Finland Defamation Laws: Civil, Criminal & Defences

In Finland, defamation is both a criminal offence and a civil wrong. The Criminal Code (Rikoslaki) Chapter 24 punishes kunnianloukkaus (defamation) and its aggravated form under sections 9 and 10, while the Tort Liability Act (Vahingonkorvauslaki) lets the injured person claim damages for the suffering an offence against honour causes.
Is defamation civil, criminal, or both in Finland?
It is both. Defamation is primarily a criminal offence under Chapter 24 of the Criminal Code (Rikoslaki), headed Violation of privacy, peace, and personal reputation, with the core provisions in section 9 (kunnianloukkaus, defamation) and section 10 (torkea kunnianloukkaus, aggravated defamation). The same conduct gives rise to civil liability for damages under the Tort Liability Act (Vahingonkorvauslaki), and the criminal and civil claims are typically heard together, with the injured party joining a damages claim to the criminal prosecution. The constitutional backdrop is section 12 of the Constitution of Finland (Perustuslaki), which guarantees freedom of expression. Chapter 24 also contains separate privacy offences in sections 8 and 8a for spreading information about a person's private life, which differ from defamation because they can apply even to true information.
What counts as criminal defamation under Chapter 24?
Finnish law covers both false claims and insults. Section 9 provides that a person who presents false information or a false insinuation about another so that the act is conducive to causing damage, suffering, or contempt, or who otherwise disparages another, is to be sentenced for defamation to a fine. The basic offence is fine-only; the possibility of imprisonment for ordinary defamation was removed by a 2014 reform (Act 879/2013) that followed criticism from the European Court of Human Rights. Section 10 covers the aggravated form: where defamation causes considerable suffering or particularly extensive damage and is aggravated when assessed as a whole, the penalty is a fine or imprisonment for up to two years. Presenting false information about a deceased person can also be defamation where it is apt to cause suffering to someone close to them.

Watch out: Sections 8 and 8a punish spreading information about a person's private life and can apply even when the information is true. So a true but privacy-invading disclosure may be an offence even though it is not defamation under section 9.
How does civil liability work?
Civil damages run alongside the criminal case. Under the Tort Liability Act, compensation may be awarded for the suffering (karsimys) caused by, among other things, an offence against another person's honour, and the injured party commonly attaches this claim to the criminal prosecution. For statements made through the media, the Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media (460/2003) routes content liability through the Tort Liability Act and makes the publisher and broadcaster liable for the compensation. There is no fixed statutory cap, and awards depend on the gravity of the statement and the harm caused. Because the damages claim is usually combined with the prosecution, a single set of proceedings can produce both a criminal penalty and an award of compensation.
What defences and privileges apply?
The central protections are the criticism and public-interest exceptions. Section 9 provides that criticism directed at a person's activities in politics, business, public office or position, science, art, or other comparable public activity is not defamation if it does not clearly exceed what can be deemed acceptable, and that presenting information to deal with a matter of general importance is not defamation if, considering its contents and the rights of others, it does not clearly exceed acceptable limits. Truth is relevant but not always a complete defence: section 9 also punishes disparagement separate from false-fact claims, so a gratuitously insulting statement, or a true statement about private life, can still be punishable. Finnish courts apply section 12 of the Constitution and Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, and the Supreme Court has acquitted defendants where a statement was criticism of a public figure's conduct on a matter of public interest.
| Offence | Section | Maximum penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Defamation (kunnianloukkaus) | 24:9 | Fine |
| Aggravated defamation (torkea kunnianloukkaus) | 24:10 | Fine or 2 years |
| Dissemination of private information | 24:8 | Fine |
| Aggravated dissemination of private information | 24:8a | Fine or 2 years |
What is the limitation period?
The limitation period depends on the maximum penalty under Chapter 8 of the Criminal Code. Ordinary defamation under section 9, being a fine-only offence, has a two-year limitation period, while aggravated defamation under section 10, with its two-year maximum prison term, has a five-year limitation period. The Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media contains short procedural deadlines, such as a three-month window to seek the identifying information of the sender of a network message and a 14-day window to demand a reply or correction, but these are procedural steps rather than the prosecution limitation period.

