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https://github.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland

The ultimate resource for transitioning to freelancing for software developers 👩‍💻🇫🇮
https://github.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland

finland freelancing software-developer

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The ultimate resource for transitioning to freelancing for software developers 👩‍💻🇫🇮

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README

        

# Freelancing in Finland

The ultimate resource for transitioning to freelancing for software developers 👩‍💻🇫🇮

* [Introduction](#introduction)
* [What problem will you face without this guide?](#what-problem-will-you-face-without-this-guide)
* [How can this guide solve the problem?](#how-can-this-guide-solve-the-problem)
* [Preparation - what to do **before** you establish your company](#preparation---what-to-do-before-you-establish-your-company)
* [Know how to handle your upcoming new immigration status](#know-how-to-handle-your-upcoming-new-immigration-status)
* [Network with freelance brokers and organizations](#network-with-freelance-brokers-and-organizations)
* [Wait until you find a project you like](#wait-until-you-find-a-project-you-like)
* [Apply for startup grant](#apply-for-startup-grant)
* [Quit your job](#quit-your-job)
* [Establish your company](#establish-your-company)
* [Foundation - what to do **after** you establish your company](#foundation---what-to-do-after-you-establish-your-company)
* [Apply for general housing allowance](#apply-for-general-housing-allowance)
* [Open a business bank account](#open-a-business-bank-account)
* [Find an accountant](#find-an-accountant)
* [Buy social security insurance YEL](#buy-social-security-insurance-yel)
* [Understand your new personal taxation situation](#understand-your-new-personal-taxation-situation)
* [Consider buying corporate liability insurance](#consider-buying-corporate-liability-insurance)
* [Consider joining a union](#consider-joining-a-union)
* [Consider joining an unemployment fund](#consider-joining-an-unemployment-fund)
* [Consider buying health insurance](#consider-buying-health-insurance)
* [Consider getting dental care plan](#consider-getting-dental-care-plan)
* [Consider buying voluntary pension insurance](#consider-buying-voluntary-pension-insurance)
* [Consider selling your personal work-related tools to your company](#consider-selling-your-personal-work-related-tools-to-your-company)
* [Operation - what to do to **run** your company](#operation---what-to-do-to-run-your-company)
* [Offer yourself benefits that you like](#offer-yourself-benefits-that-you-like)
* [Offer yourself daily-allowance when you travel for business](#offer-yourself-daily-allowance-when-you-travel-for-business)
* [Send your invoices carefully](#send-your-invoices-carefully)
* [Take out money from your company in the most tax optimal way](#take-out-money-from-your-company-in-the-most-tax-optimal-way)
* [Ensure that your obligations are fulfilled continuously](#ensure-that-your-obligations-are-fulfilled-continuously)
* [References](#references)
* [Contributors](#contributors)
* [Final words](#final-words)

---

[![eAccounting Finland Oy sponsorship banner][eAccounting Finland Oy sponsorship banner image]][eAccounting Finland Oy sponsorship banner link]

[eAccounting Finland Oy sponsorship banner image]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/sponsor.gif
[eAccounting Finland Oy sponsorship banner link]: https://www.eaccounting.fi/en/it-freelancing-finland/

**eAccounting Finland Oy** is the exclusive sponsor of Freelancing-in-Finland guide 🧡

For 4+ years, I've been using their accounting services for my own company.

So, I'm recommending what I use myself, with proper **skin in the game**. Here's why:

* I’m extremely sensitive to fulfilling my company’s obligations and they haven't missed a deadline in 4+ years.
* Every time I had a question in 4+ years, I got a reply to my email within 1-2 days. They’re extremely responsive and helpful.
* Their advice on tax planning has saved my company money. That's helpful when starting as a new entrepreneur.

If you decided to use them for your company because of this introduction:

* Please 🧡, tell them you decided to use their services because of this guide.
* That'd increase the chance of them continuing to sponsor this guide.
* Please 🧡, don't forget that, thank you! 💐

---

## Introduction

### What problem will you face without this guide?

**Losing an estimated 200 hours** figuring out how to do everything by your own. I know this because that's how much I had to spend myself.

In Finland, there are many extensive guides by authorities which have precise information about everything you need to know.
The problem is, however, that the **target audience of those guides are the general population** and out of every 100 pages, maybe 10 pages are relevant to your situation.

For myself, I had questions like:

* How to get freelance projects without any network of my own?
* What you need to do _before_ you establish your company to be eligible for government grants?
* When you setup your company, what are your recurring _obligations_?

Figuring those questions out was tiring and very time consuming.

### How can this guide solve the problem?

By **narrowing down the target audience** to the person reading this guide on Github, you wouldn't lose the time I lost.

You are the target audience of this guide if:

* You are already living in Finland for more than 3 months
* You are already working as a software developer
* You want to work as an independent freelance software developer
* You want to establish a limited liability company to offer your freelance services through it

This guide is under [MIT license](https://github.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/blob/main/LICENSE.md) which means **use it at your own risk**,
I'm not a lawyer and no statement here should be thought of as legal advice.

## Preparation - what to do **before** you establish your company

### Know how to handle your upcoming new immigration status

**Source of truth**: [Finnish Immigration Service](https://migri.fi/en/)

**What is it?** Once you start working as a `self-employed` person, you may need to apply for a different type of residence permit.

**If you're a Finnish citizen**, this is not applicable to you.

**If you're a EU citizen**, as the target audience of this guide is people who are already living in Finland for more than 3 months,
given that you have already [registered your right of residence](https://migri.fi/en/registration-of-right-of-residence),
you don't need to apply for another permit.

**If you're a non-EU citizen**, depending on your current permit, you may need to apply for another permit.

* If you have a permanent residence permit, you don't need to apply for another permit.
* If you have any other type of permit, please contact Migri to get specific advise for your case.

### Network with freelance brokers and organizations

**What is it?** To find a project that you like, there are companies that can help you with that.
Most require a meeting before they let you in their network. It's always a relaxed meeting, though, as you will be _partners_ who will help each other.

**How does it work?** They find you a project. They add around 5-20% to your hourly rate. You invoice them. They invoice the end client.

**What happens in the meeting?**

* They ask if you know their company and depending on that, they introduce you accordingly.
* They ask about your story.
* They ask if there's an industry that you particularly like/dislike to work in.
* They ask about your hourly rate.
* You can ask about their principles and priorities for the possible partnership with you.
* You can ask if they offer any other services than finding a project.
* You can ask about their *terms of payment*, i.e. how many days until they pay your sales invoice.
* You can ask if there are any restrictions in place if you take a project from them in the form of NDAs or non-competition.

**What about hourly rate?** In Helsinki, if we put aside particular situations in which the client has become dependent on a single point of failure developer,
or other extraordinary situations, in an average project with an average client with an average developer, I've heard companies charging their clients between
90-130€ per hour depending on the strength of their brand, the experience of the developers in the team, and the particular relationship with that client.
In extraordinary situations, I've heard of 150-200€ per hour.

However, the ranges above are for direct company-to-client sales. If you get connected to a client using an intermediary broker company, the ranges will be cut
by 5-20%, which would be their cut of the hourly rate. This means that, with one intermediary company, you're looking at 65-105€ per hour in non-extraordinary situations.

