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Lapsilisä

Child benefit

FPA:s barnbidrag för varje barn under 17 — automatiskt, ingen inkomstgräns, skattefritt.

≈ 1,500 €/år Svårighetsgrad Kela
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Barnbidraget är en universell förmån som betalas för varje barn under 17 som bor stadigvarande i Finland enligt barnbidragslagen (796/1992). Förmånen är skattefri och påverkas inte av familjens inkomster, tillgångar eller föräldrarnas sysselsättning. Beloppet per barn ökar med antalet barn: mindre för det första, mer för varje ytterligare. En ensamförsörjare får ett höjt belopp per barn. Ansökan görs en gång efter barnets födelse, varefter bidraget betalas månadsvis utan ny ansökan.

Berättigande

Du får barnbidrag om:

  • Barnet bor stadigvarande i Finland
  • Barnet är under 17 år
  • Du är barnets förälder, vårdnadshavare eller annan person som faktiskt sköter barnet
  • Barnbidrag inte redan betalas till någon annan för barnet

Legal basis

Child benefit is governed by the Child Benefit Act (lapsilisälaki 796/1992). It is one of the oldest and simplest benefits in the Finnish welfare system: it is universal — paid for every child under 17 living in Finland, regardless of the parents' income, assets or employment.

The benefit is granted and paid by Kela. Unlike means-tested benefits such as basic social assistance or housing allowance, child benefit is not reduced by other family income and is not clawed back when income limits are exceeded.

Child benefit is tax-free — it is not counted in the income base of other Kela benefits or in taxation. It does not affect, for example, the amount of housing allowance or basic social assistance, even though formally it is part of the household's available funds.

Child benefit amount in 2026

The monthly amount of child benefit is graded by the order of the child. The 2026 amounts (per Kela's most recent figures) per month:

Order of childAmount €/month
1st childabout €94.88
2nd childabout €104.84
3rd childabout €133.79
4th childabout €173.24
5th and furtherabout €192.69

In addition, the single-parent supplement is about €73.30/month per child. A single parent is someone who does not live in a shared household with another adult — a cohabiting partner under the same roof removes entitlement to the supplement.

Children under 3 also receive the early-years front-loaded portion of child benefit, a small uplift on the regular amount up to age 3.

Who can receive child benefit

Child benefit can be received by a person who actually cares for the child. This is usually the parent, but it can also be a guardian, foster parent or another adult permanently caring for the child.

By default the benefit is paid to the mother, unless the parents have agreed otherwise. If the child's parents live in different households, the child benefit is paid to the parent with whom the child mainly resides according to the population register.

The child must reside permanently in Finland. Temporary stays abroad — for example a short holiday or student exchange — do not break entitlement. If the child moves abroad permanently, child benefit ends.

When child benefit ends

Child benefit ends at the end of the month in which the child turns 17. After that, the family's financial support is mainly continued by:

Child benefit also ends if the child marries, begins to receive a national pension themselves or moves abroad permanently. The death of a parent does not interrupt child benefit; it transfers automatically to the other guardian or foster parent.

How to apply for child benefit

Child benefit is applied for only once after the child's birth or move to Finland. After that the benefit is paid automatically each month until the child turns 17 — no re-application is needed.

The application is made online in OmaKela. You will need the child's personal identity code, retrieved automatically from the population register, plus the applicant's personal identity code and bank-account number. No attachments are required — Kela checks the data directly with the population register.

Processing is usually fast, under two weeks. The benefit is paid at the start of the month for the previous month. Child benefit can be granted retroactively for at most 6 months, so a delay in applying does not necessarily mean lost money — but support older than that is not paid.

Child benefit as part of the family benefit mix

Child benefit is rarely a family's only Kela benefit. A typical family benefit mix consists of the following, complementary benefits:

Several of these can be applied for in one go — Buronia helps to make them into one coherent set of applications where the data does not contradict between forms.

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