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Market Access for Medical Technologies in Finland

A brief overview of key market access pathways and challenges for medical devices, in-vitro diagnostic tests in Finland

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Key Topics

There are three key themes describing market access for medical technologies in Finland: 

  • Reimbursement: payment mechanism via the DRG system and regional price lists
  • Funding: recommendations by the national Council for Choices in Health Care
  • Health technology assessment: obtaining recommendations from the national and local HTA bodies
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Reimbursement

There is no national reimbursement or funding model for healthcare services in Finland. Wellbeing counties in Finland are funded in different ways. Local price lists (fee-for-service), activity-based funding on the basis of diagnosis-related groups (DRGs), and global budget adjusted for DRG activity are the three most common ways of financing health care services.

Finland shares the DRG system (NordDRG) with several other countries, including Sweden and Norway. However, all inter-regional care is reimbursed on a case-by-case basis via the DRG system. Therefore, the role of DRG is higher for procedures, which are concentrated only in several hospitals across the country and provide care for patients from other Finnish wellbeing counties. 

DRGs are determined by the combination of a procedure code (THL) and a diagnosis code (ICD-10). THL nomenclature is maintained by the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare and released a few times a year. The Finnish version of the NordDRG system is approved annually.

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Funding

Finland has no nationally defined list of health benefits that are guaranteed to the Finnish population. Decisions on which treatment methods to use and which new technologies to introduce are made by the hospitals.

In order to promote equal access, cost-effective, and efficient use of medical technologies in the country, the Council for Choices in Health Care in Finland (COHERE) evaluates technologies and provides recommendations for the adoption of novel technologies to payers (wellbeing counties) and healthcare providers. 

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Health Technology Assessment

HTA is performed on the national level (as part of the COHERE recommendations or stand-alone assessments by the Finnish Coordinating Center for Health Technology Assessment) or on the local level (which can inform hospital decision-making).

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Specifics for IVD Tests

There is no specific reimbursement framework for in-vitro diagnostic tests in public laboratories. IVD tests are funded using a global budget principle as part of the laboratory funding.

The Social Insurance Institution of Finland (Kela) reimburses IVD tests performed in private laboratories ordered by private physicians.

MTRC has experience with more than 97 projects in Finland

News and Insights

Digi-HTA assessment scale updated in Finland

In April 2026, the Finnish Coordinating Center for Health Technology Assessment (FinCCHTA) updated the Digi-HTA assessment scale. Products are now scored across five evaluation subareas using a scale of 2, 1.7, 0.9, or -4. FinCCHTA issues its final recommendation through a traffic light model based on the total score, with 10 points corresponding to the green category and a score of 4 or below corresponding to the red category.

New procedure codes in Finland from January 2026

In July 2025, the Finnish classification of procedures (THL) was updated. Forty-five procedure codes concerning ophthalmology, radiology, e-Health, radiotherapy, nuclear medicine, interventional radiology, and some other fields were introduced to come into force on January 1, 2026.

Laboratory Tests Nomenclature updated in Finland

On May 12, 2025, the updated version of the Finnish Laboratory Tests Nomenclature was published by the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) to come into force on June 1, 2025. Twenty-one new codes were introduced.

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