- Fraud recovery in Finland is available through criminal proceedings filed with the Poliisi (Police of Finland) and the Syyttäjälaitos (National Prosecution Authority), civil litigation before Finnish courts, and regulatory complaints to Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA / Financial Supervisory Authority) depending on the fraud type.
- Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA) is the sole financial market supervisor in Finland – regulating and supervising investment firms, CASPs under MiCA (with the full MiCA regime already in application), forex and CFD platforms, banks, and payment institutions. FIN-FSA accepts supervisory complaints but does not resolve private-law disputes between clients and financial companies.
- The Keskusrikospoliisi (KRP / National Bureau of Investigation / NBI) handles serious, organised, and professional financial crime, and houses both the Cybercrime Centre and the Financial Intelligence Unit within its structure.
- FINE (Financial Ombudsman Bureau) is the independent complaint body for disputes with financial service providers in Finland – covering banking, insurance, and securities complaints. FIN-FSA directs clients to FINE as the next step when disputes with financial companies are not resolved.
- Finland has two official languages – Finnish and Swedish. Court proceedings, criminal investigations, and regulatory complaints are conducted in Finnish or Swedish. Parties who do not speak the language of proceedings are entitled to an interpreter. In the Sámi region, Sámi may also be used.
Fraud recovery in Finland operates through three parallel channels: criminal proceedings initiated through the Poliisi (Police of Finland) and the Syyttäjälaitos (National Prosecution Authority), civil litigation before Finnish courts (Käräjäoikeus / District Court), and regulatory complaints to Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA). FIN-FSA supervises investment firms, CASPs under MiCA, forex platforms, banks, and payment institutions – publishing investor warnings and accepting supervisory complaints, while noting that private-law disputes between clients and financial companies are not within its resolution mandate. For serious, organised, or professional crime, the Keskusrikospoliisi (KRP / National Bureau of Investigation) handles investigation through its Cybercrime Centre and Financial Intelligence Unit. Recovery outcomes depend on the fraud type, the speed of criminal complaint filing, the identifiability and asset position of the fraudster, and whether institutional liability claims are available against regulated entities. All formal proceedings are conducted in Finnish or Swedish.
Types of Fraud in Finland and Where to Report
Investment Company Fraud
Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA / Financial Supervisory Authority) supervises the Finnish financial market, including investment firms. FIN-FSA accepts supervisory complaints and publishes investor warnings but confirms that it does not resolve private-law disputes about compensation between clients and financial companies – such disputes are resolved through courts or alternative dispute resolution bodies.
Where an investment firm, fund, intermediary, or unlicensed entity offered investment products or services in violation of Finnish financial regulation, complaints are filed with FIN-FSA. For criminal fraud – misappropriation of invested funds, false representations about returns, Ponzi structures, or fabricated investment products – a criminal complaint is filed with the Poliisi. The Syyttäjälaitos (National Prosecution Authority) handles prosecution, with the Valtakunnansyyttäjän toimisto (Office of the Prosecutor General) and specialised prosecutors covering serious economic cases. Civil proceedings for damages, restitution, and injunctions are brought before the Käräjäoikeus (District Court).
Cryptocurrency Fraud
Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA) is the competent authority for MiCA implementation and crypto-asset authorisations and registrations in Finland. Finland had a short transitional period, and the full MiCA regime is already in application.
Where a crypto operator claims CASP authorisation in Finland or uses false licensing claims to attract investors, complaints are filed with FIN-FSA. For crypto scams, fake exchanges, wallet theft, or blocked withdrawals, criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. For serious, organised, or professional crypto-related crime, the Keskusrikospoliisi (KRP / NBI) handles investigation through its Cybercrime Centre and Financial Intelligence Unit. The Syyttäjälaitos handles criminal prosecution.
Forex and Online Trading Fraud
Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA) exercises supervisory authority over forex and CFD platforms under Finland’s general financial supervision framework. FIN-FSA publishes investor warnings and complaint guidance on financial providers.
Where a forex or CFD provider claims a Finnish licence or offers investment services unlawfully, complaints are filed with FIN-FSA. For fraud involving manipulated platforms, boiler room operations, blocked withdrawals, or impersonation of brokers, criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. For large-scale, organised, or professional schemes, the KRP / NBI handles investigation. The Syyttäjälaitos handles prosecution.
Real Estate Fraud
Finland does not have a dedicated financial regulator for the real estate sector. For consumer disputes, the key authorities are the Kilpailu- ja kuluttajavirasto (KKV / Finnish Competition and Consumer Authority), including Consumer Advisory Services, and the Kuluttajariitalautakunta (Consumer Disputes Board). Property title, mortgages, and encumbrances are verified through the Maanmittauslaitos (National Land Survey of Finland) and the land title and registration system. The aluehallintovirasto (Regional State Administrative Agency) maintains registers including the real estate brokerage and letting agency register.
