
Emirates has formally added Finland to its next wave of European capacity growth, revealing on 15 February that a daily Dubai–Helsinki flight will start on 1 October 2026. The route will be flown with a three-class Airbus A350-900 featuring the carrier’s new 56-seat Premium Economy cabin. (travelandtourworld.com)
Although the launch is eight months away, Finnish corporates are already recalculating travel budgets. Today, Helsinki-based executives bound for Gulf, Africa or Australasia hubs must connect via Frankfurt, Doha or Istanbul. A nonstop to Dubai cuts journey times by up to four hours and creates one-stop access to 130 onward Emirates destinations.
For Finnish travellers and visiting executives alike, securing the right travel documents will be easier than booking the flight itself. VisaHQ’s online platform (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) lets passengers check visa requirements for the UAE and the 130 onward destinations served by Emirates, complete applications, and arrange courier pickup in minutes—a useful one-stop solution that complements the new one-stop flight via Dubai.
Tourism officials expect a double-digit rise in winter-sun traffic. Visit Finland’s head of aviation partnerships, Kaisa Aalto, said the service could add €60 million in visitor spending annually by drawing GCC and Asian leisure travellers who dislike double-connect itineraries.
For mobility managers, the bigger story is cargo. The A350 offers 20 tonnes of belly capacity and pharmaceutical-grade temperature control—a boon for Finland’s biotech exporters whose shipments now backtrack via European hubs.
Emirates will sell fully-lie-flat Business and new Premium Economy fares that undercut existing one-stop options. Companies with Nordic travel policies pegged to Premium Economy can therefore upgrade staff comfort without breaching cost ceilings.
Although the launch is eight months away, Finnish corporates are already recalculating travel budgets. Today, Helsinki-based executives bound for Gulf, Africa or Australasia hubs must connect via Frankfurt, Doha or Istanbul. A nonstop to Dubai cuts journey times by up to four hours and creates one-stop access to 130 onward Emirates destinations.
For Finnish travellers and visiting executives alike, securing the right travel documents will be easier than booking the flight itself. VisaHQ’s online platform (https://www.visahq.com/finland/) lets passengers check visa requirements for the UAE and the 130 onward destinations served by Emirates, complete applications, and arrange courier pickup in minutes—a useful one-stop solution that complements the new one-stop flight via Dubai.
Tourism officials expect a double-digit rise in winter-sun traffic. Visit Finland’s head of aviation partnerships, Kaisa Aalto, said the service could add €60 million in visitor spending annually by drawing GCC and Asian leisure travellers who dislike double-connect itineraries.
For mobility managers, the bigger story is cargo. The A350 offers 20 tonnes of belly capacity and pharmaceutical-grade temperature control—a boon for Finland’s biotech exporters whose shipments now backtrack via European hubs.
Emirates will sell fully-lie-flat Business and new Premium Economy fares that undercut existing one-stop options. Companies with Nordic travel policies pegged to Premium Economy can therefore upgrade staff comfort without breaching cost ceilings.










