Finland · 2026

Finland VAT calculator

Work out Finnish VAT (arvonlisävero, usually shortened to ALV) in either direction: put it on top of a net price or pull it out of a price that already includes it. Finland charges a 25.5% standard rate, one of the steepest in the EU, alongside reduced rates of 13.5% and 10% for named categories. Pick the band that matches your goods or services and enter the amount.

Net amount
Rate
VAT at 25.5%
25,50 €
Added to the net amount
Net
100,00 €
Gross
125,50 €
Net 80%VAT 20%

How it works

  1. Adding VAT means multiplying the net amount by the rate. At the 25.5% standard rate, a 100 euro net price gains 25.50 euros of VAT for a total of 125.50 euros.
  2. Pulling VAT out of a gross price works by dividing by 1 plus the rate as a decimal. A 125.50 euro receipt at 25.5% divides by 1.255, giving 100 euros net and 25.50 euros of tax.
  3. Finnish receipts list each ALV band separately, so a supermarket bill mixing groceries at 13.5% with household goods at 25.5% shows two tax lines. Run each line through the calculator with its own rate.

gross = net x (1 + r); VAT = gross - net; net = gross / (1 + r)

Take the rate as a decimal, so 25.5% becomes 0.255. Multiplying the net figure by 1.255 produces the gross, and the gap between the two is the tax. Reversing out of a gross figure uses division by the same factor rather than subtracting the percentage, a common slip that understates the net.

r
VAT rate as a decimal (0.255, 0.135, 0.10 or 0)
net
price before VAT
gross
price including VAT

Standard VAT rates around the Baltic and Nordic region

Hungary 27% Highest in the EU
Finland 25.5% Second highest in the EU
Sweden 25%
Denmark 25% Single rate, almost no reductions
Norway 25% Outside the EU
Estonia 24% Raised in July 2025
Germany 19%

Worked example

A restaurant bill of 227 euros, which sits in the 13.5% band for catering contains 27 euros of VAT on a 200 euro net charge. Going the other way, a 200 euro net booking attracts 27 euros of tax and totals 227 euros.

Key facts

Tips

Frequently asked questions

What does the 25.5% standard rate cover?+

Everything without a named reduced rate: electronics, clothing, fuel, alcohol, building work, hairdressing, repairs and most professional services. Finland lifted this rate from 24% to 25.5% on 1 September 2024.

What falls under the 13.5% reduced rate?+

Food and groceries, restaurant and catering services, books, medicine, passenger transport, hotel accommodation, sport and fitness services, admission to cultural and entertainment events, menstrual products and nappies. The band was 14% during 2025 and dropped to 13.5% on 1 January 2026.

What is still taxed at 10%?+

Only newspapers and magazines, in print and digital form. Until the end of 2024 this band also covered books, medicine, transport, accommodation, sport and event tickets, but those all moved up to the 14% band on 1 January 2025 and now sit at 13.5%.

Why did the reduced rate change twice in two years?+

Two separate reforms. From 1 January 2025 the government shifted most 10% categories into the 14% band to raise revenue, while cutting menstrual products and nappies down from the standard rate. From 1 January 2026 the whole 14% band was trimmed to 13.5% to ease prices on food and services.

When does a Finnish business have to register for VAT?+

Registration becomes compulsory once turnover in a calendar year passes 20,000 euros, a threshold raised from 15,000 euros at the start of 2025. Below that line registration stays voluntary, and many small operators opt in to reclaim input VAT.

Does Finland zero-rate anything?+

Yes. Exports to countries outside the EU, sales to VAT-registered buyers elsewhere in the EU and the sale or charter of certain vessels carry 0% VAT, and the seller can still deduct input tax. Healthcare, social services and most financial services are exempt instead, which blocks input deduction.

Things to watch

Sources

Last updated: 2026-01-01 · Applies to 2026

Estimate only

This is an estimate for general guidance, not financial, tax, legal or medical advice. Figures can change and individual circumstances vary. Always confirm with the official sources listed before making decisions.

Reviewed by Vikas Dulgunde.

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