Finland · Thursday, June 18, 2026
It is a normal working day in Finland today. Here is when the next closure lands and how many working days you have until then.
Counting down to Midsummer Eve
Counting down in your device's local time zone. Updates every second.
Today in Finland
Working day
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Next public holiday
1 day
Midsummer Eve
Working days until it
0
Mon–Fri, excluding other holidays
Midsummer Eve
Juhannusaatto
Fri, Jun 19
next up
Midsummer Day
Juhannuspäivä
Sat, Jun 20
All Saints' Day
Pyhäinpäivä
Sat, Oct 31
Independence Day
Itsenäisyyspäivä
Sun, Dec 6
Christmas Eve
Jouluaatto
Thu, Dec 24
Christmas Day
Joulupäivä
Fri, Dec 25
St. Stephen's Day
Tapaninpäivä
Sat, Dec 26
New Year's Day
Uudenvuodenpäivä
Fri, Jan 1
Epiphany
Loppiainen
Wed, Jan 6
Good Friday
Pitkäperjantai
Fri, Mar 26
Easter Sunday
Pääsiäispäivä
Sun, Mar 28
Easter Monday
Toinen pääsiäispäivä
Mon, Mar 29
Finland recognises nine state-recognised holidays and three church holidays for a total of twelve recognised days under the Laki kirkollisista juhlapäivistä ja yleisistä juhlapäivistä 1973. The list combines Lutheran dates (Epiphany, Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Easter Monday, Ascension, Whit Sunday, All Saints' Day on the Saturday between 31 October and 6 November, Christmas Day, Boxing Day) with civic dates (New Year's Day, May Day on 1 May, Midsummer Day on the Saturday between 20 and 26 June, Independence Day on 6 December commemorating the 1917 declaration of independence from Russia). Several holidays are recognised both as state and church days.
That structure is why a simple "is it a holiday today" answer for Finland is more nuanced than a single yes or no. A date can be a public holiday at the national level, a regional one observed only in certain states or provinces, or a banking holiday that closes financial settlement without closing every employer. The status shown above reflects the nationally recognised public holiday list for Finland; if you are in a specific region, check the full calendar for the local additions that do not appear on the national list.
Finnish Työaikalaki (Working Time Act) of 2019 sets a 40-hour standard week with collective agreements typically reducing this to 37.5. The standard private-sector week is Monday to Friday with banks operating Monday to Friday. The Code of Judicial Procedure (oikeudenkäymiskaari) rolls procedural deadlines falling on a Saturday, Sunday, public holiday, Midsummer's Eve, Christmas Eve or May Day to the next working day, an unusually broad list including pre-holiday eves. Settlement of euro transactions follows TARGET2; domestic Finnish bank-to-bank clearing observes the Bank of Finland calendar matching the statutory list.
Right now there are about 0 full working days between today and Midsummer Eve, counting Monday to Friday and skipping any other public holidays in between. If you are scheduling a deliverable, a delivery, or a meeting that depends on people being at their desks in Finland, that is the realistic window you have before the next closure.
For cross-border planning, overlay the Finland calendar with the calendars of the other countries your team works with. A week that looks completely open from your side can be a national holiday on theirs, and the clash only shows up when you compare the two side by side. The full holiday page links into a country-by-country comparison so you can spot the weeks where almost nobody is at their desk before you commit to a date.
Holiday dates are compiled from Nager.Date and the national sources listed above. Regional and substitute-day rules vary; for legal deadlines, confirm the observed date with the relevant official calendar for Finland.