Building stock and new production: documentation of statistics
Basic data of the statistics
Data description
The statistics describe the production of buildings and dwellings with the help of the volume of newbuilding subject to building permits and the volume of building production. The measurement units for construction actions having been granted a building permit and building projects started and completed are the number of construction actions, cubic volume, floor area and number of new dwellings. The volume index of newbuilding describes the fixed-price value of ongoing newbuilding relative to the comparison period, the index base year.
In the statistics, the building stock is described according to the intended use of the building, year of construction and gross floor area, for example. Both dwelling and resident data can be linked to buildings with the help of various identification data and building stock data can be produced by all regional divisions based on municipalities and coordinates and by postal code area. Building stock data also include data on free-time residential buildings, such as free-time residences.
The data of the statistics are mainly derived from the built environment information system Ryhti maintained by the Finnish Environment Institute (Syke), to which municipal building supervision authorities report data concerning buildings that are subject to building permits.
Statistical population
The population of the statistics on new production of buildings and dwellings comprises construction actions requiring a building permit, which include new buildings to be built, building expansions and alterations comparable to reconstruction, and new dwellings located in them. The data of the statistics are gradually supplemented as municipal building supervision authorities enter data into the register.
As a rule, under the Construction Act that entered into force at the beginning of 2025, building permits are no longer needed for new buildings of under 30 square metres with other intended use than housing. These buildings are excluded from the statistics starting from the statistical reference year 2025. In addition, the time series of the statistics does not include construction actions directed at buildings demolished before autumn 2024, because their data are not available from the Finnish Environment Institute's Ryhti system.
As regards building stock data, the statistics represent total statistics. The building data of the Ryhti system are not exhaustive for all building types, for which reason buildings used in agricultural production and sauna buildings and outhouses of residential buildings, for example, are eliminated from the building stock statistics.
Statistical unit
Unit of measure
The measurement units used in the building stock data are the number of buildings and dwellings and the gross floor area of buildings in square metres.
Base period
Reference period
Data on the building stock are published annually and they describe the situation on the last day of the year. The data are completed approximately four to five months after the statistical reference period.
The regional breakdown applied in the building stock data is the regional breakdown valid on the day after the compilation period, i.e. the first day at the turn of a year. Therefore, the statistics concerning any municipalities that merge on the first day of a year are compiled as one.
Reference area
Sector coverage
The data on new production do not include buildings entirely controlled by foreign missions, buildings of the Finnish Defence Forces and air raid shelters.
The data in the building register maintained by the Finnish Environment Institute have not been comprehensive for all building types, for which reason the building stock data do not primarily include buildings used in agricultural production, sauna and outhouses of residential buildings, buildings of the Finnish Defence Forces, air raid shelters, buildings entirely controlled by foreign missions, liquid storage buildings or light-structured shelters and kiosks, except when the aforementioned buildings are occupied.
In the source material, Syke categorizes the intended use of the building in a way that deviates from the classification made by the municipal building supervision. For example, some of the buildings in Building Class 11 Civil Engineering buildings have been classified for data protection reasons so that the correct class of use is not known at Statistics Finland. This has an impact on the number and volume of buildings in Class 11 of the Building Classification and therefore the data are not comparable with previously published data.
Time coverage
For new production, the time series is updated starting from 1995 and for the volume index of newbuilding starting from 2000. The data are updated monthly.
Frequency of dissemination
Concepts
Building
Caves and other subterranean spaces which are mainly enclosed within rock or similar walls and/or which do not contain structures comparable to the interior structures of buildings proper, such as underground oil tanks, are not buildings.
Buildings do not include light-structured stalls, kiosks and the like, which do not include spaces separated by closed walls, or transportable caravans, ships and so on.
The building data derive from the building information system maintained by the Finnish Environment Institute Syke.
The building stock statistics of Statistics Finland do not include:
- liquid storage buildings
- buildings used only in agricultural production
- sauna buildings belonging to residential buildings
- outhouses of residential buildings
- buildings entirely controlled by foreign missions
- buildings of the Finnish Defence Forces,
- air raid shelters
except where the above-mentioned buildings are occupied or have commercial properties.
The data on new production of buildings do not include:
- buildings entirely controlled by foreign missions
- buildings of the Finnish Defence Forces
- air raid shelters
Building material
- concrete, light concrete
- brick
- steel
- wood
- other, unknown.
