Retour
Oct 28, 2025

Finnair to Launch Direct Florence–Helsinki Flights, Boosting Nordic–Italian Business Links

Finnair to Launch Direct Florence–Helsinki Flights, Boosting Nordic–Italian Business Links
Finnair announced on 28 October 2025 that it will open a twice-weekly seasonal service between Florence Peretola (FLR) and Helsinki-Vantaa (HEL) from 2 April to 18 October 2026. The route—operated with 100-seat Embraer E190 aircraft every Thursday and Sunday—marks the first non-stop connection between Tuscany and the Finnish capital, reinforcing Helsinki’s role as a Northern European hub.

Florence has a strong high-tech and life-sciences cluster, and Finnish exporters of machinery and medical devices expect the flight to shave at least four hours off current one-stop itineraries via Rome or Milan. The Italian Trade Agency’s Helsinki office notes that bilateral trade exceeded €2.3 billion in 2024 and has grown 11 % year-on-year; easier executive travel is likely to accelerate deals, particularly in fashion and design where Finnish brands seek partnerships with Tuscan leather manufacturers.

For leisure travellers and assignees’ families, the schedule is tailored for long weekends: a Thursday departure from Helsinki allows two full days in Florence before a Sunday evening return. Finnair will offer through-ticketing from Florence to Tokyo, Seoul and Singapore via HEL, leveraging its Asia-focused network—a useful perk for Italian SMEs looking eastward.

Travel-management companies should update corporate booking tools once inventory is loaded in global distribution systems (expected 1 November). Employers with posted workers in Finland should remind them that Florence is within the Schengen Area, so no additional visa is required, but under Italy’s local registration rules, stays over 90 days within 180 require a permesso di soggiorno. HR teams planning training rotations in Florence should factor in Tuscany’s peak-season accommodation costs, which rise by up to 40 % in June–August.

Finnair says the launch reflects “strong Nordic-Mediterranean demand” and hints that more southern Europe routes could follow in 2027 if aircraft deliveries stay on track. Competitors Norwegian and SAS currently offer no direct Italy–Finland services to secondary cities, giving Finnair a first-mover advantage.
×