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Oct 24, 2025

Finland Issues ‘Avoid All Travel’ Advisory for Iran as Security Situation Deteriorates

Finland Issues ‘Avoid All Travel’ Advisory for Iran as Security Situation Deteriorates
Finland’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs (MFA) escalated its travel advice for Iran to the highest level—“avoid all travel”—on 24 October 2025. The updated advisory cites a rapid decline in security following a new wave of attacks that began on 13 June and lasted almost two weeks. Finnish citizens in Iran are urged to reassess the necessity of their stay and to make active plans to leave the country while commercial flights and land borders remain sporadically open.

The MFA warns that Iranian authorities can close airports without notice, making timely departure uncertain. Travellers are advised to build contingency stocks of food, water and medicines for up to three weeks, monitor local media, and stay in close contact with family members. The advisory highlights an elevated risk of arbitrary detention—particularly for foreigners and dual nationals—and points to ongoing internet restrictions that complicate communication, banking and booking travel out of the country.

The travel warning also underscores ripple effects for Finnish businesses and NGO personnel. Companies with operations in energy, telecommunications and humanitarian aid must revisit risk assessments, review evacuation plans and double-check the validity of local insurance cover. Employers are strongly encouraged to record the locations of staff via company travel-tracking tools and Finland’s online travel-notification system.

Global-mobility managers should update corporate “do-not-travel” lists, provide duty-of-care briefings and confirm that any necessary critical-site visits are postponed or rerouted through third-country hubs such as Türkiye or the UAE. Finnish insurers have already signalled that new policies for Iran will carry higher premiums or be excluded altogether. Any employee who remains in Iran must be prepared for disrupted logistics, limited consular help—especially for dual nationals—and sudden changes to exit options.

For organisations with Iranian assignees bound for Finland, the advisory does not directly affect visa issuance, but biometric appointments at Tehran’s outsourcing centre could be suspended with little notice. Employers should therefore plan for processing at Finnish missions elsewhere in the region or consider remote-work solutions until the situation stabilises.
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