Skip to content

Study abroad in Finland

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Finland.

Capital

Helsinki

Languages

Finnish / Swedish

Academic Year

Two semesters: Autumn (early September to December) and Spring (January to late May). Main intake September, secondary January.

Population

Approx. 5.6 million

Typical Budget

EUR 700 - 1,200/month

Study Abroad in Finland: What to Expect

Study abroad in Finland works best for students who want a Nordic exchange that is calm, safe and academically serious without feeling sterile. English-taught courses, compact student cities, sauna-and-lake culture and very low perceived crime make the country easy to trust, even if the first weeks can feel quiet.

Who loves this country?

Finland is a strong fit for students who want a calm, safe and highly organised exchange with serious academics, reliable public services and easy access to forests, lakes and winter trips.

What makes it special

The country feels different because student life mixes world-class universities with sauna culture, low crime, quiet cities and nature that is genuinely part of everyday life rather than a weekend extra.

Newcomer shocks

  • Winter darkness is the real adjustment: short daylight, ice and the need for proper layers affect your mood, schedule and social energy.
  • Finland is quiet in public spaces, so the first weeks can feel distant until you learn how friendships form through repeat plans, clubs and sauna nights.
  • Eating out and alcohol are expensive; the student budget works best when you lean on canteens, home cooking and free outdoor plans.
  • Non-EU paperwork is precise: Migri funds, insurance and identity checks need to be prepared early, not treated as a last-minute form.

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

27

Crime Index

Low

World avg: 44.7

74

Safety Index

Very safe

World avg: 55.3

69

Cost of Living

Expensive

EUR 700 - 1,200/month

Budgets need planning because Finland is not a cheap destination: expect roughly EUR 700-1,200/month depending on the city, with Helsinki at the upper end. Rent is the main pressure point, while student housing, subsidised lunches and free outdoor life keep the exchange workable.

Safety: Among the safest countries in the world; violent crime is rare. The real 'risks' are winter darkness, ice and the cost of a night out, not crime.

Big Cities vs Small Towns

Big Cities

  • Helsinki concentrates the largest universities, the biggest English-taught offer and the most international student life, with Espoo (Aalto) next door.
  • It is a compact, design-led Nordic capital — sea, islands, saunas and reliable transport — but the priciest place to live in Finland.
  • Tampere and Turku are smaller, cheaper student cities with strong universities and tight communities.

Small Towns

  • University towns like Jyväskylä, Oulu and Rovaniemi are very student-dominated, cheaper, and closer to lakes and Lapland nature.
  • Less happens in English socially, and winters are darker and colder the further north you go.
  • Oulu and Rovaniemi put the aurora and true Lapland on your doorstep.

Culture & student life in Finland

The cultural adjustment is less about chaos and more about silence, punctuality and personal space. Finland opens up through repeat routines: a student lunch, a lakeside sauna, a forest walk, coffee with korvapuusti and friends who appear slowly but tend to be reliable.

Social Norms

Finns value personal space, quiet and punctuality — silence in a conversation is comfortable, not awkward. Sauna is a normal, often weekly social ritual, usually nude and gender-separated; it's relaxation, not a party. People keep their word and queue precisely; trust and self-service systems are everywhere. Tipping is not expected — service is included; rounding up is plenty.

Daily Rhythm

Local pace

07:00–09:00

Morning

Early, efficient starts. A quick coffee and karjalanpiirakka or pulla, then tram/metro to campus. Winter mornings are dark until late.

11:00–13:00

Midday

Lunch is early and is the main hot meal. The student canteen (Unicafe) lunch with a student card is the cheap daily standard.

13:00–17:00

Afternoon

Lectures and self-study in libraries like Oodi. The kahvitauko (coffee break) with a cinnamon bun is a genuine institution.

17:00–20:00

Evening

Dinner at home (eating out is pricey). A sauna evening or a gym/swim is common; grocery runs to K/S-Market or Lidl.

20:00–00:00

Night

Pre-drinks at home then Kallio's bars in Helsinki; quieter midweek. In summer the sky barely darkens; in winter, aurora-watching out of town.

Food Culture

Karjalanpiirakka (Karelian pie)

Karjalanpiirakka (Karelian pie)

EUR 0.50–1 each (6-pack €3–5 in supermarkets)

Rye-crust pastry filled with rice porridge, eaten with egg butter (munavoi). The national everyday snack.

Student hack:

Buy a fresh 6-pack from K-Market or S-Market and top with egg butter — cheapest authentic breakfast going.

Lohikeitto (creamy salmon soup)

Lohikeitto (creamy salmon soup)

EUR 8–14 (canteen/cafe)

Comfort-food classic — salmon, potato, leek and cream. Warming in the long winter.

Student hack:

Student canteens (Unicafe) serve a hot soup-and-bread lunch for a few euros with a student card.

Korvapuusti (cinnamon bun)

Korvapuusti (cinnamon bun)

EUR 2–4

Cardamom-and-cinnamon sweet bun, the heart of the Finnish coffee break (kahvitauko).