Building permit
Construction actions requiring a building permit are such as construction of a new building, renovation and repair work comparable to construction of a building, expansion of a building or addition of space calculated in its gross floor area, and essential alteration of the intended use of the building or its part. The current Construction Act entered into force on 1 January 2025. Unlike before, building permits are no longer required for new buildings of under 30 square metres with other intended use than housing. These include, for example, sauna buildings and outhouses.
One building permit may cover one or more construction actions. The construction action is directed at one building. The number recorded in the statistics is the number of construction actions.
Completed building
Construction action
One building permit may cover one or more construction actions. The construction action is directed at one building. The number recorded in the statistics is the number of construction actions.
For more details, see building permit.
Construction stage
The data on building projects started in the latest 24 months are estimated values, and they will become revised most during around 12 months from the first release.
Cubic capacity of a building
The cubic capacity of a building is calculated in accordance with the Finnish Standards Association's standard SFS 2460, RT 120.12.
Dwelling
Facilities
The facilities in a dwelling:
- sewage
- running water
- toilet
- hot water
- washing facilities (shower, bathroom or sauna)
- sauna in the dwelling
- central or electric heating.
The data on a dwelling’s facilities have been used in determining the standard of facilities in the dwelling.
Facilities in a building:
- electricity
- sewage
- running water
- hot water
- lift
- sauna in the building
- mechanical ventilation
- air raid shelter.
Floor area
The following are not counted in the dwelling's floor area: garage, cellar, sauna facilities in an unfurnished basement, unheated storage space, balcony, porch, veranda and attic space unless used as a living space.
The floor area of a freetime residence refers to its gross floor area.
Free-time residence
Free-time residences comprise all buildings the intended use of which on 31 December was as a free-time residential building or which on the said date were used as holiday residences.
Free-time residences are not included in the building stock. The floor area of free-time residences refers to the gross floor area of the whole building.
The data on free-time residences are obtained of the Population Information System, maintained by building project notices from municipal building supervision authorities.
Gross floor area
The gross floor area is the horizontal area enclosed by the outer surfaces of the walls of the storeys or their imagined continuation for openings and decorations on the surface of the outer walls.
Heating fuel
The classification is as follows:
- district heating
- oil
- gas
- hard coal
- electricity
- wood
- peat
- geothermal heat
- solar energy
- heat pump
- other, unknown
Heating system
The classification is as follows:
- central water heating
- central air heating
- electric heating
- oven-fireplace-stove heating
- solar heating
- air source heat pump
- no fixed heating installation
- unknown.
In a water central heating system, the building is heated with circulating water, and in an air central heating system, with circulating air. In direct electric heating, the building is heated with the aid of a fixed radiator, etc. connected directly to the electricity network.
In stove heating, heating takes place by burning wood or other fuels in a fireplace (stove) that stores heat. Stove heating also includes electric heating reservoirs, separate fixed oil heaters and heat preserving fireplaces (not lightweight). Stoves used for heating saunas are not regarded as heating equipment.
Holiday resident
When counting the number of holiday residents it has not been possible to take account of the free-time residences owned by death estates or foreigners, or of those in joint ownership.
Intended use of building
The Classification of Buildings is presented in Statistics Finland’s handbook Classification of Buildings 2018.
Not all categories of the Classification of Buildings are included in Statistics Finland's building stock.
Newbuilding
Number of new dwellings
Residential building
Standard of facilities
- a dwelling with a high standard of facilities the dwelling has running water, sewage, hot water, toilet, washing facilities (shower/bathroom or sauna) and central or electric heating
- other or unknown standard of facilities
Started building
Type of building
- one to two-dwelling houses: one to two-dwelling houses and permanently occupied free-time residences
- terraced houses: detached houses with at least three adjoining dwellings and where the spaces belonging to different dwellings are not on top of each other.
- blocks of flats: residential buildings of at least three dwellings in which at least two dwellings are located on top of each other and which do not belong to the categories above
- other buildings: also buildings whose type of building is unknown.
Type of ownership of building
- private person/ death estate
- housing corporation or co-operative
- real estate corporation
- private company
- company controlled by the State or municipality
- State or municipal corporation
- bank or insurance company
- municipality
- State
- social security fund
- religious community, foundation, party, etc.
- other or unknown.
Volume index of newbuilding
In addition to the volume change, the change of the volume index includes changes in the quality of construction, such as changes in time in the planning solution of different building types.
Year of construction
Accuracy, reliability and timeliness
Overall accuracy
Data on buildings and construction actions subject to building permits are obtained from the Finnish Environment Institute weekly. The data include construction actions having been granted a building permit, building projects started and completed, and changes to existing buildings.
