Description
In May 2025, the Finnish Supreme Administrative Court ruled on whether Wolt couriers were employees or independent contractors, finding that the couriers met all the criteria for an employment relationship under Finnish law. The ruling overturns a ruling by a lower court, the administrative court in Hämeenlinna, which had found the couriers to be independent contractors.
The court noted that while the couriers displayed some features typical of independent contractors, Wolt exercised significant control and monitoring over the couriers, indicating that their independence was largely fictitious.
Although found to be employees, the court ruled that the Working Hours Act does not apply to the couriers. The curt concluded that the couriers' work was characterised by working time autonomy as they could decide their working hours and the overall length of their work was not pre-defined. Consequently, the couriers were not covered by the Working Hours Act.
- Keywords
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autonomy and control,
work intensity, working time quality, work-life balance,
working conditions,
employment status
- Actors
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Platform,
Court
- Sector
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Transportation and storage
- Platforms
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Wolt
Sources
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In February 2024, the Finnish delivery company Wolt won a landmark court case where its couriers were ruled to be entrepreneurs, not employees. The administrative court in Hämeenlinna assessed the …