Special Education in Finland: What Expat Parents Need to Know
Special Education in Finland: What Expat Parents Need to Know
Finland's schools produce some of the highest PISA scores in the world, and the country's inclusive model is studied in education faculties from Seoul to São Paulo. But when your child is the one struggling in a Finnish classroom — and you don't speak the language, and the teacher keeps saying things are "fine" — that global reputation offers very little comfort.
This post explains how the Finnish special education system actually works in 2026, what changed with the August 2025 legislative reforms, and what expat parents should expect when they start asking for help.
How Widespread Is Learning Support in Finnish Schools?
First, the number that surprises most incoming expats: support is not rare. According to Statistics Finland, 26% of comprehensive school pupils received either intensified or special support in 2024. Approximately 16% (88,900 students) were on intensified support, while 10% (57,000 students) held the highest level of formal special support. The combined share grew by 0.8 percentage points year over year.
This matters because a common misconception — that Finnish children rarely need intervention because the system is so well-designed — leads many international parents to dismiss early warning signs. In reality, Finland's system succeeds partly because it catches and addresses learning challenges proactively. The question is whether your child's school is doing that, and whether you have the tools to push if they aren't.
The Core Philosophy: Needs-Based, Not Diagnosis-Driven
The most important thing to understand about Finnish special education is that it is built around observed pedagogical need, not medical diagnosis.
In the United States, a diagnosis of ADHD or dyslexia carries legal weight — the school must produce an IEP. In the UK, an Education, Health and Care Plan is tied to a clinical assessment process. In Finland, neither of these frameworks applies. Finnish legislation deliberately avoids labeling students by medical category. Instead, the school's multi-professional team observes the child's learning in context and decides what support is warranted based on those observations.
This has a practical consequence for expat families: arriving with a private diagnosis from abroad will not automatically trigger a specific support level. The school will treat the diagnosis as useful context, but Finnish educators are required to conduct their own pedagogical assessment regardless. The child's support level is determined by what the school observes, not by what a private clinician in London or Boston documented two years ago.
The Shift That Happened in August 2025
For over a decade, Finland operated a three-tier model — general support, intensified support, and special support — that was widely praised internationally. That system has now been officially replaced.
From August 1, 2025, basic education in Finland moved to a two-category framework:
Group-specific support is the baseline. Every pupil is entitled to it, and it requires no administrative decision, no formal assessment, and no diagnosis. Schools are legally required to allocate a minimum of 0.122 teaching hours per week per pupil specifically for group-level interventions — remedial instruction, co-teaching by a special education teacher, and language support. This happens without paperwork.
Pupil-specific support kicks in when group-level measures are not enough. This is individualized, documented, and involves a formal process. It can include small-group instruction by a special education teacher, full-time placement in a special class, or provision of an assistant. A formal decision is issued by the municipal education provider.
The old terminology — pedagogical assessment (pedagoginen arvio), pedagogical statement (pedagoginen selvitys), learning plan (oppimissuunnitelma), and the HOJKS individual education plan — has been replaced by a single document: the child/pupil-specific support implementation plan (lapsi-/oppilaskohtainen tuen toteuttamissuunnitelma). The formal decision that used to authorize "special support" is now simply called a "Decision on support."
If you're reading older documents, or if your child entered the system before August 2025, you will encounter the old three-tier terminology. It's still valid context — the new system replaces the administrative labels, not the underlying support structures.
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Where Expat Families Run Into Trouble
The Finnish system is designed around a cultural assumption: that parents trust educators to identify problems and respond appropriately, without aggressive parental pressure. Finnish families generally operate this way. Expat families, particularly those from the US or UK, typically do not — and the friction is real.
Several friction points come up repeatedly in expat communities:
Language. School documents, assessments, and teacher notes in the Wilma school communication platform are almost exclusively in Finnish. You will need to translate everything, and automated translation tools often miss the legal weight of specific terms.
Diagnosis timing. If your child needs a formal medical diagnosis, the public pathway involves waiting three to nine months for a pediatric neurology or child psychiatry appointment. Private clinics in Helsinki (Mehiläinen, ProNeuron, Ombrelo) can conduct full neuropsychological assessments in English, but costs range from €890 to €2,410. Kela does not generally reimburse private diagnostic costs.
Preparatory education. Children who arrive without Finnish language skills enter valmistava opetus (preparatory education) for six to twelve months. During this period, distinguishing a language acquisition challenge from an underlying learning disability is genuinely difficult — Finnish psychologists are appropriately cautious about assessment results in a child's second language. This can delay formal identification of actual learning difficulties.
Municipal variation. Finland's 309 municipalities have significant autonomy over how they resource support. Helsinki has over 400 special education classes in its Finnish-language schools. A small rural municipality may have far less. Where you live affects what's available.
What Expat Parents Should Do First
When your child starts school, register them with the Wilma platform immediately and learn to use it — it's the primary communication channel with teachers and the record of all support decisions. Even if your Finnish is limited, regular translation of teacher notes is essential.
If you have concerns about your child's learning, contact the school's opiskeluhuolto (student welfare team) directly. This multi-professional group includes the school psychologist, social worker, and health nurse. Request a meeting in writing, and if you need an interpreter, Finnish law requires the municipality to provide one at no cost — this is not optional and the school cannot refuse.
If your child has existing documentation from another country's special education system, bring it to the meeting as context, but understand that the school will conduct its own assessment alongside it.
For families navigating the full support pipeline — from requesting an assessment through to securing a formal support decision, understanding the HOJKS replacement document, and connecting school-level support to Kela disability benefits — the Finland Special Education Blueprint covers the complete process with checklists and translated terminology.
The Inclusion Model and Its Limitations
Finnish law explicitly favors keeping all students in mainstream classrooms (inklusiivinen kasvatus). The system is designed to bring support to the child rather than moving the child to a separate setting. In practice, this means your child will almost certainly stay in a mainstream classroom even with significant learning needs, with support provided through co-teaching, small-group pull-out sessions (pienryhmä), or in-class assistance.
Full-time special class placement (erityisluokka) exists and is used, but it requires a formal support decision. Placement in a dedicated special school (erityiskoulu) is rare and reserved for children whose needs cannot be met at the municipal level; the national Valteri network operates six such schools.
For most expat families, the practical challenge is not accessing the system — Finnish schools are legally obligated to provide support — but rather knowing the right questions to ask, understanding the documents they're being asked to sign, and knowing when and how to escalate if the school's response is inadequate.
Key Terms for Navigating the System
| Finnish Term | English Meaning |
|---|---|
| Erityisopettaja | Special education teacher (master's-level, integrated into mainstream classrooms) |
| Opiskeluhuolto | Student welfare team (school psychologist, social worker, nurse) |
| Lapsi-/oppilaskohtainen tuen toteuttamissuunnitelma | Child/pupil-specific support implementation plan (replaces HOJKS from Aug 2025) |
| Valmistava opetus | Preparatory education for non-Finnish-speaking arrivals |
| Hallintopäätös / Decision on support | The formal municipal decision authorizing pupil-specific support |
| Wilma | The digital platform used for all school-home communication |
The Finnish special education system is well-resourced, legally structured, and philosophically committed to inclusion. For expat parents willing to learn how it works, it can deliver genuine, well-supported outcomes for children with learning difficulties. The barrier is almost always informational — not legislative.
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