Finnish national parks are found in most parts of the country. In addition to national parks some other protected areas are presented below, as well as national hiking areas and the wilderness areas of Finnish Lapland.
Finland has a diverse nature, with forests, fells, mires, bogs, lakes and islands featuring in many of the parks. In a few parks the interaction between Man and nature is a central theme. As Finland is sparsely populated, one can often be alone with nature in the less known parks and in remote areas even of popular parks.
open to the public without any entry or hiking fees. Many have services such as marked hiking trails, cottages, goahtis and saunas for rent. The right to access is usually somewhat restricted in the parks, but the offered free services should compensate that for most visitors. National parks and strict nature reserves are always on state owned land, but other protected areas may be on ground owned by other entities, even privately owned.
There are nature trails in most of the areas listed below. In nearly all but the smallest areas, there are locations for rest (with campfire sites and pit toilets) and in the bigger ones hiking trails and some lodging facilities (often lean-to shelters, in the north more commonly open wilderness huts, in popular areas also rental cabins).
Berry and mushroom picking is usually allowed, in regard to edible species. Taking anything else (such as insects, plants or stones) is usually forbidden in national parks and nature reserves. Dogs must be kept on leash with few exceptions; you may see people letting their dog free, but even a friendly dog can wreak havoc, especially among nesting birds and among reindeer.
Information is usually available in English, but some (such as most information boards along nature trails) may be in Finnish only, or Finnish and either Swedish or Sami.
Most of the really large parks are in the far north, in the Sami native region. Regulations of the parks try not to disturb the traditional livelihood of the Sami. Thus e.g. reindeer herding, hunting, fishing, taking wood for households needs and even driving are often allowed for the locals also where forbidden otherwise. The local population is sparse enough that this does not generally threaten the ecology of the areas.
National parks are the prime destinations for those wanting to see Finnish nature other than normal countryside. They are always on state owned land where the nature is deemed to be of general interest as a sight or for education. As the national parks are always also nature conservation areas there are restrictions to the right to access: collecting stones, plants (other than edible mushrooms and berries) or insects is usually forbidden, wild camping is allowed only in certain areas and entry to some locations may be restricted. Pets may not be kept loose. Services, such as trails, shelters and campfire places more than compensates for this for most visitors. Acquaint yourself to the rules of the park in question, especially if you are not just walking marked trails. The parks are maintained by Metsähallitus, the Finnish forestry administration.
The national hiking areas are specifically for hiking and for acquainting oneself to the nature of the region, offering quite large versatile and at least seemingly unspoiled areas. The nature may not be untouched but at least the forestry should be invisible for the trekker. There is good infrastructure, such as hiking trails, campfire places and lean-to and cooking shelters. Most hiking aseas have also accessible nature trails. The right to access also usually applies. The areas are maintained by Metsähallitus.
The wilderness areas were established in 1991 to preserve their wilderness character, the Sami culture and the Sami natural form of livelihood. There are twelve such areas, all of which are located in Lapland. The wilderness areas are not nature conservation areas and the right to access usually applies in full (there may be local restrictions) but on the other hand they are planned to stay wilderness so there's very little infrastructure as well. There are few services in these areas themselves but often tourist businesses nearby may arrange some service on request. The wilderness areas usually lack any marked trails and therefore are of interest especially for experienced hikers who are used to making their own paths. If there are some marked trails, they cover only part of the area. If there are skiing routes in winter, only the markings are maintained, not the tracks themselves. The areas are maintained by Metsähallitus.
These areas are all listed below.
The selection below of nature reserves and other areas is somewhat arbitrary. The ones listed are deemed to be of interest also to the casual visitor, some as a destination in themselves, some worth a visit if you happen to pass by.
Recreation areas are usually maintained by the municipality. They may have good infrastructure like the national hiking areas, often also facilities for outdoor sports and sometimes camping sites and the like. They are not listed here, but may be mentioned in the city articles.
