration jurisdictions have since adopted. The reform marks the first comprehensive overhaul of Finnish arbitration legislation in over thirty years. Its stated objective is to modernise the legal framework, enhance Finland’s attractiveness as an arbitral seat, and remove longstanding sources of procedural uncertainty that have complicated dispute resolution in Finland for cross-border commercial parties.

The Ministry of Justice convened a working group tasked with preparing a proposal for a new Arbitration Act. The working group’s report, published on the Valtioneuvosto (Finnish Government) website, proposes a statute that closely tracks the UNCITRAL Model Law while incorporating features drawn from contemporary Nordic arbitration practice. Industry observers expect the new Act to position Helsinki alongside Stockholm and Copenhagen as a preferred Nordic seat for international commercial arbitration.

Legislative Timeline

Event Date Practical Effect
Ministry of Justice working group established 2025 Reform process formally commenced; stakeholder consultations initiated
Working group proposal published (Valtioneuvosto) January–February 2026 Detailed draft provisions available for practitioner review; firm alerts begin circulating
Consultation period and firm commentary February–April 2026 DLA Piper, Waselius, HPP, and other leading firms publish practitioner analysis
Government bill anticipated and parliamentary process 2026–2027 (projected) Counsel should begin adapting clauses and procedures now; final Act expected to enter into force following parliamentary approval

The reform’s four pillars, form-free agreements, tribunal interim powers, emergency arbitrator recognition, and the 60‑day annulment deadline, each carry concrete implications for how practitioners handle arbitration-related dispute resolution in Finland going forward.

Form-Free Arbitration Agreements and Drafting Implications for Dispute Resolution in Finland

Under the proposed Arbitration Act 2026, an arbitration agreement will no longer require a specific written form to be valid. The working group proposal adopts the more permissive UNCITRAL Model Law standard, recognising agreements recorded in any form, including electronic communications, email exchanges, and even oral agreements where their existence can be established. This represents a significant departure from the current Act’s more formal requirements.

The practical consequence is twofold. First, parties gain flexibility: arbitration clauses embedded in click-wrap agreements, digital platforms, or informal correspondence chains will be enforceable, provided their content can be proven. Second, that same flexibility creates evidentiary risk. Where no signed document exists, the burden of establishing the agreement’s terms and scope falls on the party invoking it.

Recommended Clause Language

Even though form-free arbitration agreements will be recognised, best practice strongly favours clear, written clauses. The FAI continues to provide model arbitration clauses designed for use with its institutional rules. A recommended clause for contracts governed by Finnish law under the new regime should specify:

  • Institutional affiliation. Reference the FAI Rules of Arbitration or another designated institution.
  • Seat. Specify Helsinki (or another Finnish city) as the seat of arbitration to ensure the new Act’s provisions on interim measures and annulment apply.
  • Language and governing law. State the procedural language and applicable substantive law explicitly.
  • Number of arbitrators. Designate whether the dispute will be resolved by a sole arbitrator or a three-member tribunal.
  • Emergency arbitrator opt-in/opt-out. Confirm whether the parties intend to use emergency arbitrator procedures, particularly if the chosen institutional rules include such provisions by default.

International Contracts and Seat Considerations

For cross-border transactions, the form-free rule reduces the risk that a Finnish-seated arbitration clause will be invalidated on formal grounds by a foreign enforcement court. This aligns Finland with the approach taken by Sweden, Germany, and other Model Law jurisdictions, and early indications suggest it will strengthen the enforceability of Finnish arbitral awards under the New York Convention.

Tribunal Interim-Measure Powers and Court Recognition Under the Arbitration Act 2026

The proposed reform codifies the tribunal’s power to order interim measures, including orders for the preservation of evidence, maintenance of the status quo, provision of security, and protection of assets. Under the current Act, the legal basis for tribunal-ordered interim measures has been a source of uncertainty, with parties sometimes forced to rely on parallel court proceedings. The new statute provides a clear, codified framework aligned with the UNCITRAL Model Law provisions on interim measures enforcement.