Student hack:

Pair it with bottomless filter coffee at a café — the cheapest way to study warm for an afternoon.

Ruisleipä with salmon (rye open sandwich)

Ruisleipä with salmon (rye open sandwich)

EUR 3–7

Dense sour rye bread, the staple of Finland, here topped with salmon — a quick filling lunch.

Student hack:

Buy rye bread and toppings from a market hall and build your own; far cheaper than cafés.

Mustikkapiirakka (blueberry pie)

Mustikkapiirakka (blueberry pie)

EUR 3–5 a slice

Made with wild bilberries — in late summer you can pick them free under 'everyman's right'.

Student hack:

Forage your own bilberries in any forest in August (it's legal and free) and bake the pie yourself.

Pulla (sweet cardamom bread)

Pulla (sweet cardamom bread)

EUR 2–4

Braided cardamom-scented sweet bread served with coffee — the everyday café treat alongside korvapuusti.

Student hack:

Supermarket pulla is cheap; a loaf lasts a week of breakfasts.

Cultural dos & don'ts in Finland

Do

  • Take your shoes off when entering a home — always.

  • Say yes to the sauna; it's how Finns relax and socialise.

  • Use the student canteens (Unicafe) — a full hot lunch for a few euros with a student card.

  • Dress in proper layers and get reflectors for winter — they're expected, not optional.

  • Learn 'kiitos' (thank you) and 'moi' (hi) — small effort, well received.

Don't

  • Don't fill silence with small talk just to fill it — Finns are comfortable with quiet.

  • Don't be loud on public transport; it's noticeably calm.

  • Don't skip winter gear thinking you'll tough it out — darkness and ice are real.

  • Don't expect cheap nights out — alcohol is heavily taxed; pre-drinking at home is normal.

  • Don't litter in nature; 'everyman's right' comes with leave-no-trace respect.

Things to do in Finland as a student

Daily life changes dramatically with the seasons. Summer brings long bright days, islands and lake trips; winter brings darkness, ice, saunas, careful clothing and the possibility of heading north for the aurora.

Public sauna & ice swim

Public sauna & ice swim

Löyly and Allas Sea Pool, Helsinki Year-round (ice swim in winter)

Sauna then a plunge into the cold Baltic is THE Finnish ritual — cheap, social and unforgettable.

Learn more
Northern lights in Lapland

Northern lights in Lapland

Rovaniemi / Kittilä, Lapland September–March

Long dark skies and tour infrastructure make Lapland the place to finally see the aurora — a bucket-list winter trip.

Learn more
Suomenlinna sea fortress

Suomenlinna sea fortress

Suomenlinna, Helsinki Year-round

A UNESCO island fortress a short ferry ride from the centre — picnics, ramparts and sea views on a single HSL ticket.

Learn more
Hiking in Nuuksio National Park

Hiking in Nuuksio National Park

Nuuksio, Espoo (near Helsinki) May–October (snowshoe in winter)

Lakes, forest trails and free wilderness huts under 'everyman's right', reachable by bus from Helsinki for a day trip.

Learn more
Lakeland cottage (mökki) weekend

Lakeland cottage (mökki) weekend

Finnish Lakeland June–August

Rent a lakeside cabin with friends for sauna, swimming and white nights — the quintessential Finnish summer escape.

Learn more
Berry & mushroom foraging

Berry & mushroom foraging

Any forest (everyman's right) August–September

Picking wild bilberries and chanterelles is legal and free anywhere under 'everyman's right' — a genuinely Finnish, zero-cost activity.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Vappu (May Day)

30 April – 1 May (annual)

Vappu (May Day)

Helsinki (Senate Square, Esplanadi) & nationwide

students party goers

Finland's biggest student carnival — white graduation caps, sparkling wine, picnics and the whole country outdoors to celebrate spring.

Juhannus (Midsummer)

Around 20 June (annual)

Juhannus (Midsummer)

Lakesides nationwide

nature lovers culture seekers

The year's most important holiday — bonfires (kokko), saunas and white nights at lakeside cottages. Cities empty as everyone heads to the lakes.

Flow Festival

Mid-August (annual)

Flow Festival

Suvilahti, Helsinki

music fans design lovers

Helsinki's premium music-and-arts festival in a former power plant — 90,000 visitors over three days, global headliners and design-led food.

Ruisrock

Early July (annual)

Ruisrock

Ruissalo island, Turku

music fans party goers

One of Europe's oldest rock festivals, on a leafy island — a classic Finnish summer weekend an easy trip from Helsinki.

Helsinki Pride

Late June / early July (annual)

Helsinki Pride

Helsinki

everyone community

One of the Nordics' biggest Pride weeks, ending in a huge parade through central Helsinki and a park celebration.

Lux Helsinki

Early January (annual)

Lux Helsinki

Central Helsinki

winter lovers photographers

A free winter light festival — illuminated artworks along a route through the dark, snowy city centre. The antidote to January gloom.