The current Construction Act entered into force on 1 January 2025. Unlike before, building permits are no longer required for new buildings of less than 30 square metres with other intended use than housing. These buildings are excluded from the statistics starting from the statistical reference year 2025.
Data reported by municipalities on building projects started accumulate at a delay to the Finnish Environment Institute, for which reason new production data for the latest month are always based on incomplete data at the time of production. The data of the volume index of newbuilding are never final, because data on starts of building projects subject to building permits are continuously updated.
The coverage of the key data on the dwelling stock is fairly good. However, some errors may occur in the numbers of buildings and the attribute data, because not all change data are comprehensively reported to the authorities.
Annually compiled statistical data may be relatively comparable over a longer period of time. Individual annual changes are not accurate in all respects.
From 2020 onwards, free-time residences have been defined as unoccupied buildings included in categories 0210 and 0211 of the Classification of Buildings. Prior to that, detached houses in leisure-time use were included in the data on free-time residences.
It is also possible for the intended use of a free-time residence to be changed into a residential building when it is taken into residential use. A free-time residential building is also recorded as a residential building in case its address is given as a permanent address in the notification of move.
A great many free-time residences do not have data on electrification or running water and sewage connections. According to a sample-based survey (Kesämökkibarometri 2021), 79 per cent of free-time residences fell within the scope of the electricity network and 19 per cent got their domestic water from the network of a water supply plant or a water cooperative. The corresponding data in the statistics on free-time residences based on the official register is that clearly under half of free-time residences have an electricity connection and only a few per cent a connection to a system of running water.
At the beginning of 2015, a permanent building identifier was adopted in the statistics on building stock and in the Digital and Population Data Services Agency's information system, which may have some effect on time series data.
Timeliness
For the building stock, the delay between the reference period and the release time of the data is typically three to five months.
Punctuality
Data revision - practice
Revisions to data (volume of construction actions having been granted a building permit and annual change in the volume index) between different releases are presented in their own tables on the home page of the statistics.
Non-sampling error
In the building stock data, errors are caused by that not all building change actions require a building permit, in which case data on changes are not necessarily transmitted to the register. Errors are corrected in statistics production with logical inference and by supplementing data with other register sources.
Coverage error
No over-coverage is connected to the statistics. The entire number of units in the statistics is contained in administrative sources.
Measurement error
Processing error
Comparability
Comparability - geographical
The statistics do not include comparisons between countries.
The data of the statistics can be compiled with both national and European regional classifications (NUTS) and with coordinate based regional divisions.
Comparability - over time
When comparing data from different periods, it must be taken into account that some of the changes may be attributable to checks made to the register, changes in the compiling of the statistical data, or different collection methods during earlier years. For example, corrections to years of construction have an impact on the age structure of buildings. Likewise, changes to the intended use of buildings have to be accounted for when reviewing annual changes.
The current Construction Act entered into force on 1 January 2025. Unlike before, building permits are no longer required for new buildings of under 30 square metres with other intended use than housing. These include, for example, sauna buildings and outhouses. Because the statistics on new production are based on construction actions subject to a building permit, new non-residential buildings of under 30 square metres are excluded from the statistics starting from the statistical reference year 2025. The time series data are not fully comparable for those building categories in which there are many such small projects. The change is most visible in the number of construction actions, the effect on the volume and gross floor area is smaller.
The statistics do not include construction actions directed at buildings demolished before autumn 2024, because their data are not available from the Finnish Environment Institute's Ryhti system.
As of 1987, the building stock data have been produced annually on the basis of registers, and the annually compiled statistical data are relatively comparable over a longer period of time. Annual changes, however, are not accurate in all respects.
The current classification of the intended use of buildings, the Classification of Buildings 2018, was adopted in the statistics on building stock in the statistical reference year 2020. The prior classification of 1994 was used starting from the statistical reference year 1993. Data in accordance with the new building classification are available in terms of building stock data starting from 2005.
The first published register-based statistics on free-time residences are from 1989, after which they have been published yearly. The Population Register Centre (the current Digital and Population Data Services Agency) supplemented the building data in the Population Information System by adding the Tax Administration’s data on free-time residences to the register in the summer of 1990. After this, municipalities checked missing coordinate and attribute data. The preceding data on free-time residences derive from the 1980 census, in which the data were collected with forms.
At the beginning of 1997, the Population Register Centre (the current Digital and Population Data Services Agency) again supplemented the building data in the Population Information System with the Tax Administration’s real estate data. Significant numbers of free-time residences were also added to the register at this point. Some of the units in the Tax Administration’s data may already have been in the Population Information System’s building data under a different identifier.