Critically, the proposal introduces a court procedure through which a party may apply to have a tribunal-ordered interim measure declared enforceable. An interim measure ordered by a tribunal seated in Finland can be declared enforceable by the competent district court upon application. This means tribunal orders will carry practical teeth: non-compliance can be sanctioned through the Finnish enforcement machinery, eliminating the historical gap between a tribunal’s authority and the court’s enforcement power.

Comparison of Interim Relief Mechanisms

Mechanism Typical Timeframe to Decision Enforcement / Recognition Route
Tribunal interim measure (order) Days to weeks (depending on tribunal rules and complexity) Apply to competent Finnish district court to declare order enforceable under the new codified procedure
Emergency arbitrator order 24–72 hours to appointment; decision typically within days Convert to court order for enforcement; the new Act recognises the emergency arbitrator procedure
Court injunction (pre-arbitral) Days to weeks (depends on court calendar and urgency) Directly enforceable by Finnish enforcement authorities

Practical Checklist: Preserving Interim Relief

Counsel seeking tribunal interim measures under the reformed Act should follow a systematic approach:

  1. Document the urgency. Prepare a detailed factual record demonstrating irreparable harm, asset dissipation risk, or evidence destruction, the tribunal will assess urgency against a threshold aligned with international practice.
  2. Identify the competent court. Under the proposal, the Helsinki District Court will typically serve as the competent court for enforcement applications related to Finnish-seated arbitrations. Confirm jurisdiction before filing.
  3. Prepare a bonding or security proposal. Many tribunals will require the applicant to provide security for the respondent’s potential damages if the interim measure is later found to have been unwarranted.
  4. Draft the enforcement application simultaneously. Do not wait for the tribunal’s order before preparing the court application. Having the enforcement motion ready to file immediately after the tribunal issues its order can be the difference between effective relief and a hollow victory.
  5. Consider parallel court proceedings. In cases of extreme urgency, particularly before the tribunal is constituted, a pre-arbitral court injunction remains available and may be faster.

Emergency Arbitrator Recognition and Procedure in Finland

One of the most consequential features of the Finnish arbitration reform is the statutory recognition of emergency arbitrator procedures. The FAI Rules of Arbitration already include provisions allowing the appointment of an emergency arbitrator before the full tribunal is constituted. Under the current Act, however, the legal status of emergency arbitrator decisions has been ambiguous, particularly regarding their enforceability. The proposed reform resolves this by explicitly recognising emergency arbitrator orders and providing a conversion mechanism through Finnish courts.

The recognition of the emergency arbitrator in Finland brings the country into line with leading arbitral jurisdictions including Singapore, Hong Kong, and Sweden. For parties facing imminent asset dissipation, evidence destruction, or contractual breaches requiring immediate injunctive relief, the emergency arbitrator pathway offers a faster alternative to court proceedings, with the added benefit of arbitrator appointment within hours rather than the days or weeks a court application may require.

Step-by-Step: Seeking Emergency Relief in Finland

  1. File an emergency arbitrator application with the relevant institution. Under FAI rules, the application should detail the nature of the relief sought, the factual and legal basis, and the urgency. The FAI will appoint an emergency arbitrator typically within 24 hours.
  2. Serve notice on the opposing party. Proper notification is essential for the enforceability of any resulting order. Ensure service complies with both institutional rules and the requirements of the proposed Act.
  3. Present the case to the emergency arbitrator. Be prepared to proceed on an expedited basis, the emergency arbitrator will normally issue a decision within days of appointment.
  4. Obtain the emergency order. The order may require the respondent to preserve assets, maintain the status quo, or refrain from specific actions.
  5. Convert the order to an enforceable court order. Apply to the competent Finnish district court for a declaration of enforceability. The new Act’s recognition framework means the court should not re-examine the merits but will verify procedural regularity and compatibility with Finnish public policy.
  6. Enforce through the Finnish Enforcement Code. Once declared enforceable, the order is executed through the standard enforcement machinery, including seizure of assets where applicable.

