Helsinki
Finland (capital)
Sold price (Statistics Finland). The capital, by far the most expensive, but easing over the year.
Selling price per sqm
EUR4,823 /sqm
down 4.5% over 12 months
Cooling See homes in Helsinki See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Finland property prices
Short answer. In Q1 2026, the highest selling prices were in Helsinki (about 4,823 EUR per square meter) and the lowest in Oulu (about 2,166 EUR per square meter), a gap of about 123%. These are sold (transaction) prices for existing apartments in euros. Source: Statistics Finland register, via asunnollehinta.fi (sold prices for existing apartments).
Finland (capital)
Sold price (Statistics Finland). The capital, by far the most expensive, but easing over the year.
Selling price per sqm
EUR4,823 /sqm
down 4.5% over 12 months
Cooling See homes in Helsinki See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Finland
Sold price (Statistics Finland). The second largest city, next to Helsinki, down over the year.
Selling price per sqm
EUR3,694 /sqm
down 6.6% over 12 months
Cooling See homes in Espoo See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Finland
Sold price (Statistics Finland). A lakeside city, the third largest in Finland.
Selling price per sqm
EUR2,924 /sqm
down 1.2% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Tampere See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Finland
Sold price (Statistics Finland). The old capital on the southwest coast, one of the few cities still rising.
Selling price per sqm
EUR2,700 /sqm
up 3.4% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Turku See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Finland
Sold price (Statistics Finland). Part of greater Helsinki, home to the main airport.
Selling price per sqm
EUR2,598 /sqm
down 3.8% over 12 months
Cooling See homes in Vantaa See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
Northern Finland
Sold price (Statistics Finland). The biggest city in the north, the most affordable here and still rising.
Selling price per sqm
EUR2,166 /sqm
up 3.9% over 12 months
Stable See homes in Oulu See the price dataAs of Q1 2026
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| City | Selling (EUR/sqm) | Sold (EUR/sqm) | Change, 12 months | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Helsinki | 4,823 | n/a | -4.5% | Cooling |
| Espoo | 3,694 | n/a | -6.6% | Cooling |
| Tampere | 2,924 | n/a | -1.2% | Stable |
| Turku | 2,700 | n/a | +3.4% | Stable |
| Vantaa | 2,598 | n/a | -3.8% | Cooling |
| Oulu | 2,166 | n/a | +3.9% | Stable |
Source: Statistics Finland register, via asunnollehinta.fi (sold prices for existing apartments). https://stat.fi/en/statistics/ashi
Finland's official transaction based House Price Index fell about 3.1% over the year to 2025-Q4, with the index at 97.43 (2015 = 100). This is the official trend behind the asking prices above. Source: Eurostat, House Price Index (prc_hpi_q), fetched 2026-06-08. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/prc_hpi_q/default/table?lang=en
Finland's official trend comes from Statistics Finland (Tilastokeskus) and is also in Eurostat. The per square meter figures here are sold (transaction) prices for existing apartments, drawn from the official Statistics Finland register (tax records). Finland is a cooling market: prices fell about 4 percent nationally over the year to spring 2026.
In the big southern cities, yes. Helsinki, Espoo and Vantaa fell over the year to early 2026, while Turku and Oulu rose a little. Nationally old apartments were down about 4 percent.
These are sold (transaction) prices for existing apartments, from the official Statistics Finland register based on tax records, not listing prices.