The strict nature reserves are primarily for nature protection and research. Visiting a strict nature reserve usually require a written permission from Metsähallitus, but some have marked trails that can be used by the public. If there are trails, hiking is usually restricted to these either year round, when snow cover is absent, or when birds are nesting (mostly spring and summer, exact dates vary). Larger reserves may have other infrastructure, such as pit toilets and shelters for rest and overnight stays (often just outside the protected area itself). As the right to access is severely restricted, you should always check the rules of the individual area. Dogs have to be on a leash at all times and usually nothing may be moved or removed, not even edible berries, unless explicitly permitted. Most strict nature reserves are small, some suitable for a trip of a few hours, some for a weekend, but there are also bigger areas, an extreme being the Kevo strict nature reserve with a 64 km trail.
Entry to bird nesting areas is prohibited in the bird nesting season, but there may be towers for bird watching and trails and other service in the neighbourhood or in less sensitive parts of the area. The seal protection areas may be closed for public year round.
There are also many areas for protection of specific types of nature or specific features of the nature, such as mire, old-growth forest and esker protection areas. Camping and campfires are forbidden in old-growth forest and in certain lush wood types (lehto, lund). Otherwise these areas typically have no restrictions relevant for visitors, other than on any land, but you should probably be careful about not causing erosion or wildfire and not to harm plants and wildlife.
There are trails through most of the areas listed below. In some areas (especially nature reserves and restricted areas of national parks) only the marked trails may be used. In hiking, recreation and wilderness areas the right to access usually applies without restrictions.
There are usually nature trails and short easy trails at the visitor centre or some other trailhead of the more popular areas, such as most national parks, some even meant for use also with pram or wheelchair (assisted – grades are often still quite steep), and nature trails or hiking trails suitable for day trips in most areas. In the hiking areas, larger national parks and in many wilderness areas there are also trails for overnight hikes. There are quite a few trails also for several days' hiking and – especially in wilderness areas and backcountry of national parks – many visitors hike independent of any trails.
In addition to the hiking trails and nature trails inside national parks and similar, there are longer hiking trails and networks of hiking trails extending much outside some protected areas, sometimes leading through several. If you are going for a longer hike, anywhere but in the largest parks, it might be worthwhile to include some of the unprotected countryside landscape by using such trails. They usually keep to areas in natural condition where possible, but often also utilise forest roads and similar. Combining trails you can spend weeks on your hike in e.g. eastern Finland. The most famous trail is Karhunkierros of 82 km. The longest trail of the Walks in North Karelia network is 133 km. The UKK trail, though not complete or well documented, goes from Koli in Lieksa all the way to the Urho Kekkonen National Park in Lapland (more than 500 km by bird's flight). The Nordkalottleden, which crosses borders to Norway and Sweden, is 800 km long. Some of the trails are described by Metsähallitus. Trails of 40–60 km are common.
You are free to explore the landscape more or less everywhere, thanks to the so called Every man's right (jokamiehenoikeus, allemansrätten), the right to access. There is usually plenty of undeveloped land also near cities, and most cities have recreational areas. The destinations listed here, as outlined above, are worth some more travelling.
Most of the national parks, national hiking areas and wilderness areas are reachable by car and by public transportation. A taxi ride can be worth its price for freer choosing of endpoints of a hike, and needed for getting to some trailheads without an extra day of hiking or a car. There are seldom roads into the destination itself.
A few of the national parks cover archipelago areas, either in the lakes or by the coast. They are best explored by kayak or boat, but usually some parts are reachable by road or ferry. Kayaks, canoes and boats suitable for the destination can usually be rented. If you are not confident commanding your own vessel, at least taxi boat services are available, often you can get a wilderness guide to arrange a canoe trip for you.
There are visitor centres, Metsähallitus customer service points and nature information huts, where you can get advice, maps, some literature, fishing permits and an introduction to the area.
The visitor centres are usually outside the main entrance of national parks, but sometimes quite a distance from the destinations. At some national parks there are hotels, ski resorts or other big tourist businesses by the visitor centre.
The visitor centres are usually accessible by wheelchair, if assisted, as are a few nature trails.
For destinations other than national parks there are not necessarily any obvious visitor centres. Wilderness areas are usually handled by other visitor centres in the area, like some other destinations. For some areas not administered by Metsähallitus you may have to do some research to find the responsible entity and people able to give information on it.