**List of brokers**:
* Fika ☕️ with [Witted](https://witted.com/for-talents/witted-partners) and get into their network.
* Fika ☕️ with [Thriv](https://www.thriv.dev/) and get into their Slack.
* Fika ☕️ with [Finitec](https://finitec.fi/) and get into their network.
* Fika ☕️ with [Siili One](https://one.siili.com) and get into their network.
* Fika ☕️ with [HiQ](https://hiq.fi/en/subcontracting/) and get into their network.
* Fika ☕️ with [7n](https://www.7n.com/become-a-7n-consultant/) and get into their network.
* Register a profile with [Verama](https://verama.com/) to be able to apply to their projects.
* Register a profile with [Digia Hub](https://digiahub.com) to be able to apply to their projects.
* Drop [Toughbyte](https://www.toughbyte.com/) a line.
* Look into [Harnham](https://www.harnham.com/jobs?options=1122,261&page=1) `contract` positions in `nordics`.
* Apply for an account at [Tingent](https://tingent.inkopio.se/vms/register?action=register) to see their remote gigs in Sweden.
* Register to [Vahvistus.fi](https://vahvistus.fi/), a network run by Sysart.

**List of aggregate sites**:
* Create a [job search alert](https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/) on LinkedIn with:
* Your `location`
* Your most important `skill` (Python, for example)
* Job type as `Contract`
* Create a profile on [Nordgigs](https://nordgigs.com/) which aggregates freelance projects across Nordic countries and email you on a match with your `skill` tags.
* Check [the Hub](https://thehub.io/jobs?positionTypes=5b8e46b3853f039706b6ea75&countryCode=FI) for freelance job types.

**List of organizations you can introduce yourself to**:
* [NewCo Helsinki](https://newcohelsinki.fi/en/startup-services/) is a governmental organization which is focused on helping companies in Helsinki:

> When problems come up, we are here to help you right away. Please contact us at [email protected] and stop by!

NewCo Helsinki advisors see many startups in Helsinki who would need software developers. By visiting them and introducing yourself, they might be able to connect you with potential Helsinki startups.

### Wait until you find a project you like
**What is it?** Finding a freelance project is like finding a job. A lot has to be in order for you to find the right project.

It took me ~6 months from the time I got into the networks to find my first project that I liked. I've heard of couple of weeks from my peers too. It really varies, patience is necessary.

**Steps**:
* Once you find the right project, check the terms and conditions of the client's contract and run it by a lawyer if you have that available to you either through a union or elsewhere.
* If your client doesn't have a contract and asks you instead for one, you can take a look at a [simple contract template](https://github.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/blob/main/templates/resource_hiring_agreement.docx)
for the target audience of this guide and **change its content based on your circumstances**.
* If you're planning to [apply for startup grant](#apply-for-startup-grant), before you sign any contract, ask them to give you two weeks so that you can apply for startup grant and receive a decision.
Even though the official estimation is 2 weeks, decision comes much faster in reality (2-4 working days). Once you receive the decision, you can proceed.
* As you don't have a company yet, and you need to accept the contract, you can sign it **as a temporary solution** under your own name.
* The contract will be between a `natural person` (you) and a `legal entity` (the client's company or the freelance broker's company).
* You will sign a new contract once you establish your company. It will be between a `legal entity` (your company) and another `legal entity` (the client's company or the freelance broker's company).
* Your company would be selling freelance services by sending its representative (you).

### Apply for startup grant

**Source of truth**: [TE-services startup grant page](https://www.te-palvelut.fi/te/en/employers/for_entrepreneurs/services_new_entrepreneurs/startup_grant/index.html)

**What is it?** Startup grant is a program to support you to become an entrepreneur.
You will receive the monthly payment for a total of 6 months (if you apply once) or a total of 12 months (if you apply for extension as well).

**How much?** ~705€ per month, as personal income. If your income tax is 10%, for example, you will get ~635€.
You must deliver a [revised tax card for social benefits](https://www.vero.fi/en/individuals/tax-cards-and-tax-returns/tax_card/benefits/how-to-order-a-tax-card-only-for-benefits-in-mytax/) to TE-services for them to use
your real income tax percentage, otherwise they withhold 25% income tax by default and you'll get ~530€.

**Steps** for first application:

* You will be disqualified from startup grant if you have established your company *and* started full-time entrepreneurship already.
* What TE-services considers **establishment of company** is different from what we discuss in [establish your company](#establish-your-company) section.
* TE-services considers your company as established if your company has joined any of the registeries maintained by Tax Administration (Prepayment, VAT, Employer).
* This means that if you only join Trade register to get the unique Business ID when establishing your company, TE-services won't consider your company as established.
* You can do this if you're in a hurry to setup things that depend on Business ID like opening a business bank account, applying for insurance offers, etc and you can't wait for startup grant decision to come first.

* You need a business plan and certain financial calculations as an attachment to your application.
You can use [My Enterprise Finland](https://oma.yrityssuomi.fi/#) and complete the steps for `Business plan` to
draw up your business plan which includes all necessary financial calculations as well.

* Once you have your business plan ready, as an **optional** step, you can send an email with your business plan attached to the
[Enterprise Agency in your city](https://uusyrityskeskus.fi/apua-yrittajyyteen/alueelliset-keskukset/) and ask them for an appointment with a _Business Advisor_.
In Helsinki, [_NewCo Helsinki_](https://newcohelsinki.fi/en/) is the Enterprise Agency to go to. Although it is not mandatory to go to this appointment for getting startup grant,
the _Business Advisor_ has seen hundreds of business plans and can guide you to correct your mistakes in the business plan and therefore increase your chances for a successful application.

* You need an updated Resumé as an attachment to your application.

* You need a [tax debt certificate](https://www.vero.fi/en/About-us/contact-us/efil/information-on-mytax/how-to-request-a-tax-debt-certificate-in-mytax/) as an attachment to your application.

* In your business plan, you have specified how much **own funding** you have available to you.
You need to provide a proof of your claimed own funding as an attachment to your application.
This proof doesn't have to be official. I personally printed a pdf from my netbank account overview and that was enough for a successful application.

* The amount of **own funding** available to you, no matter how high, does not influence the decision of TE-services negatively.
In addition, when applying for startup grant payments later once startup grant is granted, the salary you've taken from your own company does not affect the
payment application negatively either.

* Apply for startup grant [electronically](https://asiointi.mol.fi/omaasiointi/)
and you will get an electronic decision within 2 weeks (official estimation). Official decision letter should arrive by post soon after the decision is served (~1 week).

**Steps** for application extension:

* Apply **five months** after the starting date of previous grant but also **before it expires**.

* You need a short explanation of how the business has started.

* You need a short explanation of why the extension is being applied for.

* You need a summary report of your business actions during the startup grant period and plans for the near future.

* You need an *income statement*, self-made or verified by an accountant, of a 5-month-period, as an attachment to your application.

* You need a *balance sheet*, self-made or verified by an accountant, of a 5-month-period, as an attachment to your application.

* To determine whether to award the grant extension:

* TE-services will consider whether the business has started more or less according to the original business plan.
* TE-services will consider whether the already acquired income is enough to support the entrepreneur.

* Apply for the grant extension [electronically](https://asiointi.mol.fi/omaasiointi/)
and you will get an electronic decision within 2-4 weeks. Official decision letter should arrive by post soon after the decision is served (~1 week).

