Do Finland passport holders need a visa to visit KP?
Finnish passport holders need a visa to visit North Korea (DPRK). There is no visa-free, visa-on-arrival, or eVisa option for ordinary tourists. The visa must be arranged in advance through a state-authorized tour operator and is issued as a separate tourist card (not stamped in the passport). Independent travel is not permitted, and as of 2026 access for Western/European tourists is heavily restricted. A Finland ordinary passport holder requires a tourist visa to enter North Korea. The DPRK has no online visa portal, no walk-in counter, and no visa-on-arrival channel that a traveler can use directly. By law, all foreign tourists (except a narrow Chinese border-county exemption and current Russian-focused arrangements) must travel on a guided tour organized by a tour operator registered with North Korea's State General Bureau of Tourist Guidance. The operator submits the application to the Korea International Travel Company (KITC); on approval the visa is issued as a separate tourist card and handed to the traveler at a pre-tour meeting in China (or aboard the Beijing-Pyongyang train), so the passport is never stamped. The visa fee is normally bundled into the all-inclusive tour package. Importantly, as of 2026 North Korea's tourism reopening has prioritized Russian and Chinese nationals; Western and European tourists, including Finnish citizens, face significant practical barriers to entry despite being legally eligible to apply. Travelers should confirm current access with an authorized operator and check Finland's Ministry for Foreign Affairs travel advisory before committing.
VISA REQUIREDTOURISMSINGLE ENTRYLast verified 2026-05-30
For guidance only — visa rules change with little notice. Always confirm directly with the destination's embassy or foreign ministry before booking non-refundable travel. Information here applies to ordinary (non-diplomatic) passports unless noted.