Just visiting an area, hiking and camping does not involve any fees. Some campgrounds may have fees, but they are never the only or even main option when on a hike.
You might want to pay for transport, equipment, a guided tour, a rental hut, a guaranteed bed in a reservation hut or a fishing permit.
See also: Hiking in the Nordic countries
There are usually nature trails and hiking trails in the areas, especially near the visitor centres, as well as maintained skiing tracks in the winter. Except in nature reserves you are usually allowed to find your own paths. although keeping to trails where possible is recommended, to minimise impact. In the archipelago and by some rivers you might want to use a boat or kayak.
At most parks it is possible to get a guide through the businesses the park is cooperating with. This is especially useful if you are uncertain about your skills, but the guide can be useful also by knowing the nature, culture and sights and by being able to arrange meals, boat tours and similar.
The nature trails and other shorter (day trip) trails are usually well maintained, have duckboards at wet terrain and bridges at waterways, so that no special equipment is needed in the normal season (but leave high heels at home). In spring (when the snow is melting), in rainy summers and in the usually wet autumns rubber boots or similar may be needed. On longer (overnight) trails you are more likely to meet some rough or wet terrain and are supposed to have proper equipment and some hiking skills.
There is an ongoing project, where trails are being classified (dead link: January 2023). "Easy" trails are usually suitable also for families with small children without much preparation (but leave the pram, except on the routes for wheelchairs), "intermediate" trails can have some rough terrain and on "demanding" trails there may be fords and missing signs and hiking skills and proper equipment are expected. Trails for several days' hiking are usually demanding in this sense. In wilderness areas and in the backcountry of larger national parks you are expected to know what you are doing: there may be shelters and bridges where most needed, but not necessarily where you need them.
In winter – in Lapland most of the year – one should be prepared for snow and low temperatures. Getting disabled or getting lost without proper skills and equipment can easily be fatal, so be serious about safety, although accidents are rare.
The best way to get around in winter is by ski. There are well maintained skiing tracks in many national parks and around ski resorts (which may be situated by a national park). Some of the routes are wide enough for both traditional track skiing and freestyle "skate skiing". For longer journeys, where you cannot depend on weather forecasts, or any journeys in wilderness areas or backcountry, you should have skis suitable also for trackless terrain, and enough experience to cope with bad weather, broken equipment and the like.
In national parks and hiking areas there are often shorter snowshoe trails (and snowshoes for rent). Snowshoes are less efficient than skis, but one does not need any training to use them.
In the northern parts of the country there is a network of snowmobile routes and tracks. The "routes" are regarded part of the road network and therefore free to use, while to use the "tracks" you must pay a fee. Check regulations and safety advice if renting a snowmobile. The routes usually avoid sensitive areas, so a snowmobile is seldom the way to get around in a national park, but the route may lead to a hut by the border of the park, from where you can make an expedition by ski. There are also tracks through some wilderness areas. The open wilderness huts may not be used for overnight stay by those coming by motor vehicle, but you can use them as day huts and sleep in reservation huts or rental cabins.
In the archipelagos and bigger lakes yachts, boats and kayaks are often the best means to get around. The areas are also accessible by ferries, tour boats or taxi boats. In many other areas there are some watercourses suitable for canoes, kayaks and possibly riverboats, providing a different and often quite handy way to see part of the area. Rowing boats are available at many cottages, freely available for patrons or for rent. Renting a vessel is seldom a problem, but you might want to check in advance, to have transport arranged.
See also: Eurasian wildlife
There are nature trails near visitor centres of most national parks and at many of the other destinations. These are marked trails with information boards presenting the nature or other features of the area. These are seldom in English, but the images give a hint about what to look for – and for any species, also the scientific names are usually given. These trails are usually quite easy to walk, suitable also for families with small children and some even when using a wheelchair (assistance mostly needed, though). There may be a campfire site suitable for a picnic along the trail. Often you can book a guide to take the walk with you, which allows your learning much more.