### Quit your job

**What is it?** The positive decision to your startup grant is on the condition that you will quit your job and become a full-time entrepreneur.

**Steps**:
* **Terminology**: `employee` and `self-employed` are two different terms and they cannot be used interchangeably.
* As an `employee`, deliver your binding resignation in written form to your employer.
* After that, and from the first day of your startup grant decision, you are `self-employed`.

### Establish your company

**Source of truth**: [Business Information System](https://www.ytj.fi/en/index.html)

**What is it?** You need to establish a *limited liability company* (Oy) to be able to offer your freelance services and **protect your personal assets** from a legal perspective.

This *limited liability* is such an extremely important concept that I encourage you to watch
[Khan Academy video on corporations and limited liability](https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/core-finance/taxes-topic/corporate-taxation/v/corporations-and-limited-liability)
to become fully aware of its implications.

**TL;DR of video**: Working under your own name as a private trader (toiminimi) gives you **unlimited** liability and all your personal assets like your home, car, and
personal savings are up for grabs if worst happens.
In case of a limited liability company, the liability is *limited*, and in the absence of intentional fraud, the company can declare bankruptcy if worst
happens, and your personal assets are immune from the liability of the company.

**How much?** ~240€ for online registration. It's a business cost. Later,
when your company is registered and accounting and bank account are setup,
you can claim this ~240€ back from the company as you paid this money from your *personal* bank account even though it was a *business* cost.

**What is the role of Business Information System?**

* What Finnish Digital Agency (Digi- ja väestötietovirasto) is to you, Business Information System (ytj) is to your company.
* This means that in the same manner that you came to life, in the eye of Finnish authorities, by getting a personal ID (henkilötunnus) from Finnish Digital Agency,
your company will come to life by getting a company ID (Y-tunnus) from Business Information System.
* Similarly, in the same way that you update your personal information like your address after you move apartments in Finnish Digital Agency,
you'll update your company's information in Business Information System if there are changes.
* Business Information System is also the **single place** in which you can communicate with and join/exit various registries by Tax Administration (Vero) and Finnish Patent and Registration Office (PRH).
* Tax Administration maintains:
* Prepayment register (Ennakkoperintärekisteri), which allows your company to take care of its own taxes.
* VAT register (Arvonlisäverovelvollisuus), which allows your company to report VAT related matters.
* Employer register (Työnantajarekisteri), which allows your company to report `employee`-related matters.
* Finnish Patent and Registration Office maintains:
* Trade register (Kaupparekisteri), which stores your company's information.

**Steps**:

* If you're still on your notice period from the time [you quit your job](#quit-your-job):
* Get a written permission from your `employer` that it's OK for you to establish your company.
* This is because starting a company in the same line of business as your `employer` might be in violation of your non-competition agreement.

* Choose a company name.
* Search for your chosen name in [Name Checking Service for Companies](https://nimipalvelu.prh.fi/nipa/en)
* If no exact match or very-similar names were found for your chosen name, then probably it will be accepted in the application process.
* You will be given 3 fields for company name, so prepare 2 backup names as well in case your primary name cannot be registered.

* Choose your main line of business.
* Source of truth: [Statistics Finland](https://stat.fi/en/luokitukset/toimiala/toimiala_1_20080101/)
* Required by Tax Administration.
* For freelancing, you can choose any from [\[Information and communication > Computer programming, consultancy and related activities\]](https://stat.fi/en/luokitukset/toimiala/toimiala_1_20080101/?code=62&name=Computer%20programming,%20consultancy%20and%20related%20activities)
that you feel is most relevant.
* `62010 Computer programming activities` is common as several freelancing agencies like Futurice and Reaktor have chosen that, so you can go with that as well.

* Choose your company's fiscal year ending.
* Fiscal year is the 12-month period in which your company operates.
* *First* fiscal year is always an exception and it can be less than 12 months or up to a maximum of 18 months.
* Fiscal year can be the same as `calendar` year and finish at the end of December.
* Fiscal year can also end at other times, like end of September, March, etc.
* A lot of companies have their fiscal year the same as `calendar` year and this makes accounting offices really busy during the turn of the year.
To avoid this busy season, you can choose a fiscal year that ends well before (September) or after (April) the turn of the year.

* Choose your company's number of shares.
* I recommend 10,000 shares for the target audience of this guide based on my own accountant's advice.

* Get another person's consent to be your *Deputy Member of the Board of Directors*.
* According to [Limited Liability Companies Act](https://www.finlex.fi/en/laki/kaannokset/2006/en20060624.pdf) in Chapter 6, Section 8.1:
> There shall be between one and five regular Members of the Board of Directors, unless it is otherwise provided in the Articles of Association. If there are fewer than three Members, there shall be at least one Deputy Member of the Board of Directors.

* This means that, for your company to be legally compliant, it must have a *Deputy Member of the Board of Directors* when you are going to be the *only* regular member of Board of Directors as the CEO.
* *Deputy Member of the Board of Directors* would be held liable only [for decisions they make in board meetings](https://www.yrittajat.fi/uutiset/610877-saitko-kutsun-osakeyhtion-hallituksen-varajaseneksi-sinullakin-saattaa-olla#528cbe2f). In practice, unless you die or you are permanently unable to act as the CEO, *Deputy Member of the Board of Directors* won't have to make any decision so you can communicate this fact to them to help them with their decision making.
* Once you get the person's consent, get his/her personal ID (henkilötunnus) as you'll need it for establishing the company.

* Decide the registries you'd like your company to be part of:
* Trade register ✅, as the company cannot come into life without it.
* Prepayment register ✅, as without it, other companies have to withhold taxes on the amounts they pay you.
* VAT register ✅, as you can start deducting VAT from things or services you purchase for your *main line of business*. For example, if you buy a laptop for 2,000€, you'll get ~500€ back (VAT 24%).
* Employer register ❌, because you don't need it if you're not employing anyone else. The fact that you're employing yourself is irrelevant as you're considered `self-employed`, not an `employee`.
You can join later, once and if you start employing others.

* Establish your company online by filing a *startup notification* at [Business Information System](https://asiointi.ytj.fi/ytjap)
* I recommend doing this step together with an accountant. It's faster, easier and ensures that the choices you have made from the steps above makes sense in your very particular case and your potential ambitions for the near-future of your company.
* Alternatively, you can give power of attorney in Business Information System to an accountant so that they can establish the company on your behalf.
* Do not add your email, phone number, or any other information in the public information section of the *startup notification* application.
This would prevent scammers calling you and selling you a "service", in which you might say "Ok, yes, that's fine" to get rid of them, and they'd start sending you invoices which you have to jump over dozens of
obstacles to remove yourself from the so called "service" they offered you. They can do that because in Finland, verbal agreement is as binding as writing, which the scammers take advantage of inappropriately.

* Once your company is established, you must file a *notification* of beneficial owners in [Business Information System](https://asiointi.ytj.fi/ytjap)
* The only [*beneficial owner*](https://www.prh.fi/en/kaupparekisteri/beneficial_owner_details.html) will be you (natural person) since you're the only owner of the company.
* You can do this by clicking on "Tosiasialliset edunsaajat (omistajat)" in Business Information System once you login and following the instructions.

