Finland

1. Official institutions

2. Key datasets

3. Demographics

3.1 Current population composition

Population composition (December 31, 2025 — total population 5,652,881)
88.3%
11.7%
  • Finnish background88.3%
  • Foreign background11.7%
Source: Statistics Finland, “Väkiluvun kasvu hidastui vuonna 2025”

3.2 Origin breakdown

Foreign-background population by region of background (end of 2020)
53%
30%
11%
  • Europe53%
  • Asia30%
  • Africa11%
  • Other / unspecified6%
Source: Statistics Finland, “Väestörakenne 2020 — Ulkomaalaistaustainen väestö”

3.3 Immigration waves (1990 – present)

📊A precise decade-by-decade time series of the foreign-background population (StatFin tables 11rt/159s) and exact 2015–2016 asylum application figures for Finland are planned for a future update.

3.4 Age structure by origin

📊An age pyramid broken down by origin (Finnish background / foreign background) was not found in a directly verifiable, recent published form during this research (only a 2013 figure was located, too dated to use); planned for a future update once a current StatFin table (e.g. 11rt) can be queried directly.

3.5 Long-term projection

📊A long-term Tilastokeskus population projection broken down by origin (Finnish background / foreign background share to 2040 or 2070) is planned for a future update; a national, non-origin-disaggregated projection exists (Tilastokeskus väestöennuste) but a disaggregated version was not located during this research.

4. Public finances — net cost

📊No finalized, quantified VATT (or other public institute) study on the net fiscal cost of immigration in Finland exists to date. VATT launched a study on this topic in February 2025 (results expected first half of 2027).

4.1 Pension system / dependency ratio

📊A demographic dependency ratio (pensioners and children relative to working-age population), broken down by origin, was not found via a primary Tilastokeskus source during this research and is planned for a future update.

5. Labor market

Employment rate, 20–64-year-olds, by background (2016 → 2023)
0%22%44%66%88%20162022202370.3%79%
  • Foreign background
  • Finnish background
Source: Statistics Finland, "Ulkomaalaistaustaisten työllisyyden kasvu pysähtyi" (2024)
Employment rate by background-country group, 20–64-year-olds (2023)
EU/EFTA (excl. Finland, Estonia) + North America+83%
Finnish background+79%
Other Africa+66%
Middle East / North Africa+53%
lowest group; rate had risen sharply from a lower starting point
Source: Statistics Finland, "Ulkomaalaistaustaisten työllisyyden kasvu pysähtyi" (2024)

6. Security / justice

📊An age/sex-adjusted crime-suspicion ratio by origin for a recent year (beyond 2017-2018) was not confirmed via a primary source during this research and is planned for a future update.

7. Education

Share of students at low PISA 2022 proficiency level, by generation, mathematics and reading
Native students — mathematics+22%
2nd-generation immigrant students — mathematics+43%
1st-generation immigrant students — mathematics+58%
2nd-generation immigrant students — reading+39%
1st-generation immigrant students — reading+61%
Source: Finnish Government (Valtioneuvosto), “Performance of immigrant students in PISA 2022”

8. Housing

📊Detailed city-level figures (Helsinki/Espoo/Vantaa) and a breakdown of the social housing (ARA) share by migration status are planned for a future update; not found via a directly accessible primary source during this research.

9. Social cohesion

📊A precise, verified figure on perceptions of integration drawn from the Kotoutumisen kokonaiskatsaus report could not be directly confirmed during this research (full PDF not extractable); planned for a future update.

10. Recent political context

11. Data limitations and biases

⚠️ Limits The category “ulkomaalaistaustainen” (foreign background) used by Tilastokeskus groups together people born abroad (1st generation) and people born in Finland to two foreign-born parents (2nd generation); public releases do not systematically distinguish legal entry status (work, asylum, family reunification) or length of residence. Finnish crime statistics publish raw suspect counts by origin without a population- or age/sex-adjusted ratio in the most recent freely accessible releases, a methodological gap comparable to one noted for Germany’s BKA data but addressed with less explicit transparency. Several relevant data points (the VATT fiscal study, the TEM social cohesion barometer detail, an origin-disaggregated age pyramid and population projection) were not available or verifiable during this research; these gaps are documented explicitly via ComingSoon markers rather than filled with unverified figures.