
Officials from the Finnish and Kyrgyz foreign ministries met in Bishkek on 9 February for the latest round of political consultations. According to a statement released on 10 February, the two sides discussed closer ties under the ‘Central Asia – Northern Europe (C5+N5)’ framework, including easier business-visa issuance, scholarships and labour-migration channels for ICT specialists and nurses.
Kyrgyzstan’s delegation proposed a memorandum that would allow 90-day visa-free stays for holders of service passports and create a fast-track for Finnish investors in its renewable-energy sector. Finland, for its part, highlighted its new Talent Booster programme, which offers English-language secondary education from 2026 and streamlined residence permits for STEM graduates.
Any agreement would still need to fit within the EU visa code, but Helsinki can sign bilateral readmission clauses and mobility partnerships. Trade between the two countries is modest—€38 million in 2025—but Finnish cleantech firms are bidding for hydropower upgrades in Kyrgyzstan’s Naryn basin.
To help travellers and businesses keep pace with these evolving mobility options, VisaHQ provides an easy-to-use online portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) that offers real-time visa guidance, document pre-screening and application handling for trips to and from Finland, reducing the risk of errors or delays when new bilateral schemes come into force.
If negotiations progress, global-mobility managers may gain a lighter documentation burden for short-term assignments and joint-venture staff exchanges, providing a niche talent pool for Finnish engineering projects in Central Asia.
Kyrgyzstan’s delegation proposed a memorandum that would allow 90-day visa-free stays for holders of service passports and create a fast-track for Finnish investors in its renewable-energy sector. Finland, for its part, highlighted its new Talent Booster programme, which offers English-language secondary education from 2026 and streamlined residence permits for STEM graduates.
Any agreement would still need to fit within the EU visa code, but Helsinki can sign bilateral readmission clauses and mobility partnerships. Trade between the two countries is modest—€38 million in 2025—but Finnish cleantech firms are bidding for hydropower upgrades in Kyrgyzstan’s Naryn basin.
To help travellers and businesses keep pace with these evolving mobility options, VisaHQ provides an easy-to-use online portal (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) that offers real-time visa guidance, document pre-screening and application handling for trips to and from Finland, reducing the risk of errors or delays when new bilateral schemes come into force.
If negotiations progress, global-mobility managers may gain a lighter documentation burden for short-term assignments and joint-venture staff exchanges, providing a niche talent pool for Finnish engineering projects in Central Asia.