The identification system of the Population Register Centre’s (the current Digital and Population Data Services Agency) Population Information System changed in November 2014 with the adoption of the permanent building identifier. In the statistics, the permanent building identifier is used as of the statistical reference year 2014. This may have some impact on time series and annual change data.
The renewal of the classification of buildings made in connection with the production renewal in 2020 had the following effect: the compilation of statistics on free-time residences changed in such a way that, according to the new Classification of Buildings, all free-time residential buildings are classified under the same building category, 021 (Free-time residential buildings), and are no longer separated into actual free-time residential buildings and rental holiday cottages. At the same time, these rental holiday cottages according to the old classification, of which there are some 14,000 in total, were removed from the category of commercial buildings describing the building stock; this must be taken into consideration in a review of the time series. In addition, detached houses in leisure-time use (of which there are approximately 40,000) are no longer included in the statistics on free-time residences. In the new Classification of Buildings, the category of residential buildings also includes residential buildings for communities and dwellings for special groups.
Coherence - cross domain
The data on new production in the statistics on building stock and new production do not fully correspond with the data of the discontinued statistics on building and dwelling production due to differences in the source data (Finnish Environment Institute/Digital and Population Data Services Agency) and changes made to the processing methods of the statistics. The statistics on building stock and new production do not include construction actions directed at buildings demolished before autumn 2024, because their data are not available from the Ryhti system.
Coherence -national accounts
Coherence - internal
Due to changes within the building stock, buildings completed in the new production data do not increase the stock by the same number. The building stock data describe the active building stock, that is, buildings demolished and destroyed are removed from the data. Buildings that have not been occupied for a long time are also removed from the stock data. However, they are returned to the building stock if they are returned to residential use and people move in there. Changes in the intended use of buildings also have an effect on the building stock data.
Buildings used in agricultural production, as well as sauna buildings and outhouses, which are, in turn, included in the new production data, are eliminated from the building stock data.
The unit in the statistics on new production is construction actions, which include, in addition to new buildings, expansions to existing buildings, for example. The unit used in the statistics on building stock is a building.
Furthermore, expansions to the building stock and alterations comparable to reconstruction can be registered under the start date of the building permit in the data describing newbuilding, but under the building’s original year of completion in the building stock data. The differences in the numbers between the data on building stock and new production may also be caused by different extraction times, because the data on new production are revised monthly.
Source data and data collections
Source data
To define the value of newbuilding, the volume index of newbuilding uses the cubic prices of newbuilding by building category and area and the regional tender price index of newbuilding produced by Haahtela Oy. In the data, Finnish municipalities are divided into six cost-of-living categories.
The knowledge base of the system concerning buildings and dwellings is made up of data collected from the owners or occupants of a building or dwelling in connection to Statistics Finland’s 1980 census. The data collection was based on the Census Act and a separate Census Decree.
The data of the Tax Administration’s real estate register are used in the statistics for corrections and supplementations. The attribute data of buildings are also supplemented with data from the energy certificate register of ARA (Housing Finance and Development Centre of Finland). The data on moves formed with the help of population information are used to express completed buildings to which people have moved but which are not yet included as completed in the data.
Data collection
Frequency of data collection
Methods
Data compilation
In the inflating method of starts data, the approximation estimated by the model of the actual number of projects started is compared with the current data on building projects started. The difference between these is an estimate of the number of building projects started that have not yet been reported to the Finnish Environment Institute. Projects started are drawn from construction actions not started according to that difference. Building projects taking part in the draw are limited so that building projects of over 50,000 cubic metres and over 70 new dwellings are left out.
The estimation of starts data is made monthly for the latest 24 months and the data become revised most for around 12 months from the first release. Data older than these are not estimated. Estimated starts data are used in the calculation of the volume index of newbuilding.
To improve the completion data of building projects, notices of moves are utilised in the compilation of statistics. Construction projects are combined by means of building codes to the Digital and Population Data Agency's data on moves and the newbuilding is classified as completed if it is occupied.
Given that the Population Information System’s data do not provide precise data on removals, Statistics Finland aims to eliminate old buildings and dwellings as well as buildings and dwellings in poor repair from the building stock. If permanent residents nevertheless move into such a building removed from the building stock, the building is returned to the building stock.
