Back
Oct 26, 2025

First Weekend of EU Entry/Exit System Runs Smoothly at Helsinki Airport

First Weekend of EU Entry/Exit System Runs Smoothly at Helsinki Airport
Finland’s largest international gateway, Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, saw its first full weekend of operations under the EU’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) on 26 October. The biometric border-control platform—launched EU-wide on 12 October—requires all non-EU travellers to have four fingerprints and a live facial image captured the first time they cross an external Schengen border.

Border-control officers reported that passenger flows on Sunday morning were “largely normal”, with most verifications taking under 30 seconds. Finavia had installed 42 automated e-gates and deployed roving staff to help passengers enrol. According to the Australian government’s updated travel advisory—still current at 29 October—queues may lengthen at peak times, but the phased roll-out allows officials to suspend full biometric capture if congestion builds.

Airlines have urged corporate travel bookers to allow an extra 30 minutes for departures until the system beds in. Frequent-flyer programs are updating backend systems to ingest EES data so that passport stamps can be eliminated altogether once the database is fully operational in April 2026. Finnish business-travel association FBTA said the digital record will “finally give mobility managers real-time visibility on days-in-country, a major tax-compliance headache for Nordic multinationals.”

The Finnish Border Guard stressed that data are stored for three years (or five for overstayers) and can be shared with law-enforcement agencies across the bloc. Privacy watchdogs have called for a transparent audit of retention practices, but companies relocating staff to Finland welcomed the more predictable processing times compared with manual stamping.
×