Finland Needs 100,000 Foreign Workers and Just Made It Easier to Move There in 2026

Finland updated its immigration rules in January 2026, added three fast-track routes to permanent residency, and still ranks as the happiest country in the world. Here is how to actually get a job and residence permit there.
Finland Needs 100,000 Foreign Workers and Just Made It Easier to Move There in 2026
Finland consistently ranks as the happiest country in the world. It has free university education, comprehensive public healthcare, one of the lowest corruption levels globally, and a technology ecosystem that produced Nokia and later Supercell and Rovio. It is also facing a serious workforce gap that local talent alone cannot fill.
The Finnish Employment Service estimates the country needs over 100,000 foreign workers by 2026 to maintain economic growth in its key industries. The government is not quietly hoping this resolves itself. It launched the Talent Boost program through Business Finland and the Ministry of Economic Affairs specifically to accelerate the recruitment of international skilled professionals, and it updated the Aliens Act in January 2026 to add new fast-track routes to permanent residency for workers who meet certain criteria.
If your skill set is in healthcare, IT, engineering, logistics, manufacturing, or cleantech, Finland deserves serious consideration and this guide tells you exactly how to get in.
The January 2026 Immigration Updates
The Aliens Act amendment that came into force on January 8, 2026 introduced three accelerated routes to permanent residency for workers in Finland, each with different qualifying criteria.
The first route is for workers with an annual income of at least 40,000 euros. If you earn above this threshold under a valid work permit, you can apply for permanent residency faster than through the standard path.
The second route is for professionals who hold a master’s or postgraduate degree recognized in Finland and have completed at least two years of Finnish work experience. For people who arrived on skilled worker permits in high-demand fields, this can be a significantly shorter path to settlement than the standard four-year continuous residence requirement.
The third route is for workers who demonstrate C1 proficiency in Finnish or Swedish and have at least three years of Finnish work experience. Language investment here creates a direct shortcut to permanent settlement.
For everyone else, the standard route remains four years of continuous lawful residence under a valid permit.
The government also introduced job-loss protection in mid-2025 that continues to apply in 2026. If your employment ends unexpectedly while you are on a standard work permit, your residence permit remains valid for three months while you search for new work. Specialist permit holders and those who have lived in Finland on a work permit for over two years have six months of grace before their status is affected. You are required to notify the Finnish Immigration Service, known as Migri, when your employment ends, but you are not immediately required to leave.
The Three Main Permit Categories
1. The Specialist Residence Permit is the fastest and most relevant for skilled professionals. It is designed for IT specialists, engineers, researchers, and other highly qualified professionals. The minimum gross monthly salary requirement as of January 2026 is EUR 3,937, which translates to approximately EUR 47,244 annually. Applications are processed under a fast-track system with a typical processing time of two to four weeks, which is unusually rapid by European standards.
2. The EU Blue Card is available for highly qualified workers with a university degree and a minimum monthly salary of EUR 5,200 gross. It is suited for senior professionals in specialist fields and carries a two-year initial validity rather than the one-year standard for first-time applicants.
3. The Employed Person Residence Permit, known by its Finnish abbreviation TTOL, is the broader category that covers a wider range of occupations and has a lower salary threshold than the specialist route. It is appropriate for roles in construction, manufacturing, hospitality, healthcare support, logistics, and other sectors where Finland faces shortages but where the specialist minimum salary might not apply. This permit type involves a TE Office review, where the Employment and Economic Development Office assesses whether there is available local labor before supporting the application. For jobs in nationally designated shortage sectors, this review is typically straightforward.
For workers in agriculture, tourism, or hospitality with seasonal contracts, a Seasonal Work Permit is available for up to nine months.
Which Sectors Are Hiring and What They Pay
1. Healthcare is the most urgent shortage area. Finland needs doctors, nurses, dentists, physiotherapists, care workers, and medical support professionals. Healthcare roles in Finland typically require Finnish or Swedish language proficiency for patient-facing positions, though the level required varies by role. Recognition of foreign medical qualifications goes through Valvira, the National Supervisory Authority for Welfare and Health. This process takes time, so starting it early, before you even apply for your permit, is essential for healthcare professionals.
2. IT and Technology is the most accessible sector for English speakers. Finland has a strong technology heritage and an active startup ecosystem in Helsinki, Espoo, and Tampere. Software engineers, data scientists, AI specialists, cybersecurity experts, and full-stack developers are in consistent demand. A large proportion of tech roles, particularly at companies with international teams, operate entirely in English.
