Translate English into Finnish with all 15 cases, spoken pronunciation and MP3 audio. Free and unlimited.
Finnish is spoken by 5.5 million people in one of the most educated and technologically advanced nations on earth. Translate your English and hear the result.
Text-to-speech reads your Finnish translation with natural pronunciation, capturing the long vowels, double consonants and rhythmic patterns that make Finnish distinctive.
Download spoken Finnish translations as permanent audio files for study, business or Helsinki trip preparation.
Text in, translation out, everything erased. No exceptions, no data retained.
English has no cases. Finnish has fifteen. This tool adds every suffix and reads the result so you can hear what agglutination sounds like.
Paste English and receive Finnish with correct case endings, vowel harmony, consonant gradation and the agglutinative structure that makes Finnish fascinatingly complex.
Play the translation to hear Finnish pronunciation including the double vowels, double consonants and the characteristic first-syllable stress pattern of this Uralic language.
Save spoken Finnish as MP3 for language study, Nokia country business preparation, sauna vocabulary or academic reference.
Finland leads the world in education, technology innovation, clean energy, press freedom and quality of life. Helsinki is a growing hub for startups, gaming companies (Supercell, Rovio, Remedy), clean technology, forestry science and Nordic design. English-speaking businesses partnering with Finnish companies, entering the Finnish market or attending events in Finland need Finnish-language materials for proposals, presentations, employee communications and regulatory compliance. While Finnish English proficiency is among the highest in the world, providing Finnish-language materials demonstrates commitment that strengthens professional relationships.
Finland attracts a growing number of English-speaking tourists to Helsinki, Lapland (for Northern Lights and Santa Claus Village), the lake districts, and the coastal archipelago. Finnish phrases earn genuine delight from locals who rarely encounter foreigners attempting their language. The text-to-speech feature is critical because Finnish pronunciation, while regular, includes sounds and patterns completely foreign to English: long vowels and consonants that change meaning (tuli = fire, tuuli = wind, tulli = customs), vowel harmony that governs the entire suffix system, and consonant gradation that alters root forms in unpredictable ways. Hearing these features in audio makes Finnish approachable rather than impossible.
Finland leads the world in education and technology innovation, and Helsinki is a growing hub for gaming, clean tech and Nordic design where Finnish-language engagement signals professional commitment.
Finnish is a Uralic language with 15 grammatical cases, agglutinative morphology, vowel harmony, consonant gradation, no grammatical gender, no articles and no prepositions (using case endings and postpositions instead). A single Finnish word can express what takes an entire English phrase: talossanikin means in my house too (talo + ssa + ni + kin = house + in + my + too). This agglutinative system builds words by stacking suffixes in a strict order, with each suffix triggering phonological adjustments in the preceding segments.
The translator handles this extraordinary complexity: English prepositions become Finnish case endings, English articles are dropped, English word order is restructured (Finnish allows considerable freedom but has default patterns), vowel harmony governs suffix selection, and consonant gradation is applied where Finnish phonology requires it. The result reads as properly formed Finnish that a native speaker would find grammatically correct, with every case ending in place and every phonological rule respected.
Finnish pronunciation is extremely regular: every letter is always pronounced the same way, there are no silent letters, and stress always falls on the first syllable. However, the specific sounds include long vowels and consonants (kk, pp, tt, aa, ee, ii, oo, uu) where duration changes meaning, diphthongs that English lacks (uo, yo, ie), and the distinction between front and back vowels that governs vowel harmony. The overall sound is musical and rhythmic, with the first-syllable stress creating a distinctive bouncing pattern.
The text-to-speech models all of these features, letting English speakers hear the length distinctions, the diphthongs and the rhythmic patterns in natural connected speech. For visitors to Helsinki practicing basic phrases, business travelers preparing for meetings with Finnish partners, or language enthusiasts captivated by one of the most structurally fascinating languages in Europe, the audio output transforms written Finnish from an impenetrable wall of double letters into pronounceable, enjoyable language.
Save spoken Finnish as MP3 files for any application. Gaming and tech companies prepare Finnish presentations for Helsinki events. Tourism operators create Finnish welcome materials for Lapland visitors. Students build pronunciation libraries for Finnish language courses. Sauna culture enthusiasts compile the specialized Finnish vocabulary for this national institution. Business travelers prepare meeting greetings and professional terminology.
Every file is free, permanent and unrestricted. No watermarks, no daily limits, no registration required. Finnish is famously challenging for English speakers, and audio support is not a luxury but a necessity for making any progress with spoken communication.
Standard written English produces the best Finnish output. The 15 case endings are generated automatically based on the grammatical function of each noun phrase. Vowel harmony and consonant gradation are applied correctly. Finnish compound words are formed following standard conventions. The partitive case (used for partial objects, which has no English equivalent) is applied where Finnish grammar requires it. For long texts, translate paragraph by paragraph.
English passive voice is converted to Finnish passive constructions. Modal expressions are mapped onto Finnish equivalents. The conditional mood is used where Finnish convention demands it. The output reads as natural, grammatically proper Finnish suitable for business, academic, tourism and personal communication contexts.
For legal contracts, technology licensing agreements, gaming industry localization, pharmaceutical regulatory filings, forestry sector documentation, certified translations, marketing campaigns targeting Finnish consumers, literary translation or any material where English-to-Finnish accuracy carries commercial or institutional weight, work with a professional translator.
This translator handles everyday communication, business drafting, travel preparation, study materials and general reference with strong results. A professional handles everything requiring legal certification, industry-specific terminology or publication-quality Finnish.
English enters, Finnish returns with all 15 case forms, everything is permanently erased. No copies, no logs, no cookies. Every session receives identical total privacy.
This is an architectural guarantee. Your text passes through once and leaves no trace on our systems. Use it freely for any content, from confidential business proposals to personal travel phrases, with complete confidence.
Finnish is spoken by about 5 million people, mostly in Finland. It is not an Indo-European language, which sets it apart from most of its neighbors. People translate English to Finnish for work, study, travel and family.
Finnish belongs to the Uralic family, a distant relative of Hungarian rather than of Swedish or Russian. It is agglutinative and uses around fifteen cases, so a single word can hold what English spreads across several. Vowels follow a harmony rule, there is no grammatical gender, and the length of a vowel or consonant can change the meaning.
| English | Finnish | Say it |
|---|---|---|
| Hi | Hei | hey |
| Thank you | Kiitos | KEE-tos |
| Please | Ole hyvä | OH-leh HOO-va |
| Yes / No | Kyllä / Ei | KOOL-la / ay |
| Good morning | Hyvää huomenta | HOO-va HWOH-men-tah |
| Goodbye | Näkemiin | NA-keh-meen |
Finnish packs grammar into endings, so one long word can replace an English phrase, which is expected. Keep double letters in place, since a long sound can spell a different word from a short one. Short, plain sentences give the steadiest output.
Yes. This English to Finnish translator is free with no limit on how many translations you make and no sign-up.
Yes. After the translation is read aloud, use the download button to save the Finnish audio as an MP3 file you can keep.
No. You can translate English into Finnish right away, with no registration, no login and no email.
No. Your text is processed, returned to your screen and then discarded. It is not saved, shared or used to build a profile.