* Remember that the *legal purpose* of your company is to generate profits.
* This is based on [Limited Liability Companies Act](https://www.finlex.fi/en/laki/kaannokset/2006/en20060624.pdf):
> Section 5 - Purpose

> **The purpose of a company is to generate profits for the shareholders**, unless otherwise provided in the Articles of Association.
* That is why, for example, you cannot give a loan with 0% interest from your company to other `natural persons` or `legal entities`, as that wouldn't generate profits for your company.

## Foundation - what to do **after** you establish your company

### Apply for general housing allowance

**Source of truth**: [Kela general housing allowance page](https://www.kela.fi/web/en/general-housing-allowance)

**What is it?** General housing allowance supports you with housing costs.
Based on [Suomi.fi](https://www.suomi.fi/company/starting-a-business/entrepreneurs-everyday-life-and-livelyhood/guide/securing-entrepreneurs-livelihood/housing-allowance-and-basic-social-assistance-for-entrepreneurs):

> As an entrepreneur, you are entitled to the general housing allowance under the same conditions as anyone else.

**How much?** Based on the simplified assumption that your only source of **personal** income is startup grant and you don't live with another person in the same household,
general housing allowance is ~410€ per month, tax free, for a studio in Helsinki. You can use **source of truth** calculator for exact figures.

**What counts as a `self-employed` person's income from Kela's perspective**?

* Your company:
* is a `legal entity` with a business ID (Y-tunnus)
* can **act** like a natural person from the perspective of law
* pays taxes on its **profits** in the form of _corporate taxation_, 20%, once a year
* You:
* are a `natural person` with a personal ID (Henkilötunnus)
* are a natural person from the perspective of law
* pay taxes on your **income** in the form of _personal taxation_, at progressive rates, whenever you receive income
* For the purpose of answering _what counts as a `self-employed` person's income from Kela's perspective_, your company's income is irrelevant.
* Your income is relevant. If you have [YEL](#buy-social-security-insurance-yel):
* Your `YEL income` is counted as your income, nothing else.
* You do not need to apply for general housing allowance review unless you change your `YEL income`.
* If you don't have YEL:
* All your income (salary, benefits, dividends, etc) counts as your income.
* You need to apply for general housing allowance review if your income increases by 400€ per month.

**Steps**:

* Apply for general housing allowance [electronically](https://asiointi.kela.fi/go_app/).
* Mention in application that you have received a positive decision to your startup grant application and you have quit your job.
* Attach your startup grant official decision letter which has come via post to the application.
* Attach your employment certificate which mentions the final date of your employment to the application.
* If you don't have the attachments ready, you can still attach them to the application for ~10 days after sending the application.
* You will receive a decision in ~3 weeks (official estimation).

### Open a business bank account

**What is it?** A business account for your company's business activities.

**How much?** ~40€ per month. Base prices might start from ~10€ but in *business* accounts, unlike *personal* accounts,
almost anything that happens in the eco-system of your business will cost you something and will drive the total cost to around ~40€.
Revolut for Business and some other foreign fintech companies also provide free alternatives, which may be suitable if you only have
a few transactions a month.

**Comparison of services**:

| | English service | Possibility to open account online | Phone customer service |
| :----- | --------------- | ---------------------------------- | ---------------------- |
| Nordea | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| OP | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Holvi | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Danske | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Revolut for Business | ✅ | ✅ | No (1) |

1. Revolut for Business provides customer service through an online chat instead. There is a phone number for closing a lost or stolen card.

**Steps**:

* Open a business account in your desired bank.
* Once your business account is setup, you can give a 1,000€ *loan* from your *personal* account to your company so that you can immediately start paying business costs from your business account.
* Later when your client pays your first sales invoice, you can return the 1,000€ *loan* to your personal bank account.

### Find an accountant

**What is it?** Having an accountant isn't mandatory by law.
Having an accountant doesn't mean you can hide behind them in tax inspections by the Tax Administration.
As the CEO of your company, the ultimate and absolute responsibility for having everything related to your company correct is **on you and only you**.
That is why it's important to have a reliable accountant who can correct your mistakes and fulfill your company's obligations on your behalf.
Because when the law comes to you in the form of random tax inspections, you can't go back in time and fix your mistakes.

In addition to that, your accountant can help you do legal tax planning.
Tax planning means using legal mechanisms to reduce the total tax liability of your company.
Your accountant has the best understanding of your company and is in the best position to advise you on taxation matters.

**How much?** Varies. Accountants will either charge you hourly or a fixed price, which is based on their estimation of how much time they'll spend per month on your business.
A freelancing company for the target audience of this guide with no other activities will take at least an hour or two of their time,
and if we take a 75€/hour rate, you should expect to pay at least 75-150€ per month.

**List of accountants who offer English services as well**:
* [eAccounting Finland](https://www.eaccounting.fi/en/) -> They all speak English
* [Tili Sydwest](https://www.tilisydwest.fi/en/)
* [KT Kirjanpito](https://www.ktkirjanpito.fi) Outi & Viivu speak English and specialize in micro businesses
* [Valjas](https://www.valjas.fi/en/)
* [Lemontree](https://lemontree.fi/) offers English services even though their website is only in Finnish

**Steps**:

* Investigate to find a reliable accountant for your company. Your accountant assumes responsibility for obligations which are ultimately **yours**, so this is an important step.
* Contact your accountant in mind:
* Explain that your business is about IT freelancing
* Tell if you have a client already, or expecting one soon
* Mention your estimated amount of monthly business activity and purchase receipts that they have to process.
* If you don't know, for the target audience of this guide, ~15 receipts per month is a rough estimation.
* Mention your bank account provider
* Accountant will take it from there.

### Buy social security insurance YEL

**Source of truth**: [ETK Finnish Center for Pensions](https://www.etk.fi/en/finnish-pension-system/pension-security/pension-coverage-and-insurance/self-employed/)

**What is it?** YEL _(sv: FöPL)_ is a mandatory social security insurance for `self-employed` persons.
**YEL official name is very misleading** (*Self-Employed Person’s Pensions Act*), because **YEL determines your entire social security benefits**, not just your pension.

For example, if you get sick, your *daily sickness allowance* is calculated based on your YEL. The more you pay for YEL, the more *daily sickness allowance* you get.

Similarly, when you want to [buy a health insurance](https://github.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland#consider-buying-health-insurance), no insurance company
will sell you one without YEL. Because *YEL is the foundation* and a private health insurance builds on top of YEL.

**What is `YEL income` and `YEL contribution`?**

* `YEL income`:
* Has absolutely nothing to do with your real world income (salary, benefits, dividends, etc).
* Is how much ***coverage*** you will have in social security benefits.
* Has a **minimum** of ~8,600€ and a **maximum** of ~194,500€ per year.
* Before 2023, you had complete freedom to choose the minimum.
* From 2023, you must [estimate the correct level of YEL income](https://www.varma.fi/en/self-employed/yel-insurance/determination-of-yel-income/) and select it accordingly.
* `YEL contribution`:
* Is how much you **pay** for your ***coverage***.
* Is ~19% of your `YEL income`, which means you pay ~1,600€ up to ~36,200€ per year as a business cost.

