Deportation, Entry Bans, and Refusal of Entry in Finland (2026)
Deportation, Entry Bans, and Refusal of Entry in Finland (2026) | Legally.fi Deportation, Entry Bans, and Refusal of Entry in Finland (2026) What these decisions mean, how they happen, and what you can still do at each stage The 2026 Reality: Removal is a Routine Part of Enforcement By 2026, removal decisions in Finland are […]
Old Decisions, New Interpretations: When a Negative Decision Deserves Review
When immigration law or its interpretation changes, earlier negative decisions may be reopened. Under Finnish administrative law, a rejected Migri case can be reconsidered if new facts or legal grounds emerge that could alter the outcome.
When a Relationship Ends, Residence May Not: Legal Continuity After Divorce
When a relationship ends, Finnish law allows residence to continue on new independent grounds if you act in time. Learn the legal framework, options, and required documentation for lawful continuity after divorce.
Marriage-Based Residence Permits Now Require Age 21
From December 2025, Finland requires both spouses to be at least 21 years old for marriage-based residence permits. The change aims to prevent forced marriages and strengthen informed consent, making documentation and timing more critical than before.
Legal Representation
Deportation cases in Finland now move fast and leave no room for mistakes. Each deadline, document, and translation matters. Learn why precision, structure, and professional representation are essential when the margin of error is zero.
Family Life and Administrative Law
Recent Finnish court decisions show that family rights and immigration law now intersect more tightly. The KHO 2025:50 precedent redefines who can appeal and how family interests must be documented within a deportation case.