Marked hiking trails are usually planned to allow experiencing the nature at its best, but you have to take your time. You are not supposed to hurry from one sight to the next. They are usually longer than the nature trails and thus allow getting deeper into the area. There are usually campfire sites and the like, to allow nice breaks on day trips. Longer trails usually have lean-to shelters, allowing overnight hikes without tent (but carrying a tent may be wise in many cases).
Hiking in the backcountry you should immerse in the nature and the sights are all around you. You should of course choose your route so that you pass by some good examples of the typical or special nature of the area, get nice views from higher terrain or at the borders of lakes and treeless mires, and have time to look also at the small wonders.
Traces of human activity are presented in many national parks.
Finland is sparsely populated, but that does not mean large areas would be untouched by man. The Finnish word for wilderness is "erämaa", which also means hunting grounds. People ventured far from their village to hunt and fish. Settling new areas was often encouraged by the crown and some landless people and adventurers built their home in what still is regarded wilderness. And, of course, only some of the national parks are wilderness. Some have been regularly used, but have had some feature hindering extensive logging or turning them to farmland. In Lapland in the far north, where there are truly large national parks and wilderness areas, most land is still used for reindeer husbandry, introduced in large scale by Northern Sami. The statutes of national parks often explicitly encourage traditional livelihood. The most prominent example is probably the Archipelago Sea National Park, where the park is trying to help keeping the archipelago inhabited.
There are often traces of the normal lives of people of the past: cultural landscapes kept open by grassing cattle, forest formed by slash-and-burn farming, sometimes remnants of farms, or even well preserved ones. Some trails have a long history, such as the Ruija trail, used to get to the Barents Sea coast before there were roads, or the post route in Muotkatunturit. In many parks by the east border there are structures remaining from the war.
Most visitor centres have exhibitions that can be seen for free, in a few cases for a fee. Some are quite large. Groups can book guiding for a fee, sometimes it is also possible to join a regular guided tour. There are often also audiovisual shows, at regular intervals or at request, and nature trails. The personnel should be happy to give advice on what sights would suite your timetable and interests.
The Metsähallitus customer service points and nature information huts are more modest but sometimes really worth a visit. Some information huts are unmanned.
Hiking in the Nordic countries has advice on many topics relevant for visiting national parks or otherwise spending time in the Finnish nature.
There are many businesses arranging tours in national parks or at other destinations, usually trying to pack many different experiences in a day or a few days. This may involve hiking to a hut where dinner is served, sitting down to enjoy the silence at a lake shore and ending the day with roasting salmon at open fire listening to local legends and lastly having a sauna bath and a dip in the river. Programme of course differs between locations and depending on the tour organizer and your choices. Usually you could do most of it by yourself, but getting it all fit a tight schedule without knowing the location is difficult.
With more time at hand or going independently you will probably come closer to the experiences many Finns seek in the forest and fells. Slow down, immerse in the natural landscape, enjoy the silence. You can also roast your salmon, but only if you were lucky with your lure, otherwise to have a good dinner you should have packed what you need to make hiking food something special, and the sauna is doubly refreshing after a few days of trekking.
Tours can be tailored to your wishes, but then it helps to be many enough to afford paying a guide – or to be able to do some of it by yourselves. You could for example take a tour with a river boat, having coffee and sandwiches with the guide telling the local legends, continue the trek by the route he recommended, and return to his cottage village to get the dinner and sauna.
Local family businesses near the destinations often offer meals, lodging, tours, equipment and other service. Near some destinations there are also proper restaurants. At most destinations you will not find any meals or drinks inside the area, other than what you cook yourself – or have a wilderness guide prepare for you (also without a guide you may be able to have a local business bring you meals).
Picking edible mushrooms and berries is often allowed also when collecting other things is strictly forbidden. Make sure you know the ones you are going to pick and – at least for mushroom – any local doppelgangers. Fishing is often allowed, with the usual restrictions or requiring a local fishing permit. Hunting is allowed in the wilderness areas, given needed licences and paying for a permit (usually for small game only).
Good looking water in springs, streams and even lakes is often potable untreated, but boiling it for a few minutes may be recommended. In some areas water has to be brought. There may be wells or other water sources provided. The authorities make tests to evaluate the general quality of natural water in many of the areas, but give no guaranties, except where a specific water source has been tested and recommended (typically tap water or a well).