Data on new buildings built without a permit and data on alterations and improvements are not transmitted to the information system. Changes to the heating system or heating fuel are not, in all cases, subject to a permit. The same issue applies to data on the facilities and network connections of a building, which may contain errors. Statistics Finland is able to correct some of the erroneous data by removing inconsistencies between various facilities, heating systems and heating fuels. The data which have only been collected after the establishment of the 1980 knowledge base also contain deficiencies. Data on lifts, balconies and mechanical ventilation, for instance, may be deficient. The year of a building’s completion and other attribute data have been corrected at Statistics Finland as of 2017 with data in the Tax Administration’s real estate register.
Data validation
Principles and outlines
Contact organisation
Contact organisation unit
Legal acts and other agreements
The compilation of statistics is guided by the Statistics Act. The Statistics Act contains provisions on collection of data, processing of data and the obligation to provide data. Besides the Statistics Act, the Data Protection Act and the Act on the Openness of Government Activities are applied to processing of data when producing statistics.
Statistics Finland compiles statistics in line with the EU’s regulations applicable to statistics, which steer the statistical agencies of all EU Member States.
Further information: Statistical legislation
Confidentiality - policy
The data protection of data collected for statistical purposes is guaranteed in accordance with the requirements of the Statistics Act (280/2004), the Act on the Openness of Government Activities (621/1999), the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 and the Data Protection Act (1050/2018). The data materials are protected at all stages of processing with the necessary physical and technical solutions. Statistics Finland has compiled detailed directions and instructions for confidential processing of the data. Employees have access only to the data essential for their duties. The premises where unit-level data are processed are not accessible to outsiders. Members of the personnel have signed a pledge of secrecy upon entering the service. Violation of data protection is punishable.
Further information: Data protection | Statistics Finland (stat.fi)
Confidentiality - data treatment
Statistics Finland has used, for example, less detailed classification of variables or suppression of the variable values received by an individual unit as data limiting methods.
Release policy
Statistics Finland publishes new statistical data at 8 am on weekdays in its web service. The release times of statistics are given in advance in the release calendar available in the web service. The data are public after they have been updated in the web service.
Further information: Publication principles for statistics at Statistics Finland
Data sharing
Accessibility and clarity
Statistical data are published as database tables in the StatFin database. The database is the primary publishing site of data, and new data are updated first there. When releasing statistical data, existing database tables can be updated with new data or completely new database tables can be published.
In addition to statistical data published in the StatFin database, a release on the key data is usually published in the web service. If the release contains data concerning several reference periods (e.g. monthly and annual data), a review bringing together these data is published in the web service. Database tables updated at the time of publication are listed both in the release and in the review. In some cases, statistical data can also be published as mere database releases in the StatFin database. No release or review is published in connection with these database releases.
Releases and database tables are published in three languages, in Finnish, Swedish and English. The language versions of releases may have more limited content than in Finnish.
Information about changes in the publication schedules of releases and database tables and about corrections are given as change releases in the web service.
Data revision - policy
Revisions – i.e. improvements in the accuracy of statistical data already published – are a normal feature of statistical production and result in improved quality of statistics. The principle is that statistical data are based on the best available data and information concerning the statistical phenomenon. On the other hand, the revisions are communicated as transparently as possible in advance. Advance communication ensures that the users can prepare for the data revisions.
The reason why data in statistical releases become revised is often caused by the data becoming supplemented. Then the new, revised statistical figure is based on a wider information basis and describes the phenomenon more accurately than before.
Revisions of statistical data may also be caused by the calculation method used, such as annual benchmarking or updating of weight structures. Changes of base years and used classifications may also cause revisions to data.
Seasonally adjusted data in statistics on economic trends become revised because of the calculation method used. Additional information on a new time series observation is exploited in model-based calculation methods and this is reflected as changes in previous releases. Revisions of the latest figures to be seasonally adjusted are elaborated on in the releases and quality reports of statistics.
A summary table of the revisions that have taken place is also published in connection with key statistics on economic trends and some annual statistics. The table shows how the data for the statistical reference periods have changed between the first and the most recent statistical release.
Quality assessment
Quality assurance
Quality management requires comprehensive guidance of activities. The quality management framework of the field of statistics is the European Statistics Code of Practice (CoP). The quality criteria of Official Statistics of Finland are also compatible with the European Statistics Code of Practice.
Further information: Quality management | Statistics Finland (stat.fi)
User access
Data are released to all users at the same time. Statistical data may only be handled at Statistics Finland and information on them may be given before release only by persons involved in the production of the statistics concerned or who need the data of the statistics concerned in their own work before the data are published.
Further information: Publication principles for statistics
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