Termination
Finland
Grounds
Employers are not allowed to terminate an indefinite employment contract without a proper and weighty reason as referred to in the Employment Contracts Act, such as serious breach or neglect of obligations or economic, production-related or reorganizational reasons.
Employees subject to termination laws
All employees under the Employment Contracts Act are protected.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
The employment of a shop steward, an elected representative or an industrial safety delegate may be terminated due to redundancy only if the work of the representative in question ceases completely and the employer is unable either to arrange work that corresponds to the person’s professional skill or is otherwise suitable, or is unable to train the person for other work.
The employer can terminate the employment contract of an employee on maternity, special maternity, paternity, parental or child care leave due to redundancy only if its operations cease completely.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
No 3rd-party approval required. However, if a shop steward’s, elected representative’s or health and safety representative’s employment is terminated on personal grounds, the majority of employees who are eligible to vote for the person must approve the termination.
Mass layoff rules
A formal and heavily sanctioned consultation process must be followed in case of mass redundancies as set out in the Co-operation Act , if the employer regularly employs at least 20 employees. Furthermore, the Employment Contracts Act imposes some obligations to the employer (eg, obligations to offer work, training and rehire) regardless of the number of employees.
Notice
In general, the length of the notice period depends on the length of the employment. Unless otherwise agreed in the applicable CBA or employment contract, notice periods according to the Employment Contracts Act are as follows:
- 14 days if the employment has continued for up to 1 year
- 1 month if the employment has continued for more than 1 year but no more than 4 years
- 2 months if the employment relationship has continued for more than 4 years but no more than 8 years
- 4 months if the employment relationship has continued for more than 8 years but no more than 12 years
- 6 months if the employment relationship has continued for more than 12 years
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
No statutory right to pay in lieu of notice. Payment in lieu of notice requires an agreement with the employee. However, employees may be unilaterally placed on garden leave.
Severance
No statutory right to severance payment, although severance may be agreed upon in the employment contract. Termination agreements are also allowed.