Minimum YEL | Maximum YEL
:-------------------------:|:-------------------------:
[![minimum YEL][minimum YEL image]][minimum YEL link] | [![maximum YEL][maximum YEL image]][maximum YEL link]

[minimum YEL image]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/minimum_YEL.png
[minimum YEL link]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/minimum_YEL.png

[maximum YEL image]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/maximum_YEL.png
[maximum YEL link]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/maximum_YEL.png

\* Taken from [Varma's YEL calculator](https://www.varma.fi/en/self-employed/yel-insurance/yel-calculator/)

**Steps**:

* You have 6 months from starting self-employment to buy YEL.
* If, however, your company has not had income equal to minimum `YEL income`, i.e. ~8,600€, you do not need to buy YEL yet.
* When your company gets income above the level of minimum `YEL income`, you'll have to buy YEL within the 6 months mentioned above.
* Even though you have 6 months to buy YEL, if e.g. you had to buy YEL from the 3rd month because that's when your company had more than ~8,600€ of income,
even if you buy YEL in the 5th month, you'll have to select the starting date of YEL to be from the 3rd month as that's the date when you were obligated to buy YEL anyway.

* Buy YEL from an YEL insurance provider:
* [elo](https://www.elo.fi/?sc_lang=en)
* [varma](https://www.varma.fi/en/)
* [ilmarinen](https://www.ilmarinen.fi/en/)
* [veritas](https://www.veritas.fi/en/)

### Understand your new personal taxation situation

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/)

**What is it?** As a `self-employed` person, your payslip is going to be different than what you used to have as
an `employee` and practically speaking, you only pay `income tax` and nothing else.

**How is the payslip for an `employee`?** Imagine a basic example, in which an `employee` receives 1,000€ salary, and her/his tax card says their tax is 35%.

From the `employee`'s perspective:

1. The employer withholds 35% of 1,000€ as `income tax` => 350€
2. The employer withholds 7.15% of 1,000€ as `TyEL pension insurance contribution` => 71.5€
3. The employer withholds 1.50% of 1,000€ as `unemployment insurance contribution` => 15.0€
4. The employer pays withheld amount of 436.5€ to Tax Administration and other insurance providers.
5. The *employee* receives the rest which is 563.5€.

From the `employer`'s perspective:

1. The employer has to pay 18.15% of 1,000€ as `Employee's pension insurance contribution` => 181.5€
2. The employer has to pay 0.50% of 1,000€ as `Employer’s unemployment insurance contribution` => 5€
3. The employer has to pay 0.70% of 1,000€ as `Occupational accident and disease insurance contribution` => 7€
4. The employer has to pay 0.07% of 1,000€ as `Group life insurance contribution` => 0.7€
5. The employer has to pay 1.53% of 1,000€ as `Employers’ health insurance contribution` => 15.3€
6. The employer pays ~210€ to Tax Administration and other insurance providers.

**How is the payslip for a `self-employed`?** Imagine a basic example, in which a `self-employed` person receives 1,000€ salary from their own company, and her/his tax card says their tax is 35%.

From the `self-employed`'s perspective:

1. Their company withholds 35% of 1,000€ as `income tax` => 350€
2. Their company pays withheld amount of 350€ to Tax Administration.
3. The *self-employed* receives the rest which is 650€.

From the company's perspective:

1. The company has to pay 1.53% of 1,000€ as `Employers’ health insurance contribution` => 15.30€
2. The company pays 15.30€ to Tax Administration.

**What's the practical conclusion?** Because `Employers’ health insurance contribution` is such a small percentage, in the rest of this guide, I will intentionally assume
that the `self-employed` people only pay `income tax` and nothing else.

### Consider buying corporate liability insurance

**What is it?** An insurance to cover the potential damages you may cause to your client while freelancing.
For example, if you drop the production database and it would take 5 hours to recover from that mistake, and
your client claims 100,000€ in damages for those 5 hours, corporate liability insurance may cover it.

**When is it necessary?** Even though it's not mandatory by law, it may be mandatory by the contract you'll sign with freelance brokers or the client itself.

Some components of a corporate liability insurance, like *legal expenses insurance*, require you to have signed the corporate liability insurance **before** signing your project contract
in order for the insurance cover to be valid. If that is the case and you have already signed the project contract, discuss with the insurance agent to find a solution to the problem.

**How much?** Insurance companies decide the price based on a number of factors including but not limited to your main line of business and your estimated annual revenue.
I have received offers from ~200€ up to ~500€ per year from different insurance providers.

**Corporate liability insurance providers**:
* if [corporate liability insurance](https://www.if.fi/yritysasiakkaat/vakuutukset/vastuuvakuutukset)
* Insurance offer available in Finnish, Swedish, and English.
* OP [corporate liability insurance](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/operational-insurance/liability-insurance)
* Insurance offer available in Finnish and Swedish.
* Lähitapiola [corporate liability insurance](https://www.lahitapiola.fi/yritys/vakuutukset/omaisuus-ja-toiminta/toiminnan-vakuutukset)
* Insurance offer available in ?
* Online service available in ?

### Consider joining a union

**What is it?** A union is an organization which can offer its members certain services at a much lower price and lobby the interests of its members with relevant authorities.

**How much?** ~165€ per year.

**When is it necessary?** Given the union membership fee, and the 200€ average hourly rate of lawyers in Finland,
if you have 2-4 questions about running your business per year, the membership fee will pay itself back.

For example, I had a question about corporate law, and wanted to know what happens if my Deputy Member of the Board of Directors leaves
the company. I called the union and within 5 minutes, I was talking with a lawyer who knew about corporate law and got my answer.

In addition to that, unions negotiate the `self-employed` interests. For example, from July 2019, you no longer have to put 2,500€ initial
capital into the company when establishing a limited liability company. This has been one of the points from
[Business Legislation agenda of Suomen Yrittäjät union](https://www.yrittajat.fi/en/about-federation-finnish-enterprises/fields-influence/business-legislation-598844),
among other points.

**Unions**:
* [Suomen Yrittäjät - Finnish Entrepreneurs](https://www.yrittajat.fi/en)
* [Kauppakamari - Finland chamber of commerce](https://kauppakamari.fi/en/)
* [Helsinki chamber of commerce](https://helsinki.chamber.fi/en/)

### Consider joining an unemployment fund

**Source of truth**: [Kela unemployment page](https://www.kela.fi/web/en/unemployment)
and [Unemployment Fund for the self-employed](https://yrittajakassa.fi)

**What is it?** There are two types of unemployment benefits:

1. **Basic** unemployment allowance, which is paid by Kela and the amount is the same for everyone, ~700€ per month.
2. **Earnings-related** unemployment allowance, which is paid by *unemployment funds* and the amount for the `self-employed` people depends on their `YEL income`.

You can only apply for earnings-related unemployment allowance if you're part of an unemployment fund.

**How much?** Depends on your `YEL income`. Unemployment law enforces a higher minimum `YEL income` if you wish to be part of an unemployment fund.
In 2023, the minimum level is ~14,100€ per year of `YEL income`, and with that, the membership fee is ~175€ per year.

**When is it necessary?** If you wish to get earnings-related unemployment allowance in case of unemployment.

Note that **receiving any kind of unemployment allowance requires permanent closure of your company** and registering as
a job-seeker to be a full-time `employee` again, among other things.

