Compare the highlights, then save the ones that fit your trip.
A place isn’t one thing all year. This is the fast, high-signal view of what’s culturally alive in Finland over the next 6 weeks — with confidence labels and “last checked” trust cues.
Browse first. You can save up to 5 celebrations on this device before you start free to keep them updated.
Ilmajoki stages an opera about the Great Wrath in Southern Ostrobothnia — a music festival built around a single historical theme so local most Finns haven't heard of it.
Åva's village association raises its Midsummer pole by the sea on Brändö — the smallest Åland celebration with folk singing, pancakes, and the midnight sun as lighting.
Six thousand Joensuu schoolchildren sing in Laulurinteen Park to open the Finnish summer — the Suomen suven avaus where childhood and the season begin together.
Kastelholm's open-air museum raises its Midsummer pole in the castle grounds — the Jan Karlsgården celebration where Åland heritage is walked, not just displayed.
Bjärström gathers at Karl-Erik's village hall to leaf the maypole, eat herring, and dance — Åland midsummer where everyone knows everyone and the accordion never stops.