The likely practical effect of these provisions is that emergency arbitrator applications in Finnish-seated arbitrations will increase substantially. Counsel drafting arbitration clauses should consider whether to explicitly opt into (or out of) emergency arbitrator procedures and ensure the selected institutional rules support the conversion mechanism envisaged by the new Act.

The 60‑Day Annulment Deadline: What Counsel Must Do Now

The most immediately impactful change for practitioners engaged in dispute resolution in Finland is the introduction of a strict 60‑day time limit for bringing an action to annul (set aside) an arbitral award. Under the working group proposal, the 60‑day annulment deadline runs from the date on which the party received notification of the award. This replaces the current regime, which has been criticised as a source of uncertainty due to the absence of a clear, fixed limitation period for annulment actions.

The strategic consequences are profound. The 60‑day annulment deadline compresses the entire post-award decision cycle. Counsel for the losing party must decide within days, not weeks or months, whether to challenge the award, identify viable grounds for annulment, gather supporting evidence, and file a properly substantiated action with the competent court. Simultaneously, counsel for the prevailing party must calibrate enforcement timing: moving to enforce immediately carries the risk that an annulment action filed within the 60‑day window could complicate or stay enforcement proceedings.

Grounds for Annulment Under the Proposed Act

The proposal aligns annulment grounds with the UNCITRAL Model Law, meaning a court may set aside an award only in limited circumstances:

  • Incapacity of a party or invalidity of the arbitration agreement
  • Lack of proper notice of arbitrator appointment or of the proceedings
  • The award deals with matters beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement
  • The composition of the tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement or the Act
  • The subject matter is not arbitrable under Finnish law
  • The award conflicts with Finnish public policy

Motion Calendar and Pre-Award Preservation Steps

Counsel should implement the following protocol to manage the 60‑day annulment deadline effectively:

  1. Immediate triage upon award receipt. Within 48 hours of receiving notification of the award, counsel should complete a preliminary assessment of whether any annulment ground exists and whether the cost-benefit analysis supports a challenge.
  2. Preserve the record. Secure all communications, procedural orders, transcripts, and evidence that may support or defend against an annulment action, regardless of which side counsel represents.
  3. Calendar the deadline with no ambiguity. Calculate the 60‑day deadline from the exact date of notification. Build in internal warning markers at day 7, day 30, and day 50.
  4. Pre-emptive stay motions. If the opposing party is likely to seek immediate enforcement, respondent counsel should prepare a stay application for filing alongside the annulment action. Under the Finnish Enforcement Code, enforcement of an arbitral award can only be suspended if there are cogent reasons to grant a stay.
  5. Claimant enforcement strategy. Prevailing-party counsel should prepare enforcement applications in advance of the award and file promptly. The compressed annulment window means that swift enforcement action can create facts on the ground before any challenge materialises.

The 60‑day annulment deadline eliminates the risk of indefinite challenges but demands a fundamentally higher level of post-award preparedness from all parties. Industry observers expect this reform to significantly reduce the number of speculative or tactical annulment actions that have become more frequent in recent years.

Enforcement Implications and Cross-Border Considerations

The interplay between the 60‑day annulment deadline and international enforcement creates both opportunities and risks. Under the Finnish Enforcement Code, a domestic arbitral award is enforceable immediately, there is no requirement to wait for the annulment period to expire before commencing enforcement. However, if an annulment action is filed within the 60‑day window, the respondent may seek a stay of enforcement, and the court will assess whether cogent reasons exist to suspend proceedings.

For awards subject to cross-border enforcement under the New York Convention, the compressed Finnish annulment window provides a significant advantage: once the 60‑day period expires without challenge, the award achieves a high degree of finality that foreign enforcement courts will recognise. The award-creditor can present to foreign courts an award that is no longer subject to any domestic challenge, strengthening the enforcement position considerably.