[![unemployment fund paths][unemployment fund paths image]][unemployment fund paths link]

[unemployment fund paths image]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/unemployment_fund.png
[unemployment fund paths link]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/unemployment_fund.png

\* Taken from an old brochure of Unemployment Fund for the self-employed

**Steps**:
* According to [Federation of Unemployment Funds in Finland (TYJ)](https://www.tyj.fi/en/join-a-fund/membership-fees/), there's only one unemployment fund for the `self-employed`.
* Join [Unemployment Fund for the self-employed](https://yrittajakassa.fi).

### Consider buying health insurance

**Source of truth**: [Ministry of Social Affairs and Health](https://stm.fi/en/frontpage)

**What is it?** As a `self-employed` person, you are not legally obligated to buy `occupational healthcare` for yourself.
Therefore, when you fall ill and the issue is not urgent, you can go to public health stations or private.
To partially or fully cover the medical costs, you may want to buy an appropriate health insurance.

**Is it a tax-free benefit?** For you, as the target audience of this guide and the assumptions that come with it, and given that the absolute source of truth is Vero itself,
the answer is yes, if it's a health insurance all your freelancer friends take as well — meaning it's *reasonable* and *usual* — and if and only if you buy `occupational healthcare` as well.
This new rule of having to buy an `occupational healthcare` for the health insurance to remain tax-free was added in 2024 and is explained on Vero's in-depth instruction on the subject, in particular in [section 3.1](https://www.vero.fi/syventavat-vero-ohjeet/ohje-hakusivu/48347/tyonantajan-ottaman-sairauskuluvakuutuksen-verotus2#3.1-osakkeenomistaja-ja-henkil%C3%B6yhti%C3%B6n-yhti%C3%B6mies).
Like all-things-tax-related, it's the Tax Administration officer who decides what's *reasonable* and what's *usual*.
Therefore, practice caution with this subject and take advice from Vero or an accountant/lawyer if you want to be certain.

**How do public and private compare?**

* In **public**:
* You cannot go to any public health station, you should go to the health station assigned to you.
* You cannot book a doctor's appointment online.
* You cannot jump the [Nurse -> Doctor -> Specialist] rule.
* You will not pay more than ~700€ per year for medical costs or ~600€ per year for medicine [as there are laws protecting you from that](https://stm.fi/terveydenhuollon-maksukatto).
* In **private**:
* You can go to any private health station you wish.
* You can book your appointments online and usually get a doctor's appointment either the same day or day-after.
* There's no rule preventing you from seeing an specialist straight away.
* It's expensive.

**When is it necessary?** If you wish to go to private for non-urgent issues and you'd like the health insurance to cover it.

Comparison of health insurance providers:

| | No need to fill health declaration form | No need to have `occupational healthcare` agreement from a service provider (~500€ per year) | No need to apply for reimbursements yourself | Price per year + Deductible | Anything else? |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ | -------------------------------------------- | --------------------------- | ---------------------------------------- |
| [OP - Basic](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/personal-insurance/health-insurance) | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ? | Need accident insurance (~200€ per year) |
| [OP - Comprehensive](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/personal-insurance/health-insurance) | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ? | Need accident insurance (~200€ per year) |
| [OP - Extra](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/personal-insurance/health-insurance) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ~350€ + 100€ | Need accident insurance (~200€ per year) |
| [OP - Super](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/personal-insurance/health-insurance) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ~1,800€ | Need accident insurance (~200€ per year) |
| If | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | ~ 153€ + 30€ per visit | |

**Steps**:

* Contact the insurance provider you chose and get a quote for your specific health insurance package.
* Be ready to answer basic questions about your business like your estimated annual revenue, your `YEL income`, main line of business and many more.

### Consider getting dental care plan

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/)

**What is it?** An employer can offer an dental care plan to their employees. The dental checks and/or proceduers have to be non-estethical, related to the employees health, and reasonable to be tax-deductible. More details in [section 3.2.5.3 Hammashoito](https://www.vero.fi/syventavat-vero-ohjeet/ohje-hakusivu/62486/henkil%C3%B6kuntaedut-verotuksessa4/). You can decide the upper yearly limit of what the employees can use for dental care per year. Each employee has to have the same sum on the contract, but by being `self-employed`, you can set the limit to what you want. Usual yearly dental care contracts range from 150€ to 3000€ per year. You will also have to decide if you pay your check/procedures yourself personally and return them to yourself from your company, or if the company pays for them directly.

Some available dental care providers:

* [Mehiläinen](https://www.mehilainen.fi/en/companies/occupational-dental-care)
* [Oral](https://www.oral.fi/en/information/information-for-fustomers/occupational-dental-care/)

**Steps**:

* Contact the dental care provider and ask for an offer/contract for your company.
* Sign the contract and provide details of the person (you) to be included in the plan.
* Book your checkups and/or procedures with your dental care provider's dentist.
* Either pay yourself or with your company and include the payments into your accounting.

### Consider buying voluntary pension insurance

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/sv/Detaljerade_skatteanvisningar/anvisningar/48268/frivilliga-pensionsf%C3%B6rs%C3%A4kringar-som-arbetsgivaren-tecknat2/)

**What is it?** On top of [YEL](#buy-social-security-insurance-yel), which is mandatory, you can buy *voluntary pension insurance*.
Payouts can start at the age of ~70 and have to be paid out during at least 10 years of time. Depending on the provider, you can typically choose what to do with the money in the insurance (invest in stocks/bonds/etc).

**How much?** Depends on the coverage you choose. The higher the coverage, the more you pay in premiums. Premiums are a business expense and fully tax-deductible up to 8,500€/year. Above this limit, premiums will be taxed as personal income for you, the `self-employed`.

**How does it differ from YEL?** If you die before reaching the pension age, what you've accumulated and paid for YEL goes to /dev/null and disappears. With voluntary pension insurance, you can include a life insurance, so that your spouse or some other beneficiary can inherit the full value of the voluntary pension insurance you have accumulated and paid for.

**Voluntary pension insurance providers**:
* [LähiTapiola](https://www.lahitapiola.fi/yritys/vakuutukset/elakevakuutukset/yrittajan-vapaaehtoinen-elakevakuutus/) ([LokalTapiola](https://www.lahitapiola.fi/sv/foretag/forsakringar/pensionsforsakringar/frivillig-pensionsforsakring-for-foretagare/))
* [Mandatum](https://www.mandatum.fi/en/pension/entrepreneurs-supplementary-pension/), formerly part of the Sampo Group
* [OP](https://www.op.fi/corporate-customers/insurance/personal-insurance/corporate-pension-insurance) (Osuuspankki/Andelsbanken)

### Consider selling your personal work-related tools to your company

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/)

**What is it?** When you were an `employee`, your employer gave you work-related tools like laptop, phone, desk and a chair to do your work.
Now, your company (`legal entity`) can buy from you (`natural person`) work-related tools in a similar fashion.

**When is it useful?** If you didn't have work-related tools when you started your company, you would have bought them from company's money as *business costs*.
Now, by selling what you already have to the company, it's as if you're retroactively turning what used to be a personal cost into a *business cost*.

**How much?** Their current *fair market value*. If you bought an iPhone for 1,000€ two years ago, and you sell it to your company for 500€ because in most 2nd hand stores
you see that the market price is ~500€ nowadays, that's a *fair market value*. If you sell it for 950€, tax administration might consider that a *disguised dividend* to the owner.

