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Fixed price from €65 · about 30 minutes · door-to-door with meet & greet
Book your transferTravel directly from Helsinki Airport (HEL) to the heart of Helsinki in a private, pre-booked car with an English-speaking driver. Your driver tracks your flight, meets you in the arrivals hall with a name sign, and takes you straight to your hotel or address in the city centre — whether that is a flagship hotel on the Esplanade, an apartment in Kruununhaka, a meeting in the Kluuvi business district, or a quiet street in Ullanlinna by the sea. No taxi queue, no meter climbing in traffic, and a price that is fixed the moment you book.
Helsinki, the capital of Finland since 1812, wraps around a series of peninsulas and islands on the Baltic coast, and its compact, walkable centre packs the cathedral, the market squares, the design quarter, the main museums and the waterfront into a few square kilometres. We have been driving international travellers into Helsinki since 2008, and the airport-to-city-centre run is the route we know best.
The Helsinki Airport ↔ city centre route is a fixed-price city transfer of about 20 km. You pay the same fixed fare whatever the traffic and whatever the time of day, and the exact price for your specific hotel or address is shown the moment you book — and stays fixed once you do.
| Vehicle | Best for | From |
|---|---|---|
| Standard — comfortable sedan or crossover (up to 3 passengers, 3 bags) | Value option | €65 |
| Business — executive sedan (up to 3 passengers, 3 bags) | Couples, business travellers | €85 |
| Business Van — premium Mercedes minivan (up to 8 passengers, 8 bags) | Families, groups, extra luggage | €95 |
| First Class Van — premium Mercedes minivan (up to 7 passengers, 7 bags) | Groups wanting extra comfort | €120 |
| First Class — luxury flagship sedan (up to 3 passengers, 3 bags) | VIP, executive travel | €145 |
All fares are per vehicle (not per person), and include all taxes, flight tracking, meet & greet and up to 60 minutes of free waiting time from the moment your flight lands. Child seats are available on request at no extra charge.
A fixed price, not a running meter. An ordinary metered taxi into Helsinki is unpredictable — you never know which car will arrive or what the fare will be once it sits in traffic on Tuusulanväylä or Ring Road I. With us you see the full price before you book and pay exactly that, straight to your door. There is no airport surcharge and no night-time surprise.
Door-to-door with your luggage. The train and bus into Helsinki are cheap, but they leave you at the Central Railway Station to find your own way to your hotel with your bags — across tram tracks, down into the metro, or on foot through the centre. A private transfer takes you to the exact address, which matters most late at night, in winter snow, or when you are travelling with children, luggage or equipment.
A driver who waits for you. We track your flight in real time. If you land early or late, your driver is still there in arrivals with a name sign and up to 60 minutes of free waiting time from the moment the wheels touch down — no frantic messaging, no missed pickup.
Reliable even when the trains are not. Through spring and summer 2026 the airport rail line (the I and P Ring Rail trains) is running a reduced maintenance schedule, with some services turning back before the centre. A pre-booked private car is unaffected: it leaves when you land and goes directly to your door.
Helsinki city centre is about 20 km south of the airport, and the drive normally takes around 25–35 minutes depending on traffic and the time of day. The route runs mostly on the motorway before dropping into the grid of streets around the Central Railway Station, Kamppi and the Esplanade — so within half an hour of clearing the arrivals hall you can be checking in on Pohjoisesplanadi or sitting down to a meeting in Kluuvi.
We are a pre-booked service — please book at least a few hours ahead, and ideally the day before. After booking you receive an email confirmation with your booking reference and clear meeting instructions for the arrivals hall. Driver details are shared the day before the trip on request. From the city centre we also run the journey in reverse, picking you up in good time for check-in, so a round trip is a single, simple arrangement.
Helsinki is a compact, sea-facing capital where neoclassical squares, a granite-cut rock church, world-class design and an island fortress all sit within walking distance of each other. The centre is small enough to cross on foot, ringed by water on three sides, and laid out around a handful of landmark squares — which makes it one of the most rewarding European capitals to arrive into. The sections below cover what is actually here, district by district and sight by sight, so you can picture exactly where your transfer will drop you.
The white, green-domed Helsinki Cathedral rising above Senate Square is the city's defining image. The square and the surrounding government and university buildings were laid out in the early 19th century by the architect Carl Ludvig Engel as Finland's neoclassical "Empire" centre, and the cathedral was completed in 1852. The steps in front of it are one of the best free viewpoints in Helsinki, looking down over the square to the harbour. Around it sit the University of Helsinki main building, the National Library and Sederholm House, the oldest stone building in central Helsinki. In December the whole square fills with the wooden stalls of the Tuomaan Markkinat Christmas market.
A short walk downhill, Market Square (Kauppatori) is the lively open-air market on the South Harbour, where stalls sell berries, salmon, handicrafts and, in autumn, the famous Baltic herring market. Beside it, the red-brick Old Market Hall (Vanha kauppahalli), open since 1889, is the place for a bowl of Finnish fish soup, archipelago cheese and salmon. This is also the departure point for the harbour ferries, and the waterfront promenade runs from here past the Presidential Palace and City Hall toward Katajanokka.
Esplanadi — the tree-lined Esplanade Park between Pohjoisesplanadi and Eteläesplanadi — is the city's elegant promenade, with the Kappeli restaurant, a summer stage with free concerts, and the flagship stores of Finnish design houses along its sides. Running parallel, Aleksanterinkatu is the main shopping street, anchored by the landmark Stockmann department store. Together with the Design District (a quarter of some 200 design shops, studios and galleries spread across Punavuori, Kaartinkaupunki, Kruununhaka, Kamppi and Ullanlinna), this is the retail and design heart of the city.
