
The Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs announced on 17 April that its embassy in Tel Aviv will be closed on Wednesday 22 April in observance of Israel’s Independence Day. Consular, visa and passport services will be unavailable, and emergency assistance will be routed through the MFA’s 24/7 service centre in Helsinki.
For travellers who need to keep their schedules on track despite the closure, VisaHQ can help by offering an online platform that streamlines Finnish visa and passport applications, provides real-time status updates, and arranges courier delivery of completed documents. Detailed guidance and support are available at https://www.visahq.com/finland/
Travellers requiring an entry visa to Finland are advised to plan around the closure or submit applications via VFS Global outsourcing centres in Jerusalem and Haifa. Although a routine public-holiday closure, the notice is important for global-mobility teams relocating staff between Israel and Finland, as delayed document processing could impact planned departure dates later in the month. In recent years Finland’s consular section in Tel Aviv has handled a rising volume of residence-permit biometrics as Israeli tech workers transfer to Helsinki and Tampere-area start-ups. Companies with urgent notarial or passport-renewal needs should book the next available appointments on 23 April when operations resume. The embassy reminds applicants that Schengen visa processing times currently average ten calendar days due to high spring demand.
For travellers who need to keep their schedules on track despite the closure, VisaHQ can help by offering an online platform that streamlines Finnish visa and passport applications, provides real-time status updates, and arranges courier delivery of completed documents. Detailed guidance and support are available at https://www.visahq.com/finland/
Travellers requiring an entry visa to Finland are advised to plan around the closure or submit applications via VFS Global outsourcing centres in Jerusalem and Haifa. Although a routine public-holiday closure, the notice is important for global-mobility teams relocating staff between Israel and Finland, as delayed document processing could impact planned departure dates later in the month. In recent years Finland’s consular section in Tel Aviv has handled a rising volume of residence-permit biometrics as Israeli tech workers transfer to Helsinki and Tampere-area start-ups. Companies with urgent notarial or passport-renewal needs should book the next available appointments on 23 April when operations resume. The embassy reminds applicants that Schengen visa processing times currently average ten calendar days due to high spring demand.