finnish businessman in a sauna

10 facts about Finland that sound made up

Finland is one of those countries that consistently defies expectations. A deep-rooted coffee obsession, a justice system that lets convicted criminals stroll to the shops and a national debate about whether the country exists at all, the true facts about Finland are genuinely stranger than fiction.

These ten facts rarely make the headlines, but they tell you more about Finnish life than any tourist brochure. Understanding them is a good start to understanding Finnish personality traits, a people shaped by unusual conditions and a very particular set of values.

1. Finland is the prison escape capital of Europe

Finland has a low crime rate, but is also Europe's prison escape capital. The reason is surprisingly logical. Minor offenders are sent to one of Finland's eleven open prisons, where inmates integrate freely into the community, hold down jobs and even study. The idea works well, open prisons have low reoffending rates and cost taxpayers less.

But escaping from a minimum-security prison is also comically easy. In 2013, one in ten Finnish prisoners made a run for it. Out of every 10,000 inmates, 1,084 fled, more than double the escape rate of Belgium, which comes second. Finns are famously fond of the outdoors, but this may be taking it too far.

2. Finland's sea level is falling, not rising

Rising sea levels are a serious concern for most nations. Not Finland. Here, the land rises faster than the sea, a process called post-glacial uplift, which began when glaciers retreated at the end of the last ice age. Finland's landmass is still rising by roughly 0.5 inches per year. In a country with 188,000 lakes, that adds up to a meaningful amount of new territory.

3. A golf ball hit into Finland from Sweden stays in the air for over an hour

The Finnish town of Tornio has built part of an 18-hole golf course on Swedish soil. The course straddles the Torne River and crosses two time zones, Sweden is one hour behind Finland. So if you tee off across the border, the ball technically hangs in the air for over an hour. The Tornio Golf Club is the only place on earth where you can play the world's longest hole-in-one.

4. Finns are the world's biggest milk drinkers

Every Finn consumes roughly 34 gallons of milk per year, making Finland the world leader in dairy consumption. The country also leads in dairy research. Ironically, 17% of the Finnish population is lactose intolerant, but Finland's dairy industry has responded by developing one of the world's widest ranges of lactose-free products, funded largely by the same people who can't stop drinking milk.

5. The Finnish Air Force badge contained a swastika until 2020

When the Finnish Air Force was founded in 1918, a Swedish nobleman named Count Eric von Rosen gifted Finland a plane painted with a blue swastika, a symbol of good luck used across many cultures for thousands of years, with no political connotation at the time. Finland stopped painting swastikas on planes in 1945, but the symbol wasn't removed from the Finnish Air Force Headquarters badge until 2020. It still appears on some flags and decorations.

6. America's tallest monument was designed by a Finn

The Gateway Arch in St. Louis, 630 feet tall, 17,246 tons, visited by over 2.5 million people a year, was designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen. He won the 1947 competition for the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial. True to form, Saarinen studied the site's surroundings carefully before designing something that rose from the landscape rather than imposing on it.

That quiet confidence in craft and preparation is a thread that runs through Finnish culture. It shows up in the Sisu collection, too, if you want something to wear that reflects it.

7. One speeding ticket can cost over €100,000

Finnish traffic fines are calculated as a percentage of income. This keeps them proportionate regardless of wealth and means the rich pay dearly for minor infractions. In 2002, Nokia executive Anssi Vanjoki was fined €116,000 for driving 75 km/h in a 50 km/h zone. This stubborn commitment to fairness applies at every level of Finnish society.

No Niin Collection

8. Finland has more heavy metal bands per capita than any other country

Finland is the birthplace of Jean Sibelius and has produced some of the world's most celebrated classical composers. It has also produced 53 heavy metal bands per 100,000 people, more than any other nation. Thanks to a 2002 copyright law, taxi drivers must pay a small annual fee to play music in their vehicles. Most do. Silence in a Finnish taxi was apparently too much even for Finland.

9. Finland drinks more coffee per capita than any other nation

Finns consume over 26 pounds of coffee per person per year. Italy, for all its café culture, doesn't come close. The Finnish language even has specific words for different coffee occasions: aamukahvi (morning coffee), päiväkahvi (daytime coffee), iltakahvi (evening coffee) and vaalikahvit, the coffee you drink after voting in an election. The long, dark winters probably explain a great deal.

10. There is a theory that Finland doesn't exist

According to a theory that gained traction on Reddit, Finland was invented by Japan and the Soviet Union to conceal valuable fishing grounds in the Baltic Sea. The supposed landmass between Russia and Sweden is, in this telling, just open ocean stocked with fish. The theory has no credible supporting evidence whatsoever, but it has also never been fully disproven to the satisfaction of its proponents, which says something either about the theory or about Reddit.

Finland does, for the record, exist. Its people are real, their coffee is excellent and their prison escapes are well-documented.

Frequently asked questions

Is Finland really the world's biggest coffee drinker?

Yes. Finland consistently ranks first in global coffee consumption per capita, at over 26 pounds per person per year, well ahead of Italy, Norway and Sweden.

Why does Finland have so many prison escapes?

Finland uses open prisons for minor offenders, which allow inmates to live semi-freely in the community. These have low reoffending rates but make escape straightforward. In 2013, roughly one in ten Finnish prisoners walked away.

Did a Finn really design the Gateway Arch?

Yes. Finnish-American architect Eero Saarinen won the 1947 design competition for the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial in St. Louis. The Gateway Arch remains the tallest human-made monument in the United States.

Is Finland Scandinavian?

No. Finland is a Nordic country but not Scandinavian. Scandinavia refers specifically to Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Finland has a distinct language, culture and history and Finns will politely but firmly let you know the difference.

What is post-glacial uplift and why does it affect Finland?

Post-glacial uplift is the gradual rising of land following the retreat of glaciers at the end of the last ice age. With the immense weight of ice removed, Finland's landmass has been slowly rising ever since, at roughly 0.5 inches per year, which means Finland is literally growing.

101 Very Finnish Problems began as a list of observations about Finnish life. It became a book because the observations kept coming.

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42 comments

Item 8, “A golf ball hit in Finland stays in the air for over an hour” in wrong.

If you hit a golf ball from Finland to Sweden, it will land one hour BEFORE it was hit.
Sweden is in CET time zone (GMT+1) whereas Finland is in EET (GMT+2)

So you’d have to hit the golf ball from Sweden to Finland to make that claim work.
Unfortunately.

Jukka Lindgren

”One more issue about sauna is that you don’t go to sauna to get clean, you get clean to go to sauna”
Nowadays this is often true in ”modern” homes and public saunas, but originally sauna was the place to get clean. And to give birth and die.

Koden faija

Finland has the best educational system in the world-

VALERIE MAGNUSON

Everything to do with Sauna cannot be directly translated into any language, including the the word ‘Sauna’. So ‘Kiuas’ is the sauna stove. ‘Löyly’ is the steam from the rocks. ‘Kiulu’ is the water bucket for the löyly. ‘Kuuppa’ is the ladle to throw the water on the stones. ‘Lauteet’ are the sauna seatings. ‘Vihta’ or ‘Vasta’, depending where you come from, are the fresh birch whisks to whisk over your body for relaxation. And even the ‘Avanto’ was originally connected to the sauna. However, the Swedes call their sauna ‘Bastu’, but the Finns don’t recognise that word to be authentic.
One more issue about sauna is that you don’t go to sauna to get clean, you get clean to go to sauna

Trev

As a 2nd generation American whose grandparents were all from Finland, I simply take pride my heritage and those before me.

Jacki

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