
China Southern Airlines has confirmed it will restart non-stop services between Beijing Daxing (PKX) and Helsinki-Vantaa (HEL) on 29 March 2026, returning a link that disappeared during the pandemic and subsequent airspace restrictions. The carrier will begin with three weekly Boeing 787-9 rotations (Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday) before ramping up to daily operations from 20 June. Flight CZ609 departs Beijing at 14:20 and lands in Helsinki at 18:35; the return sector leaves at 20:35, arriving in Beijing the following morning.(aviationa2z.com)
Finavia, the Finnish airport operator, hailed the decision as “a milestone for Nordic–Asia connectivity.” Helsinki lost significant Chinese capacity when Finnair pivoted south to avoid Russian airspace, and the route’s revival is expected to stimulate both inbound tourism and cargo flows. Finland’s tech, forestry and clean-energy exporters gain same-day access to northern China, while Chinese leisure travellers regain a convenient gateway to Lapland and the Baltics.
Travel-management companies predict robust premium-cabin demand: Beijing-based multinationals with Nordic subsidiaries can now cut journey times by up to four hours versus one-stop itineraries via Doha or Istanbul. The service also plugs into China Southern’s extensive domestic network at Daxing, giving Finnish SMEs one-stop reach to 70 mainland cities.
For passengers eager to take advantage of the revived link but wary of navigating Schengen entry rules, VisaHQ’s Finland portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) offers a streamlined solution. The online platform walks both individual travellers and corporate mobility teams through each step of the visa process, provides document verification, and coordinates courier delivery so passports spend minimal time off-hand. Whether the itinerary ends in Helsinki or continues to Lapland, the Baltics or elsewhere in Europe, VisaHQ can help identify the right visa category and ensure applications are lodged well within the required timelines.
Mobility teams should note that Schengen short-stay visa processing times in Beijing remain around 15 days; early application is advised for group travel surrounding the inaugural flight. Finavia says ground-handling slots are secured, but warns that late-winter weather can still affect de-icing operations at HEL. Airlines and corporates alike are watching booking curves closely—if demand materialises, China Southern could up-gauge to the higher-capacity A350 by winter 2026/27.
Finavia, the Finnish airport operator, hailed the decision as “a milestone for Nordic–Asia connectivity.” Helsinki lost significant Chinese capacity when Finnair pivoted south to avoid Russian airspace, and the route’s revival is expected to stimulate both inbound tourism and cargo flows. Finland’s tech, forestry and clean-energy exporters gain same-day access to northern China, while Chinese leisure travellers regain a convenient gateway to Lapland and the Baltics.
Travel-management companies predict robust premium-cabin demand: Beijing-based multinationals with Nordic subsidiaries can now cut journey times by up to four hours versus one-stop itineraries via Doha or Istanbul. The service also plugs into China Southern’s extensive domestic network at Daxing, giving Finnish SMEs one-stop reach to 70 mainland cities.
For passengers eager to take advantage of the revived link but wary of navigating Schengen entry rules, VisaHQ’s Finland portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) offers a streamlined solution. The online platform walks both individual travellers and corporate mobility teams through each step of the visa process, provides document verification, and coordinates courier delivery so passports spend minimal time off-hand. Whether the itinerary ends in Helsinki or continues to Lapland, the Baltics or elsewhere in Europe, VisaHQ can help identify the right visa category and ensure applications are lodged well within the required timelines.
Mobility teams should note that Schengen short-stay visa processing times in Beijing remain around 15 days; early application is advised for group travel surrounding the inaugural flight. Finavia says ground-handling slots are secured, but warns that late-winter weather can still affect de-icing operations at HEL. Airlines and corporates alike are watching booking curves closely—if demand materialises, China Southern could up-gauge to the higher-capacity A350 by winter 2026/27.







