English to Finnish Translation


The A-Z for English to Finnish translation

Looking for a first-rate Finnish to English or English to Finnish translation? Look no further.

The Translating-Interpreting.co.uk team team of professional and experienced Finnish translators will take care of all your Finnish translation needs, offering you a cost effective one-stop translation solution.

Our customer orientated approach gives you access to fast, quality Finnish translations. We guarantee you will receive your top-notch Finnish translation how you want it and when you want it.

Top-of-the-line English to Finnish translation

Our team of Finnish translators are at the apex of their industry and strive for customer satisfaction.

We deal with translations from English to Finnish and also from Finnish to English. Our translators will always translate into their mother tongue - so a Finnish speaker will translate into Finnish and an English speaker will translate into English. This ensures the finest work.

Our translators deal with a range of materials including letters, brochures, handbooks, articles, manuals, guides, contracts, novels and much more. In addition, our respected Finnish translators specialise in the translation of legal, engineering, marketing, business, IT and academic documents.

Simply stated, for all your Finnish translation needs, Translating-Interpreting.co.uk are the company you can depend on. Don't delay; send your translation our way.

FREE no-obligation English to Finnish translation quote

For a Finnish translation quote please simply contact us to discuss your needs.


About Finnish

Finnish is spoken by roughly 5 million people in Finland.

Dialects include South-western Finnish, Häme (Tavast), South Pohjanmaa, Central and North Pohjanmaa, Peräpohja, Savo (Savolax), South-eastern Finnish (Finnish Karjala, Finnish Karelian).

South-eastern dialects, called 'Karelian' in colloquial Finnish, are distinct from true Karelian. Finnish is closely related to Karelian and Olonetsian. In Russia eastern dialects merge gradually into Karelian.