Helsinki's major art museums cluster in and around the centre: the Ateneum (the Finnish National Gallery's classic collection, by the Central Station), Kiasma (contemporary art in Steven Holl's curving building on Mannerheiminaukio), HAM Helsinki Art Museum (in the Tennispalatsi), Amos Rex (dramatic underground galleries beneath Lasipalatsi Square), and the Design Museum in Ullanlinna. Nearby stand the National Museum of Finland and the Natural History Museum in Töölö. Crowning the modern centre is Oodi, the Helsinki Central Library — an award-winning timber-and-glass building opposite Parliament, free to enter, and one of the most photographed pieces of new Nordic architecture.
Beyond the cathedral, the red-brick Uspenski Cathedral — the Russian Orthodox cathedral with golden cupolas on the Katajanokka hill — is among the most striking churches in northern Europe. In Töölö, the Temppeliaukio Church, the "Rock Church", is carved directly into the bedrock under a copper dome and is famous for its acoustics. The tiny wooden Kamppi Chapel of Silence offers a calm pause in the middle of the shopping district. The Central Railway Station, with its great granite lantern-bearing statues, was designed by Eliel Saarinen and is a National Romantic landmark in its own right, while Parliament House and Alvar Aalto's Finlandia Hall line Mannerheimintie.
Helsinki is a city of the sea, and most of it is reachable from the centre. From Market Square, public ferries cross in about 15–20 minutes to Suomenlinna, the 18th-century UNESCO World Heritage sea fortress spread over several islands — a half-day trip of ramparts, tunnels, cafés and sea views. On the central waterfront, Allas Sea Pool combines heated and Baltic-seawater pools with saunas right by the harbour, and the SkyWheel observation wheel turns above Katajanokka. For an authentic Finnish sauna by the water, the architect-designed Löyly on the southern shore is a short ride from the centre.
Kluuvi is the central business and shopping district around the cathedral, station and Esplanade, and home to the flagship hotels. Kamppi, just west, is the transport and nightlife hub. Kruununhaka and Katajanokka, east of Senate Square, are quiet, historic streets of jugendstil apartment buildings. South of the centre, Punavuori is the trendy design quarter of cafés and boutiques, while Ullanlinna, Eira and Kaivopuisto are the elegant seaside districts of Art Nouveau villas, embassies and coastal parks. Across the bridge to the north, Kallio is the bohemian district of bars, vintage shops and saunas, and Töölö, west of the centre, is the leafy district of parks, the Sibelius Monument, Hietaniemi beach and the Olympic Stadium. Whatever the address, we take you to the door.
We drop guests at every central hotel. Among the landmarks: Hotel Kämp (Finland's grand 1887 hotel facing the Esplanade), Solo Sokos Hotel Torni (a 1931 icon with the rooftop Ateljee Bar), Marski by Scandic (on Mannerheimintie by Stockmann and the station), Scandic Grand Central (in the historic station building), Hotel St. George and Klaus K (design hotels by the Old Church Park and Bulevardi), Hotel Lilla Roberts and GLO Hotel Kluuvi (Design District), Hotel Haven and Hotel F6 (boutique addresses near the harbour), Radisson Blu Plaza (by the station), and the waterfront Hilton Helsinki Strand and Clarion Hotel Helsinki. If your hotel is not listed, it is almost certainly still a fixed-price city transfer — just enter the address when you book.
Helsinki's central business district runs through Kluuvi and along Mannerheimintie, and the city hosts conferences at Finlandia Hall, congresses and corporate events across the centre, and the large trade fairs at Messukeskus in nearby Pasila. For business travellers we offer Business and First Class vehicles, quiet executive sedans, on-time meet & greet, flight tracking and fixed billing — and we can arrange account or invoice handling for companies and travel managers. A pre-booked car means a delegate or executive steps off the plane and straight into a waiting vehicle, with no taxi queue and no uncertainty before an early meeting.
The Old Market Hall and the smaller Hakaniemi and Hietalahti halls are the best introduction to Finnish food, from salmon to cinnamon buns and Finnish coffee. The centre also holds the country's densest cluster of fine dining, including several Michelin-listed restaurants, alongside the café culture of Punavuori and Kallio and the summer terraces along the Esplanade and the harbour.
The centre is genuinely walkable, and on top of that Helsinki has one of Europe's easiest tram networks — trams 2 and 4 in particular loop past most of the sights, and the metro and local trains radiate out from the Central Station. But for the first leg, with luggage and after a flight, a door-to-door transfer remains the easiest way to start the trip.
Helsinki runs on a strong calendar of events, most of them in or around the centre. The year opens with Lux Helsinki, the free light-art festival across the central squares (held 6–11 January in 2026, and again 30 December 2026 – 6 January 2027). Vappu (Walpurgis / May Day, 30 April – 1 May) is the city's biggest street celebration, centred on Market Square and the Esplanade. Summer brings the free World Village Festival at Narinkkatori, Helsinki Pride, the Tuska metal festival, and the big Flow Festival at the Suvilahti power-plant grounds in early August. In late summer the city-wide Helsinki Festival (18 August – 5 September 2026) fills concert halls and the Huvila tent with music, dance and theatre, ending the season with the Night of the Arts. Independence Day on 6 December brings a service at the cathedral and the televised Linnan juhlat reception, and December closes the year with the Tuomaan Markkinat Christmas market on Senate Square. Whatever you are in town for, your driver gets you there and back without parking or tram-stop hassle.
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