There are designated camp fire places in many areas, allowing cooking at the camp fire. Making open fire in Finland always requires permission of the landowner (use your own judgement in emergencies). Such permission is given for the built campfire sites at official destinations, for state owned backcountry in the wilderness areas and for some backcountry areas in national parks; check rules for the specific destinations, use established fireplaces where available and make sure you have enough water at hand to extinguish it. There are stoves in the wilderness huts. A camping stove is still recommended for any serious hiking.
Making open fire is always forbidden when a wildfire warning is in effect, or the fire otherwise risks spreading. The warnings are announced in most weather forecasts.
The permission to make a fire does not in itself include a right to take firewood; at huts and campfire sites firewood used to be provided for free, but this seems to have changed (in 2021?) at least at some campfire sites, where you need to bring your own. The firewood is usually in a separate wood shed, sometimes a shed some distance from the fireplace, to avoid excess use, sometimes even under a tarp at a nearby forest road. Use sparingly. If not all the firewood is ready-made, use the provided axe (or your own) to make some more instead of what you use. Likewise, take firewood indoors instead of what you use in huts. Where making a fire is allowed in the backcountry, permission is usually also given for using dry twigs and branches on the ground. Don't take branches from trees, neither living nor dead.
There are outhouse dry toilets at most huts and shelters, and at some campfire sites. You may need to have your own toilet paper. Washing your hands is your own problem. Do not use vessels meant for drinking water, and do not go upstream from your water source.
There are lots of commercial lodging facilities near at least some popular parks – but if you are going to spend more than a day in the park, you should look also at other options.
In the protected areas, at the facilities, or camping wild, remember that you are a guest, as are your fellow hikers. Be respectful to them and the surrounding nature, always make them feel welcome to share the facilities. If camping with a tent by a campfire site, put up your camp a stone's throw or a half away. Avoid loud voices and other noise. Non-live music is not appreciated, singing may or may not be, depending on the site, company and circumstances. Leave no trace, pack out even when there are garbage bins: emptying away from proper roads is costly and means unnecessary traffic. There may be a sorting station outside the area, such as near a visitor centre or at a rest spot by the nearest highway.
At the hiking destinations in northern Finland there are open wilderness huts providing accommodation for the night for free, often a day's hike or more from any trailhead. They may be used by anybody, but staying overnight is disallowed on commercial tours or arriving by motor vehicle. Also big groups should sleep in reserved beds or in their tents instead. You need about the same equipment as when sleeping in tents, but will be able to get warm and dry as you have got the fire going in the wood stove, and sometimes even have the luxury of a gas stove for cooking or of a sauna bath (do not even think about electricity or running water; have some candles for light in autumn and winter). There are no mattresses, so carry your own, in addition to sleeping bags etc. Latecomers have an absolute right to the facilities; those who already had a chance to get warm have to arrange room, by leaving if necessary, be it in the middle of the night. The common thing to do is to arrange room for possible other guests before they show up, at latest before you go to sleep, or, if the hut is small and you want to overnight indoors, put up your tent anyway to make freeing up the hut easy.
In popular areas there are also reservation huts, where you get a guaranteed bed, usually with blanket, mattress and pillow, for about €15 (have your own linen and toilet paper). Usually you get (and leave) the key at the visitor centre or some nearby business. Bigger and commercial parties should use this option, as should people with snowmobiles.
The open and the reservable huts are meant for staying a night or two, not longer times. Typically one stays in the same hut for two nights only for the resting day of a long hike, to dry equipment, or waiting out foul weather. Make sure those arriving later feel welcome; you should avoid making it look like it were your place. Staying more than two nights is permitted in some huts off season, otherwise bad manners (and disallowed). If the trails are busy, you should probably have your resting day somewhere else, and leave an open wilderness hut for your tent as soon as you have got warm and dry.
Some of the less popular wilderness huts have been transformed into rental huts, which are booked for a party, often for somewhat longer periods, e.g. as a base for fishing trips in the area. They might have a rowing boat, sauna and similar.