When an Award Is Annulled: Cross-Border Enforceability

If an award is annulled by a Finnish court, enforcement in foreign jurisdictions becomes more complex but is not automatically precluded. Article V(1)(e) of the New York Convention permits, but does not require, a foreign court to refuse enforcement of an annulled award. Some jurisdictions, most notably France, have enforced awards that were annulled at the seat. The likely practical approach for counsel is to assess the specific enforcement jurisdiction’s case law on this question before pursuing cross-border enforcement of an annulled Finnish award.

Early indications suggest that the clarity of the Finnish annulment procedure under the new Act may reduce the number of annulments overall, making the question of post-annulment enforcement less frequent but not less important for high-stakes disputes.

Practical Playbook for Counsel: Step-by-Step Dispute Resolution in Finland

The following role-specific playbook consolidates the key tactical steps counsel should take under the reformed regime.

For Claimant Counsel: Enforcement Checklist

  1. Pre-award preparation. Draft enforcement applications in the target jurisdiction(s) before the award is issued. Identify assets, registry requirements, and local counsel.
  2. Immediate filing upon award. File the enforcement application on the day the award is received, or as soon as procedurally possible. Speed is critical, the 60‑day annulment window begins running for the opposing party simultaneously.
  3. Monitor for annulment filings. Track the court docket for any annulment action during the 60‑day period. If an annulment is filed, assess whether a stay is likely and prepare opposing arguments.
  4. Cross-border enforcement coordination. If enforcement is sought in multiple jurisdictions, coordinate timing to maximise the impact of the Finnish award’s finality once the 60‑day period lapses.
  5. Interim measure preservation. If tribunal-ordered interim measures were obtained during proceedings, ensure they are converted to enforceable court orders before the tribunal is functus officio.

For Respondent Counsel: Annulment and Delay Defence

  1. Rapid ground assessment. Complete an annulment viability analysis within 7 days of award notification. Focus on procedural irregularities, tribunal composition issues, and scope-of-agreement challenges, these are the grounds most likely to succeed under the UNCITRAL Model Law framework.
  2. File annulment and stay simultaneously. Do not file the annulment action without a concurrent stay application. The stay motion should demonstrate cogent reasons for suspending enforcement, such as risk of irreversible harm or a strong prima facie case on annulment grounds.
  3. Preserve all procedural records. Tribunal communications, procedural orders, hearing transcripts, and arbitrator correspondence are essential evidence for annulment actions. Secure these immediately upon receiving the award.
  4. Assess cross-border exposure. If the claimant is likely to enforce in foreign jurisdictions, consider whether defensive actions (such as anti-enforcement injunctions where available) are warranted.

For Contract Drafters: Model Clauses and Fallback Language

  • Adopt updated FAI model clauses. The FAI provides standardised arbitration clauses that incorporate emergency arbitrator provisions and are designed for use with its current rules.
  • Specify the seat explicitly. Even under form-free rules, specifying Helsinki or another Finnish city as the seat eliminates ambiguity about which Act governs the arbitration.
  • Include emergency arbitrator and interim-measure provisions. Explicitly state whether the parties intend to permit or exclude emergency arbitrator appointments and tribunal-ordered interim measures.
  • Address multi-tier dispute resolution. Consider whether the clause should include a mandatory negotiation or mediation step before arbitration commences, and specify timeframes for each tier.
  • Provide for expedited proceedings. Where appropriate, reference the FAI’s expedited procedure rules for lower-value disputes or matters requiring rapid resolution.

