
The Ministry of Education and Culture has circulated draft legislation that would make it significantly harder for non-EU degree students to obtain or renew a residence permit. The proposal raises the monthly subsistence requirement to €850 (currently €560) and indexes it to inflation. Applicants would have to show funding for a full 12-month period—about €10,200—via bank statements or scholarship letters before a permit is issued.
Family reunification is also set to tighten: dependants could join only after the first academic year, giving authorities time to verify the principal applicant’s financial situation. On renewal, students would need to pass a basic Finnish or Swedish exam (A1.2) within 12 months of arrival.
If navigating these new rules feels daunting, VisaHQ can simplify the process. The company’s Finland portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) offers up-to-date guidance on residence-permit requirements, document checklists, and submission timelines, helping students and their families avoid costly missteps while staying compliant with Finnish immigration policy.
Universities fear the language clause could dent enrolment from Asia and Africa, where Finnish courses are scarce. Scholarship foundations are already discussing larger stipends, while corporate sponsors of MBA and graduate-training schemes may need to front-load allowances to help recruits meet the higher cash-flow hurdle.
Stakeholders have six weeks to comment, and the ministry hopes to implement the measures for applications filed on or after 1 August 2026. The draft mirrors recent moves in the Netherlands and Germany, signalling a broader European trend to link student migration to self-sufficiency and integration outcomes.
Mobility managers should update pre-arrival budgeting tools, warn candidates of the upcoming hike and revisit family-support policies to avoid unpleasant surprises midway through study programmes.
Family reunification is also set to tighten: dependants could join only after the first academic year, giving authorities time to verify the principal applicant’s financial situation. On renewal, students would need to pass a basic Finnish or Swedish exam (A1.2) within 12 months of arrival.
If navigating these new rules feels daunting, VisaHQ can simplify the process. The company’s Finland portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) offers up-to-date guidance on residence-permit requirements, document checklists, and submission timelines, helping students and their families avoid costly missteps while staying compliant with Finnish immigration policy.
Universities fear the language clause could dent enrolment from Asia and Africa, where Finnish courses are scarce. Scholarship foundations are already discussing larger stipends, while corporate sponsors of MBA and graduate-training schemes may need to front-load allowances to help recruits meet the higher cash-flow hurdle.
Stakeholders have six weeks to comment, and the ministry hopes to implement the measures for applications filed on or after 1 August 2026. The draft mirrors recent moves in the Netherlands and Germany, signalling a broader European trend to link student migration to self-sufficiency and integration outcomes.
Mobility managers should update pre-arrival budgeting tools, warn candidates of the upcoming hike and revisit family-support policies to avoid unpleasant surprises midway through study programmes.