Also day huts can be used for overnight stay, in cases where your primary plans get upset, e.g. by a snow storm. Using them overnight just for comfort as part of your plan is not allowed.
Beside the normal "huts", which are small log houses, there are more primitive turf huts and Lap pole tents, the former partly dug into the ground and with a roof made of turf, the latter timber constructions with or without a plank floor. In most you have to sleep on the floor (i.e. mostly the ground). There may be a fireplace instead of a stove.
Going to the south, open wilderness huts get sparse. As winters are less severe here, you can get away without them. Instead there are lean-to shelters, where you can spend the evening by a campfire and get shelter from rain in the night.
All the huts work mainly by self service. Check instructions (there is a folder in most huts) and leave the hut as you would like to find it. You may be supposed to chop firewood, and at least to carry some indoors from the wood shed, instead of what you used. Note your visit in the guest book, including where you came from and where you are going. There are guest books also at many shelters, often in what looks like a post box. Nowadays there is a web page for most Metsähallitus huts, specifying capacity and equipment, and warning for deficiencies, check if you have the chance.
The main option is of course a tent. You might want to carry one even if you plan to use huts, especially in peak season (get warm and dry in the hut, but sleep in the tent, if you suspect another party may arrive later) or hiking in severe conditions (where you might not reach the hut before dark). In spring and autumn (when the conditions are mild and there are no or few mosquitoes even in the night) a tarp tent or similar shelter can be used instead of a tent.
There are seldom proper camping areas in the parks. Instead you can put your tent near provided infrastructure, such as open wilderness huts and campfire places. In some busy parks only designated areas are to be used, but the facilities are similar. In the backcountry of larger parks you can usually put your tent anywhere but in a few restricted areas.
When visiting smaller areas without facilities, you can still use your tent: sleeping in the wood outside the area for a night or two is allowed by the right to access, provided due consideration.
For toilets, see Eat and drink above.
There are usually dry toilets by campfire sites, huts and other infrastructure. Toilet paper and washing your hands are usually up to you. Don't wash your hands at creeks and ponds, people downstream may use the water for drinking.
Bring what you need for starting a fire. There is often firewood provided for free. Use it sparingly. Chop your firewood or as much as you used, unless all of it wasn't chopped already.
Keep warm and afloat. In remote areas you will not be able to get any quick help in emergencies, so know your limits and prepare well for anything demanding. Carry a first aid pack. Remember that mobile phone coverage may be poor in some areas.
In the backcountry, use the guest books also to note where you are going next, especially if you make changes in your plans. They will help the rescue teams find you if you do not make it to your destination. You did tell somebody when to call the rescue service, and your planned route, didn't you?
In emergencies you do what you have to do, such as overstaying in a wilderness hut in dangerous weather or making a fire without permit – or even using somebody's private cottage after crashing through the ice of a lake. If there are other people in a wilderness hut, let those most in need of shelter or a bed get it (latecomers, children?), and if you cause damage or use resources you are not entitled to, be respectful and do your best to compensate afterwards.
Dangerous encounters with animals are rare. The European adder is the only poisonous snake (see Finland for advice). There are bears and wolves, but they avoid humans. As long as you do not manage to get between a bear and her cubs or let your dog find and provoke a bear, you should be pretty safe (they have not learnt to come after your food). Also elk, owls and some other wildlife can be dangerous unless you stay clear of their young.
The ticks can carry Lyme disease or TBE. Both are potentially nasty; you might want to take precautions. Northern Lapland is still tick-free.
Mosquitoes are a non-trivial nuisance in many of the areas in summer, especially in the north and by wetlands. Hundreds of stings may even make you ill. Make sure you have plenty of repellent at hand, a hat with a mosquito net (in the worst areas) and a mosquito proof tent. Black flies (breeding in streams, not still water, and thus more common in the north) are even worse, as they will find any small hole in your protection.
One more little beast, which can drive people crazy, is the deer fly (hirvikärpänen, älgfluga). This poor flat fly crawls around in your hair and clothing in the hopeless quest of finding the deer in you. After having cut off its wings it has no choice but to continue, even realising its mistake. They are harmless and seldom bite humans, but rather difficult to chase away or squeeze.