
On 28 October Finnair unveiled plans to add Florence (FLR) to its network with twice-weekly direct flights to Helsinki starting 2 April 2026. The seasonal route will run on Thursdays and Sundays until 18 October 2026 using 100-seat Embraer 190 aircraft. Although the launch is 18 months away, corporate travel managers are already eyeing the connection as a time-saver for executives commuting between Finland’s tech clusters and Tuscany’s life-science and fashion sectors.
Finnair’s vice-president for network planning, Geoffrey Carrage, said Italy is now the carrier’s third-largest European market by destinations served. With the addition of Florence and Catania, Finnair will operate to eight Italian cities, offering seamless one-stop access to Asia and North America via its Helsinki hub. For Finnish exporters, the new route shortens reach to central Italy by nearly two hours compared with current one-stop itineraries via Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
Travel management companies predict strong premium demand from SME exporters and design firms that need face-to-face meetings in the Tuscan region. The flights depart Helsinki mid-morning and return in the late afternoon, enabling two-day round-trips without overnight stays at either end. Finnair’s Oneworld partners, including British Airways and American Airlines, will codeshare, providing loyalty benefits for corporate travellers.
Multinationals with Nordic and southern-European footprints should update travel policies and preferred-carrier agreements well in advance to lock in launch fares. Forward-bookings open this week, and Finnair is offering discounted introductory business-class fares that undercut traditional hub connections by 15–20 percent. Companies eyeing carbon budgets will welcome the Embraer 190’s lower fuel burn, which Finnair claims will reduce per-seat emissions on the sector by 25 percent compared with its Airbus A319.
Finnair’s expansion underlines Helsinki’s role as a growing northern gateway. While the route starts in 2026, the announcement triggers immediate procurement and budgeting decisions for corporate mobility teams planning next summer’s assignment rotations and project travel.
Finnair’s vice-president for network planning, Geoffrey Carrage, said Italy is now the carrier’s third-largest European market by destinations served. With the addition of Florence and Catania, Finnair will operate to eight Italian cities, offering seamless one-stop access to Asia and North America via its Helsinki hub. For Finnish exporters, the new route shortens reach to central Italy by nearly two hours compared with current one-stop itineraries via Frankfurt or Amsterdam.
Travel management companies predict strong premium demand from SME exporters and design firms that need face-to-face meetings in the Tuscan region. The flights depart Helsinki mid-morning and return in the late afternoon, enabling two-day round-trips without overnight stays at either end. Finnair’s Oneworld partners, including British Airways and American Airlines, will codeshare, providing loyalty benefits for corporate travellers.
Multinationals with Nordic and southern-European footprints should update travel policies and preferred-carrier agreements well in advance to lock in launch fares. Forward-bookings open this week, and Finnair is offering discounted introductory business-class fares that undercut traditional hub connections by 15–20 percent. Companies eyeing carbon budgets will welcome the Embraer 190’s lower fuel burn, which Finnair claims will reduce per-seat emissions on the sector by 25 percent compared with its Airbus A319.
Finnair’s expansion underlines Helsinki’s role as a growing northern gateway. While the route starts in 2026, the announcement triggers immediate procurement and budgeting decisions for corporate mobility teams planning next summer’s assignment rotations and project travel.









