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Finnish Pronunciation for Beginners: Spelled Exactly as It Sounds

By Miracle Team ·

If Finnish grammar is the language’s reputation, pronunciation is its best-kept secret. Finnish is almost perfectly phonetic: every letter is always pronounced, always the same way, and never silent. Learn a short list of rules and you can read any Finnish word aloud correctly — even one you’ve never seen. For a language famous for being hard, this part is genuinely easy. Here’s everything a beginner needs.

The golden rule: one letter, one sound

In English, “ough” can be pronounced six different ways. Finnish refuses to play that game. Each letter maps to exactly one sound, and that sound never changes depending on the word. There are no silent letters and almost no exceptions. Once you’ve learned the alphabet’s sounds, spelling and pronunciation become the same skill — which is why Finnish is so satisfying to read aloud.

The eight vowels

Vowels are the heart of Finnish, and there are eight of them. Six are familiar; two need a moment’s attention:

  • a, e, i, o, u — clean and pure, close to Spanish or Italian vowels (not the gliding English ones).
  • y — like German ü or French u: say “ee” but round your lips.
  • ä — the “a” in cat.
  • ö — like the “u” in fur, or German ö.

Those two dotted vowels, ä and ö, are real letters with their own sounds — not decorated versions of a and o. They even sit at the very end of the Finnish alphabet.

Stress is always on the first syllable

This single rule removes a whole category of worry. In Finnish, the main stress falls on the first syllable of every word, every time — KII-tos, AN-teeksi, HEL-sinki. There’s nothing to memorize and no exceptions to trip over. Just hit the first syllable and keep going.

Double letters change the meaning

Here’s the one rule that surprises beginners. A doubled vowel or consonant is a long sound — held about twice as long — and it isn’t decoration: it can change the word entirely. The classic trio:

  • tuli = fire
  • tuuli (long u) = wind
  • tulli (long l) = customs

So you genuinely pronounce the difference between a single and double letter, holding the long one a beat longer. Kiitos has a long “ii”; kuukausi (month) has two long vowels. Train your ear for this early — it matters.

Vowel harmony, briefly

You don’t need to master this to start, but it’s worth meeting. Finnish vowels split into two teams — back vowels a, o, u and front vowels ä, ö, y — and a single native word uses only one team (the neutral e and i can join either). That’s why endings come in pairs: talossa (in the house) but kylässä (in the village). Your ear picks this up naturally long before you can explain it.

A few consonant notes

Most consonants are close to English, with a few friendly quirks:

  • r is rolled/tapped, as in Spanish or Italian.
  • j sounds like English “y” (ja = “yah”).
  • h is always pronounced, even in the middle of words.
  • The letters b, c, f, q, w, x, z, å appear almost only in foreign loanwords — native Finnish barely uses them.

Practise on real words

The fastest way to lock this in is to pronounce useful words from day one, with native audio to copy. Start with the everyday set in 100 most common Finnish words and the ready-made lines in 30 common Finnish phrases for beginners. Then follow the full plan in how to learn Finnish for beginners — pronunciation is Step 2 for a reason.

Let your ears do the work

The single best pronunciation tool is hearing each word said by a native speaker and copying it out loud. Learn Finnish For Beginners pairs every word with a clear picture and native-speaker audio, so you build an accurate accent from your very first lesson — and the whole course works offline, so you can practise anywhere.

Download Learn Finnish For Beginners free on Google Play and start sounding Finnish from day one.