**Steps**:

* List all *work-related* items you'd like to sell to your company. Here are some items you might have had before you started your company:
* Laptop
* Phone
* Desk
* Chair
* Printer
* Offline storage devices
* Take a picture of the item and its receipt if you still have it to prove the item actually exists as an attachment to the invoice you'll be sending to your company.
* Take a picture of a 2nd hand store advertisement for an item similar to yours to prove that you were in the ballpark of their *fair market value* as an attachment to the invoice you'll be sending to your company.
* Create a contract which includes the followings as an attachment to the invoice you'll be sending to your company:
* Who is buying
* Who is selling
* What is being sold and their *fair market value* price
* Signature, place, and date
* Send an invoice to your company with all attachments above.
* Your company won't get any VAT refunds from the items it buys from you. This is because you, as the *natural person*, are not registered in VAT-register. It doesn't matter if you mention the price of the laptop for example includes 24% VAT; in your company's accounting, it'll be VAT 0% anyway.

## Operation - what to do to **run** your company

### Offer yourself benefits that you like

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/detailed-guidance/decisions/47380/in-kind-benefits-fringe-benefits-2021/)

**What is it?** You can offer yourself all the benefits `employees` have access to as a `self-employed` person. Up to the tax-free limits, it'll be only a business cost.

| | Tax-free limit | [Edenred card service commission](https://edenred.fi/en/employer/price-list/#card) | [Smartum card service commission](https://www.smartum.fi/en/smartum-service#costs) | [ePassi service commission](https://www.epassi.fi/en/employer/start-using-epassi) |
| ---------------------------- | --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------ | --------------------- |
| Lunch benefit 🥗 | ~50€ per month | 2.95% of the balance loaded | 1.5% of the balance loaded | 2% of the balance loaded |
| Sport and cultural benefit 🎭 | 400€ per year | 5.2% of the balance loaded | 5% of the balance loaded | 4.7% of the balance loaded |
| Commuting benefit 🚌 | 3,400€ per year | 5.2% of the balance loaded | 5% of the balance loaded | 4.7% of the balance loaded |

* Phone benefit: you can pay your phone bill from company if you offer it as a 20€-phone-benefit every month to yourself.
Phone bills are business cost when you only and only use it for business and not in your personal life. If you'd like to use a single subscription for both personal and business,
you must offer it as a 20€-phone-benefit.
* Internet subscription: your company can provide you an internet subscription for your home office. The subscription is not taxed if it is for work use. You can use it for personal use as well,
but entertainment services should not be attached to the subscription, or the benefit will be taxable.
* Vehicles: your company can own a car, bikes, etc. that you can use for commuting to your client office and work-related trips. Naturally, as your company owns these vehicles, all their repairs and maintenance are *business costs* which you can pay from your company and like every other *business cost*, get a refund for its VAT later.
If you need to use these vehicles for non-work-related trips, ask your accountant whether it's a taxable benefit for you and act accordingly.
* Massage benefit: if you offer yourself a *reasonable* amount of massage benefit (~50€/month for example) and that reasonable amount is *proportionate* to the amount of salary your pay yourself, you should be able to offer yourself massage benefit without a problem. However, just like all-things-tax-related, it's the Tax Administration officer who decides what's *reasonable* and what's *proportionate*.
Therefore, practice caution with this particular benefit.

**Can you offer yourself only benefits?** Yes you can, but you must take a big enough salary to cover the `income tax` of the benefits you're offering yourself.

For example, let's say in March, you paid your phone bill from company and therefore you must offer yourself a 20€-phone-benefit. You want no additional salary and your tax rate is 10%.

10% of 20€-phone-benefit is 2€. This means that you must take a big enough salary in March to cover this 2€ tax that you have to pay.
Therefore, in March, your salary must be 2.22€. When you deduct your 10% tax from 2.22€ salary, 2€ is left, which will cover the 2€ tax that you have to pay for 20€-phone-benefit.

**Should you offer yourself benefits above the tax-free limit?** You can but it will be similar to taking salary in case of a `self-employed` person.

As seen in [understanding your new personal taxation situation](#understand-your-new-personal-taxation-situation), the `self-employed` only pay `income tax` on their income and nothing else.
So if you offer yourself 1,000€ salary and your tax rate is 35%, you get 650€. If you offer yourself 1,000€ as benefit, you will also get 650€.

**Who ensures that you do not go above the tax-free limit?** Your company, the `legal entity`, must ensure that its owner, you as the `natural person`, is not offered benefits above the tax-free
limits, because if you are offered, it must be reported and taxed. This is important, because you as the representative of the company can order even 10,000€ of Sport and cultural benefit, but
if you go ahead and use it all within that calendar year, you must report it and pay tax on the 9,600€ part.

### Offer yourself daily-allowance when you travel for business

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/detailed-guidance/decisions/47405/tax-exempt-allowances-in-2021-for-business-travel/)

**What is it?** When you travel for business, your company pays for obvious costs like accomodation, flight tickets and transportation to-and-from the airport.
However, not all costs are obvious and easily provable by a receipt like the ones mentioned before.
When you travel, your costs are increased because you are not familiar with the environment and not every business might offer you receipts like they do in Finland.
Daily-allowance fixes this increased costs issue.

**How much?** Between 45€ and 100€ per day, tax-free, depending on the destination country.

For example, let's say you travel to a 5-day Python conference in Spain (65€/day).
Once you come back to Finland, you are eligible for 5 days of daily-allowance (325€).

**Steps**:
* You need to document your business actions in a daily journal.
* After each day, write down the business actions you took.
* For example, if you're traveling to Spain to network with freelance developers, write down who you met and what you discussed on a high level.
* For example, if you're going to a 5-day Python conference, write down what happened in the conference on that day on a high level.
* If you don't take business actions during a particular day, you don't need to document it, and you won't get daily allowance for that day.
* After the trip, send your company a travel invoice.
* Choose the destination country in your company's accounting software to get the exact daily-allowance fee.
* Write down the number of days in your daily journal in the travel invoice.
* Attach the daily journal.

### Send your invoices carefully

**Source of truth**: [Tax Administration](https://www.vero.fi/en/)

**In general**:

* When invoicing individuals, at the very minimum you should include their full name and address in the invoice.

**If you're invoicing a company or an individual residing outside EU**:
* You do not need to add VAT to your invoice for your freelance services.

**If you're invoicing a company or an individual residing in Finland**:
* You must add 24% VAT to the total amount you're charging them for your freelance services.

**If you're invoicing a company or an individual residing within EU**:
* You must add 24% VAT to the total amount you're charging them for your freelance services.
* You can, however, use [**reverse-charge mechanism**](https://quaderno.io/blog/how-does-the-reverse-charge-mechanism-work/) and not add VAT only when you're **invoicing a company** residing within EU. To do it:
* You must state the EU company's VAT ID in your invoice.
* You must ensure that your EU company's VAT ID is valid by [checking it in VIES](https://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/vies/?locale=en)
* You must mention the exact **`Reverse Charge`** words in your invoice.
* You must state that VAT is to be accounted for by the EU company. However, you must **not** mention the VAT rate **nor** the VAT amount to be accounted for by the EU company. This is explained in details in sections 6.1.9 and 6.1.10 of [VAT invoice requirements](https://www.vero.fi/en/detailed-guidance/guidance/48090/vat-invoice-requirements2).
* *`reverse-charge mechanism`* works in the other way around too. In some checkout pages, the seller asks for your VAT ID to remove the VAT amount from your purchase invoice.
Without this mechanism, the seller could not do that.