Decision Matrix: Which Relief Path to Choose

Scenario Recommended Mechanism Key Consideration
Imminent asset dissipation, tribunal not yet constituted Emergency arbitrator application Fastest appointment; convert order to court enforcement immediately
Urgent relief needed, tribunal already seated Tribunal interim measure Apply for court enforceability declaration alongside the order
Extreme urgency, no arbitration agreement in place Court injunction Directly enforceable; no arbitration clause required
Post-award enforcement, no annulment filed within 60 days Direct enforcement under Finnish Enforcement Code Award has maximum finality; proceed to execution
Post-award, annulment filed within 60 days Oppose stay; continue enforcement in parallel jurisdictions Assess cogent-reasons threshold and cross-border strategy

Conclusion

The proposed Finnish arbitration reform represents a watershed moment for dispute resolution in Finland. The three most critical actions for counsel are: first, redline all arbitration clauses to incorporate form-free validity safeguards, emergency arbitrator provisions, and explicit seat designations; second, build internal docketing systems capable of tracking the 60‑day annulment deadline from the moment of award notification; and third, develop interim-relief strategies that leverage the new tribunal powers and emergency arbitrator recognition to protect client interests before, during, and after arbitral proceedings. Practitioners seeking specialist guidance on any aspect of dispute resolution in Finland can consult the Global Law Experts Finland lawyer directory to connect with experienced arbitration and litigation counsel.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pekka Ylikoski at Justitum, Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Arbitration Institute of the Finland Chamber of Commerce (FAI)
  2. DLA Piper, Finnish Arbitration Act Is Being Reformed
  3. Waselius, Finland’s Reform of the Arbitration Act: Working Group Proposal
  4. HPP Attorneys, Reforming the Finnish Arbitration Act: New UNCITRAL Model Law-Based Act Proposed
  5. EDILEX, The Finnish Arbitration Act Reform
  6. Jus Mundi, Finland (2026): Enforcement and Arbitration Overview
  7. Legal 500, Dispute Resolution in Finland
  8. Chambers and Partners, Dispute Resolution, Finland

FAQs

What is the 60‑day annulment deadline under the proposed Arbitration Act?
The proposed Act introduces a strict time limit of 60 days for filing an action to annul (set aside) an arbitral award. The deadline runs from the date on which the challenging party receives notification of the award. This fixed deadline replaces the current regime, which lacked an explicit statutory limitation period and was considered a source of uncertainty in Finnish arbitration practice.
Yes. Under the proposed reform, an interim measure ordered by a tribunal seated in Finland can be declared enforceable by the competent district court upon application. The court will not re-examine the merits of the interim measure but will verify procedural regularity and compatibility with Finnish public policy before granting enforceability.
Counsel should file an emergency arbitrator application with the relevant institution (such as the FAI), serve proper notice on the opposing party, present the case on an expedited basis, obtain the emergency order, and then apply to the Finnish district court to convert the order into an enforceable court order. Preparing the court application in advance of the emergency decision is strongly recommended.
No. The proposed Act adopts a form-free approach aligned with the UNCITRAL Model Law, meaning arbitration agreements do not require a specific written form. Agreements concluded orally, electronically, or through informal correspondence are valid, provided their existence and content can be established. Practitioners are nonetheless advised to use clear, written clauses to avoid evidentiary disputes.
Potentially, depending on the jurisdiction. Under Article V(1)(e) of the New York Convention, a foreign court may refuse, but is not required to refuse, enforcement of an annulled award. Some jurisdictions, notably France, have enforced awards that were set aside at the seat. Counsel should analyse the specific enforcement jurisdiction’s approach before pursuing cross-border enforcement of an annulled Finnish award.
The working group proposal has been published and is undergoing consultation. A government bill is anticipated to be submitted to Parliament, with the new Act expected to enter into force following the parliamentary process. Counsel should begin adapting their arbitration clauses and internal procedures now, as the reform’s key features, particularly the 60‑day annulment deadline, will require immediate compliance upon entry into force.

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Dispute Resolution in Finland 2026: Arbitration Act Reforms, Interim Measures, Emergency Arbitrator & 60‑day Annulment

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