Travel Tips

  • Trains (VR) are comfortable and cheap with student discounts — Tampere and Turku are easy weekend trips; the night train reaches Lapland.
  • Tallinn (Estonia) is a 2-hour ferry from Helsinki and noticeably cheaper — a popular student day trip.
  • Book Lapland trips and Juhannus cottages early; both sell out fast.

Scholarships & student benefits in Finland

Student benefits matter here rather than feeling like small extras. Subsidised meals, transport discounts, student housing routes and university services make a high-cost country much easier to manage day by day.

Useful either way

Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.

Student canteens (Unicafe / Kela subsidy)

Enrolled students get a state-subsidised hot lunch at university canteens for a few euros with a valid student card.

University restaurants / Kela

Official source

Student housing (HOAS)

Non-profit student housing foundations like HOAS offer the cheapest rooms and studios for students in the Helsinki region.

Transport & culture discounts

Student cards unlock discounted HSL transport passes and reduced museum/event entry.

HSL and cultural institutions

Official source

Finland student visa requirements

Difficulty: Easy

For EU/EEA students, the paperwork is usually lighter: longer stays normally mean registering the right of residence. Non-EU students should start early with Migri, proof of EUR 800/month and comprehensive health insurance, because the residence permit timeline can shape the whole move.

EU / EEA / Switzerland Over 90 days
Official source

EU citizen registration

No visa or residence permit. For stays over 90 days you register your right of residence with the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri), showing enrolment, sufficient funds and (for healthcare) an EHIC or insurance. EU/EEA students can use an EHIC for medically necessary care.

Fee: EUR 0 Registration; varies Duration of studies
Non-EU students Over 90 days
Official source

Student residence permit (Migri)

Non-EU students apply for a student residence permit via Migri/Enter Finland. Requires proof of funds of €800/month (€9,600 for a one-year stay) and comprehensive health insurance covering medical costs up to €120,000 for the whole stay (exchange students need the broader cover). Apply online and visit a mission to verify identity.

Several weeks; apply early Duration of studies (renewable)

Application Checklist

6 steps
  1. 1
    Confirm whether you are EU/EEA/Swiss (register with Migri) or non-EU (apply for a student residence permit before travel).
  2. 2
    Non-EU: prove €800/month — about €9,600 in your account for a one-year stay (your own account; shared accounts not accepted).
  3. 3
    Non-EU: take out health insurance covering medical costs up to €120,000 valid for the whole stay (exchange students need the wider cover).
  4. 4
    EU/EEA: bring a valid EHIC for medically necessary care.
  5. 5
    Apply via Enter Finland online and book the identity-verification appointment early — slots fill up.
  6. 6
    Keep proof of enrolment and accommodation ready for the application.

Healthcare for international students in Finland

Emergency: 112
Medical advice line: 116117
EU students: EHIC for care
Non-EU insurance: ≥ EUR 120,000 cover

How It Works

Finland has high-quality public healthcare, but access depends on your status. EU/EEA students use an EHIC for medically necessary care. Non-EU students must hold comprehensive private health insurance (cover up to €120,000) as a condition of the residence permit; some longer-term residents can access municipal services or Kela coverage. Universities provide a student health service (FSHS/YTHS) for those enrolled in degree programmes; exchange students should confirm their access and rely on their insurance.

Student Needs

EU/EEA: bring a valid EHIC. Non-EU: buy compliant insurance (≥€120,000 cover) before applying for the permit and keep it active. Register with your university's student health service if eligible, and know your nearest public health station (terveysasema) and the 116117 medical helpline.

Emergency vs Clinic

Call 112 for emergencies. For non-urgent care use a health station (terveysasema) or the 116117 advice line; private clinics (e.g. Mehiläinen, Terveystalo) are fast but cost more.

Public Coverage Notes

  • EU/EEA students rely on the EHIC for medically necessary care.

  • Non-EU students must hold comprehensive private insurance (≥€120,000) for the permit.

  • Degree students get the FSHS/YTHS student health service; exchange students should confirm eligibility.

  • Some longer-term residents can register for municipal/Kela coverage.

Private Coverage

  • Non-EU exchange students need broader cover than degree students — confirm Migri's current insurance rules.

  • Cover should include sickness and accident medical expenses up to €120,000 for the whole stay.

  • A Kela card, EHIC or UK GHIC can substitute for private insurance where applicable.

Best cities to study in Finland

Your city choice shapes the exchange: Helsinki has the widest international scene and course network, while Tampere and Turku feel more compact, student-heavy and often easier on rent. Pick by campus fit and housing reality, not only by the country name.

Helsinki

Helsinki

Finland's compact, design-led seaside capital: top universities, saunas and islands on the doorstep, the safest big city you'll study in — if…

Open City Guide
Tampere

Tampere

Finland's friendly second city and self-styled sauna capital: lakes on both sides, a big student scene, cheaper than Helsinki and easy to…

Open City Guide
Turku

Turku

Finland's oldest city: a riverside, bilingual student town that's the gateway to the archipelago — cheaper than Helsinki with one in five…

Open City Guide