### Take out money from your company in the most tax optimal way

**What is it?** Taking money from the company in the most tax optimal way is **a million-dollar question**.
Only a team of competent accountants and competent lawyers specializing in corporate tax law could answer that question.
This guide could not be reasonably expected to be of much help to answer that question, as the circumstances for every company are specific.
However, an overview of fundamentals can be illustrated.

**What are the fundamentals in taxation of income in a limited liability company?**

[![limited liability company taxation fundamentals][limited liability company taxation fundamentals image]][limited liability company taxation fundamentals link]

[limited liability company taxation fundamentals image]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/limited_liability_taxation.png
[limited liability company taxation fundamentals link]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sam-hosseini/freelancing-in-finland/main/images/limited_liability_taxation.png

\* Taken from page 73 of [Finnish Enterprise Agencies guide to becoming an Entrepreneur in Finland - 2021](https://uusyrityskeskus.fi/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Perustamisopas_2021_EN.pdf)

### Ensure that your obligations are fulfilled continuously

Tax administration office (Vero):

* **Pay your corporate income tax on time** using prepayment register, *non-recurring* obligation: if your company fiscal year ends and
you have paid no corporate income tax during the fiscal year, and it turns out you must pay thousands of euros of corporate income tax,
then the Tax Administration will add interest on this corporate tax you owe them. To avoid paying interest, pay your corporate income tax *before* the company fiscal year ends,
or *within 1 month* after it.

* **Send VAT reports**, *recurring* obligation: strictly speaking, as the owner of the company, you are responsible to ensure that VAT reports are done every month, not your accountant.
Practically, your accountant assumes responsibility for it and will do it herself/himself, but remember that if your accountant fails to do so, you yourself are responsible.
Therefore, check before the deadlines if the VAT reports have been done.

* **Send EU VAT Recapitulative Statement reports**, *recurring* obligation: if you're invoicing a EU company, you need to [report its details](https://www.vero.fi/en/businesses-and-corporations/about-corporate-taxes/vat/international-commerce/intra-community-trade/eu-vat-recapitulative-statement/).
This obligation is similar to *VAT reports* in the sense that it's fully your responsibility that this report is done correctly and on time, even though your accountant will do this for you.

* **Send payroll reports**, *recurring* obligation: if you're taking out salary, *Employer Contribution report* and *Income Register report* must be done.
If you're taking out dividends, specific *Dividend report* must be done. Your accountant can do these for you.

* **Perform monthly bookkeeping**, *recurring* activity: even though there's no legal obligation to perform bookkeeping every month, accountants insist it is necessary and I trust their judgement
on this. If in a typical software project we regularly do backlog grooming so that the backlog wouldn't become a mess, it is understandable for me why accountants would want to resolve all transactions
every month when it's fresh in everyone's mind.

* **Submit financial statement and corporate income tax return**, *recurring* obligation: after the fiscal year ends, within 4 months you must submit
a financial statement and corporate income tax return. Your accountant can do this for you.

* **Share the receipts with your accountant**, *recurring* obligation: Primarily because Tax Administration must know what the purchase was for and whether it was
related to your *main line of business*, although it would also allow you to get the VAT back on eligible purchases.

Business Information System (ytj):

* **File notification of changes to company information**, *non-recurring* obligation: any changes to company information has to be
notified to Business Information System. For example, if your company's address changes, file a [notification of change](https://www.ytj.fi/en/index/notifications/notificationsofchanges/limitedliabilitycompanies.html).

TE-services:

* **Apply for startup grant payment**, *recurring* obligation: you must apply for startup grant payment retroactively within 2 months after the month you're applying for.
For example, if you're applying for the month of March, you have until end of May to apply.

### References

Calculators:
* [Salary vs Dividend ratio optimizer](https://osinkoavaipalkkaa.fi/)

Guides:
* [Suomi.fi](https://www.suomi.fi/company/)
* [Finnish Enterprise Agencies guide to becoming an Entrepreneur in Finland - 2024](https://uusyrityskeskus.fi/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/Uusyrityskeskus_Guide_Becoming_an_Entrepreneur_in_Finland_2024-2-1.pdf)
* [Capital taxation of individuals in Finland - 2015](https://www.porssisaatio.fi/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/vero_opas_2015_eng_final_web.pdf)

Governmental organizations to provide support for you:
* [NewCo Helsinki](https://newcohelsinki.fi/en/)
* [International House Helsinki](https://www.ihhelsinki.fi/)

## Contributors

Thanks goes to these wonderful people ([emoji key](https://allcontributors.org/docs/en/emoji-key)):



Anders Nylund
Anders Nylund

📖
Ville Halminen
Ville Halminen

📖
Onni Hakala
Onni Hakala

📖
Dom Padden
Dom Padden

📖
Jyri-Petteri Paloposki
Jyri-Petteri Paloposki

📖
Tuomas Jomppanen
Tuomas Jomppanen

📖
Timo Salomäki
Timo Salomäki

📖


Ville Immonen
Ville Immonen

📖
Oleg Podsechin
Oleg Podsechin

📖
Alex Fomushkin
Alex Fomushkin

📖
Jonne Anttila - eAccounting Finland Oy
Jonne Anttila - eAccounting Finland Oy

📖
Petri Väänänen (aituri.ai)
Petri Väänänen (aituri.ai)

📖
Panu Kalliokoski
Panu Kalliokoski

📖
Sindre
Sindre

📖


Yannick Meeus
Yannick Meeus

🐛
Teemu Tiilikainen
Teemu Tiilikainen

📖
Vladimir Urbano
Vladimir Urbano

📖 🐛
Joonas
Joonas

📖
jasaarim
jasaarim

📖
Per Lundberg
Per Lundberg

📖
Omid
Omid

📖


Tapio Seppälä
Tapio Seppälä

📖
Ivan Osipov
Ivan Osipov

📖
Oguzhan Gencoglu
Oguzhan Gencoglu

📖
Kari Merikanto
Kari Merikanto

📖
Sergey Akentev
Sergey Akentev

📖
Viet Ta
Viet Ta

📖
Maxim Zavadskiy
Maxim Zavadskiy

📖


Xi Xiao
Xi Xiao

📖
Yusong
Yusong

📖

## Final words

Now that you've reached the end, I can tell you that I wrote this guide **with both selfish and selfless reasons**.

* Selfish reasons:
* **I wanted to make money**, and I managed to do it with a few sponsorship deals.
I'm happy I've reached this goal 😊

* **I wanted to get more X followers**, and 100+ people did [follow me](https://x.com/hosseini_io) because of this guide 😊
That's more than I could have asked for. Many thanks to each and every one of you 🙌🏼

* Selfless reasons:
* Software developers and the community are extremely generous and having been mostly *taking*, I wanted to give back as well.
* From the bottom of my heart, I wanted to help you start your freelance journey and that this guide would save you the headache of
having to read so many pages of different guides to do things correctly and in the right order.
* I like it that when you have your own company, the profits generated get distributed more proportionally to those involved compared to being an employee,
and so I was hoping by providing some exact figures on revenues and costs, I'd inspire you to take a bigger risk and be proportionally compensated for it.