3. Engineering and Cleantech is another growth area driven by Finland’s investment in sustainable energy, construction, and industrial technology. The cleantech sector is particularly active around companies focused on carbon capture, wind energy, sustainable forestry technology, and bioeconomy.
4. Logistics and Manufacturing sees consistent demand particularly around the Tampere and Oulu regions. Warehouse operators, logistics coordinators, and production line workers in manufacturing are among the semi-skilled roles available with employer sponsorship.
5. Eldercare and social services are a growing gap as Finland’s population ages. This is one of the sectors where non-specialist workers from abroad are being recruited, and it offers a route into Finland for people who do not have technology or engineering backgrounds.
Helsinki entry-level technology salaries start around EUR 3,000 to 4,000 per month gross. Mid-level engineers typically earn EUR 4,500 to 6,000. Senior and specialist roles go higher. Outside Helsinki, costs are lower and salaries adjust accordingly, making cities like Turku, Tampere, and Oulu genuinely good options for people who want the Finnish quality of life at a lower cost than the capital.
How to Apply Step by Step
All applications are submitted through the Enter Finland online portal at enterfinland.fi. There is no paper process for most permit types.
Step one is securing a job offer from a Finnish employer who holds a valid Finnish business ID. The employer plays an active role in the permit process and must confirm employment terms, salary, and in some cases go through the TE Office labor market assessment before the application reaches Migri.
Step two is gathering your personal documentation: a valid passport, complete CV, educational certificates and transcripts, proof of work experience, a signed employment contract specifying your salary, role, duties, and working hours, and confirmation of health insurance. For specialist and Blue Card permits, your salary documentation is particularly important since it must demonstrate that you meet the relevant monthly threshold.
Step three is submitting through Enter Finland. The system is in English and relatively user-friendly by immigration portal standards. Migri processes the application and issues a residence permit card, which you collect from the nearest Finnish embassy or consulate after approval if you are applying from outside Finland.
Step four, after arriving in Finland, is registering your address with the Digital and Population Data Services Agency and obtaining your Finnish personal identity code. Your employer should assist with payroll registration and social security enrollment.
Processing times for the Specialist Permit are two to four weeks. For the standard TTOL permit, expect one to four months depending on the TE Office review timeline and application volume.
The Talent Boost programme, run by Business Finland, provides additional support for highly skilled international applicants and their families through the International House Finland centers in Helsinki, Espoo, Tampere, Turku, and Oulu. These centers handle residence registration, tax office visits, and various integration steps in one place, which makes the practical side of arriving in Finland significantly less fragmented than it is in many other countries.
Finding Employers Who Hire Internationally
The Finnish government’s Work in Finland portal at workinfinland.fi is the starting point for international job seekers. It connects to vacancy listings and provides information on the permit process in English. The TE-palvelut job board at te-palvelut.fi covers public sector vacancies and employer listings across all sectors. LinkedIn is widely used by Finnish employers, particularly in technology and international business.
Duunitori is Finland’s most popular general job board, and indeed.fi also has strong coverage. For healthcare roles, the SOTE sector in Finnish, direct applications to hospital districts, health centers, and private healthcare networks are the most direct route.
The Talent Boost initiative also has active outreach in priority countries including India, Canada, Japan, and South Korea. If you are in one of these countries, Business Finland may have country-specific resources and contacts.
~ Official Migri work permit information: migri.fi/en/work-in-finland
~ Enter Finland application portal: enterfinland.fi
~ Work in Finland international job portal: workinfinland.fi
Why Finland Is Underrated as a Destination
The language barrier is the main reason Finland does not appear on more lists of top destinations for working abroad. Finnish is one of the most difficult languages in the world for speakers of Indo-European languages, and Swedish is a co-official language in some regions. Neither is easy to pick up quickly.
But the technology sector operates largely in English, the international community in Helsinki is growing fast, and the government has actively acknowledged that language cannot be an insurmountable barrier to attracting the international talent the country needs. The fast-track D visa introduced in 2022 lets workers enter and start employment within ten days of permit approval, which eliminates one of the most frustrating delays common in other systems.
Finland offers free tuition at its universities even for EU nationals who are already working there. For workers who arrive on employment permits and want to eventually study for a higher qualification, this is a significant long-term benefit that does not exist in most other comparable countries.
The quality of life argument for Finland is strong and consistent. Safe, clean, well-governed, with functional public services and a genuine culture of work-life respect. Whether that outweighs the language challenge is a personal calculation, but the professional case for seriously investigating Finland in 2026 is difficult to dismiss.