Finland is open to travellers
Travellers from the EU can enter Finland freely as of 12 July without any additional health and safety measures
The rules apply when they are fully vaccinated, have had a Covid-19 infection before, are born in 2006 or later, or arrive from a country with low virus incidence.
Those with one vaccination only are instructed to take a Covid-19 test at least 72 hours after arrival to Finland, and those without any vaccinations are required to have a negative test result before departure to Finland or a test on arrival.
In line with this new model, airline Finnair will discontinue its requirement for customers to present Covid certificates before boarding flights to Finland.
Finair won’t check Covid certificates
“With the new legislation, the requirements for entry are checked on arrival, so our customers do not need to show their certificates to Finnair customer service agent at the check-in, when their destination is Finland”, said Jaakko Schildt, Finnair Chief Operating Officer. “We continue to check the documents for those transiting to an international flight at Helsinki, per authority requirements.”
The Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare recommended earlier this year that all airlines with flights to Finland require their customers to show either a negative test result, a certificate of recovery, or a vaccination certificate, and Finnair has been the only airline flying to Finland who has adhered to this recommendation. With the discontinuation of this practice, Finnair does not have any requirements of its own regarding Covid certificates.
During the interim period of 12-25 July, Finnair will check customers travelling to Finland meet the Finnish entry requirements, as internal border control continues and leisure traffic is not yet allowed from all EU and Schengen countries..
Last year, Finnair introduced complimentary Covid-19 insurance cover for customers departing from Finland.