Where a dispute with a trader has a consumer character, KKV Consumer Advisory Services provides guidance and helps prepare complaint letters, including on housing and house sales. For consumer disputes within its competence, the Kuluttajariitalautakunta (Consumer Disputes Board) provides recommended decisions – FIN-FSA also identifies the Consumer Disputes Board as one of the recommended-decision bodies. For verification of title, mortgages, and registered rights, the Maanmittauslaitos and land register system are consulted. Where fraud involves fake sales, forged documents, deposit fraud, double sales, or rental scams, criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. Civil proceedings for title disputes, rescission, and damages are brought before the Käräjäoikeus (District Court).
International Trade Fraud Involving a Finnish Company
Where an international transaction with a Finnish company results in fraud – non-delivery, document fraud, payment diversion, or a fictitious supplier – criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. For cross-border, organised, professional, or serious economic crime, the KRP / NBI handles investigation. The Syyttäjälaitos handles prosecution.
Civil proceedings for contractual recovery, damages, and injunctions are brought before the Käräjäoikeus (District Court). Filings are in Finnish or Swedish, with interpretation provided where necessary.
Fraudulent Bankruptcy
Where a company in which funds were invested enters insolvency and there are indicators of fraudulent bankruptcy – dishonesty by a debtor, accounting offences, fraud, or concealment of assets – bankruptcy proceedings and creditor claims are administered by the District Court. The Finnish justice portal provides information on bankruptcy proceedings for entrepreneurs and companies.
Criminal complaints for dishonesty by a debtor, accounting offences, and related financial crimes are filed with the Poliisi – Finnish police confirm that these offences fall within financial crimes. For serious or organised economic cases, the KRP / NBI handles investigation. The Syyttäjälaitos handles prosecution.
Prepayment Fraud and Non-Delivery
Where a buyer made prepayment and received no goods or services – and the supplier acted with deception from the outset – criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. Civil proceedings for recovery of the prepayment and damages are brought before the Käräjäoikeus (District Court).
Where the dispute qualifies as a consumer purchase, KKV Consumer Advisory Services provides guidance and helps prepare a complaint to the trader. Where payment was made by credit card, KKV confirms that a refund can also be requested from the creditor if the company does not deliver the purchase.
Phishing and Cyber Fraud
Phishing, online fraud, credential theft, and social engineering attacks are reported to the Poliisi for formal criminal complaints. In parallel, information security incidents including phishing are reported to the Kyberturvallisuuskeskus (NCSC-FI / National Cyber Security Centre Finland) through its incident report form or by email at cert@traficom.fi. NCSC-FI publishes phishing alerts and scam guidance. For serious, systemic, or organised cyber incidents, the KRP / NBI Cybercrime Centre handles investigation.
Where phishing resulted in compromised banking credentials or payment data, the servicing bank, payment service provider, or card issuer must be contacted immediately. Police and NCSC-FI regularly issue warnings about banking phishing campaigns.
Financial Statement Fraud
Where a company in which funds were invested engaged in fraudulent financial reporting – accounting offences, tax fraud, dishonesty by a debtor, or deception of investors – criminal complaints are filed with the Poliisi. Finnish police confirm that financial crimes specifically include accounting offences, tax fraud, dishonesty by a debtor, and various other frauds. For serious, organised, or professional cases, the KRP / NBI handles investigation. The Syyttäjälaitos handles prosecution.
If the company is within FIN-FSA’s regulated financial perimeter, FIN-FSA is notified in parallel. Civil proceedings for investor damages are brought before the Käräjäoikeus (District Court).
Romance Fraud and Social Media Fraud
Romance scams and social media fraud – including impersonation, fabricated identities, emotional manipulation for financial extraction, and online extortion – are reported to the Poliisi for formal criminal complaints. Where the scheme involves phishing, compromised accounts, malicious links, or technical incidents, NCSC-FI is notified in parallel. For organised or large-scale schemes, the KRP / NBI Cybercrime Centre handles investigation.
Where funds were transferred through Finnish bank accounts, the servicing bank should be contacted immediately to flag the receiving accounts and initiate internal fraud procedures. Parties who do not speak the language of proceedings are entitled to interpretation.
Banking Fraud and Credit Card Fraud
Finanssivalvonta (FIN-FSA) supervises banks and financial institutions in Finland. For disputes with financial service providers, FIN-FSA directs clients first to their provider and then to FINE (Financial Ombudsman Bureau) as the independent complaint body. FINE covers banking, insurance, and securities complaints.
The first step in any banking or card fraud matter is immediate notification to the servicing bank, card issuer, or payment service provider to block compromised accounts, initiate transaction recall, and file an internal fraud report. Where the institution fails to resolve the complaint adequately, the matter is escalated to FINE (Financial Ombudsman Bureau) as FIN-FSA’s recommended independent complaint body. For supervisory breaches by regulated financial institutions, complaints are filed with FIN-FSA. Criminal complaints for card fraud, account takeover, phishing-linked theft, or unauthorised transactions are filed with the Poliisi. For serious cases or money laundering indicators, the KRP / NBI Financial Intelligence Unit handles investigation.
Immediate Steps After Discovering Fraud in Finland