How is online defamation treated?
The substantive rules apply online. The Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media (460/2003) is technology-neutral and expressly covers online publishing, defining a network message, a network publication, and a program, and it places the underlying criminal liability on the perpetrator or accomplice as defined in the Criminal Code. A defamatory social media post is therefore prosecuted under Chapter 24, section 9 or 10 itself, as confirmed by Supreme Court case law involving a social media post. The Act also provides for a designated responsible editor for mass media, allows a court to order the keeper of a server to release information identifying the sender of a network message, and allows a court to order distribution of an unlawful network message to cease.
Watch out: A defamatory post on social media is prosecuted under the ordinary Criminal Code defamation sections, so an individual user who posts a false or disparaging statement can be personally liable, not just a media organization.
How do you bring a defamation claim in Finland?
Defamation is a complainant offence. Under Chapter 24, section 12, the prosecutor generally does not bring charges for defamation or aggravated defamation unless the injured party reports the offence for prosecution, although the Prosecutor General may order charges where the offence was committed through the mass media and a very important public interest requires it. Cases are heard in the District Court (karajaoikeus) as the court of first instance, and the injured party typically joins a civil claim for damages for suffering to the prosecution. For media-content cases, the Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media vests the decision to bring public charges in the Prosecutor General. This is general information about Finnish law, not legal advice for a specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Finland?
Yes. Chapter 24 of the Criminal Code makes defamation (section 9) and aggravated defamation (section 10) criminal offences. It is a complainant offence under section 12, so the prosecutor generally acts only if the injured party reports the offence for prosecution.
What are the penalties for defamation in Finland?
Ordinary defamation under section 9 carries a fine only, after a 2014 reform removed imprisonment for the basic offence. Aggravated defamation under section 10 carries a fine or imprisonment for up to two years where the act causes considerable suffering or particularly extensive damage.
Can you sue for defamation in Finland, and how much can you recover?
Yes. The Tort Liability Act allows compensation for the suffering (karsimys) caused by an offence against honour, usually claimed alongside the criminal case. There is no fixed cap, and the amount depends on the gravity of the statement and the harm caused.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Finland?
Truth defeats the false-information limb of section 9, but it is not always a complete shield, because section 9 also punishes disparagement separate from false claims. A gratuitously insulting statement, or a true statement about private life, can still be punishable.
Is criticism of public figures allowed in Finland?
Yes, within limits. Section 9 provides that criticism of a person's activities in politics, business, public office, science, or art is not defamation if it does not clearly exceed what can be deemed acceptable, and presenting information on a matter of general importance is treated the same way.
What is the time limit for a defamation claim in Finland?
Under Chapter 8 of the Criminal Code, the limitation period is two years for ordinary defamation, a fine-only offence, and five years for aggravated defamation, which carries up to two years' imprisonment.
How is online defamation handled in Finland?
The same Criminal Code defamation sections apply to online statements, and the Supreme Court has applied them to social media posts. The Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media adds rules on responsible editors, identifying message senders, and ceasing distribution of unlawful content.
What is the difference between defamation and spreading private information in Finland?
Defamation under section 9 targets false information or insinuations, or disparagement. Sections 8 and 8a target spreading information about a person's private life, which can apply even when the information is true, so the two offences protect different interests.
Sources and References
- Criminal Code of Finland (39/1889), official English translation, Chapter 24 sections 8 to 10 and Chapter 8 (limitation)(finlex.fi).gov
- Act on the Exercise of Freedom of Expression in Mass Media (460/2003), official English translation(finlex.fi).gov
- Tort Liability Act (412/1974), official English translation, compensation for suffering(finlex.fi).gov
- Constitution of Finland (731/1999), section 12 (freedom of expression)(finlex.fi).gov
- Supreme Court of Finland (Korkein oikeus), KKO:2022:1, defamation and the criticism exception(korkeinoikeus.fi).gov
- U.S. Library of Congress: Guide to Law Online, Finland(loc.gov).gov
- Columbia Global Freedom of Expression: Niskasaari v. Finland (ECtHR, Article 10)(globalfreedomofexpression.columbia.edu)