lou_12 wrote:So, basically, if i'm driving in Finland and get pulled up by the police and they ask for my license i'm not going to get marked down or taken away for not having a valid Finnish license, my British one is completely valid until the expirary date?
So long as you are over 18, your EU licence is valid here. As Kai already mentioned
http://www.poliisi.fi/poliisi/home.nsf/ ... endocument
and you don't have to inform the DVLA that you are moving abroad (they used to be stricter on keeping address up to date)
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/Dr ... G_10023103
direct.gov.uk wrote:Moving to another country
If you move to another country, you should check with the driving licence authorities there for information about driving and exchange of licences. You don't need to notify DVLA of a change of address when moving to live abroad.
I changed my UK EC paper licence for a Finnish licence after being here over 5 years. On the down side there was a rigmarole over the health check, which they were enforcing incorrectly as far as I could make out. On the up-side there was no mention of having to take a driving test in spite of the fact that I'd been here years.
If I'd had a modern, plastic UK/EU drivers licence, I wouldn't have bothered changing over.
lou_12 wrote:Also do people in shops etc have the right not to accept it as a form of ID just because it's a British driving licence or can they not accept it because it's not Finnish?
If shop assistants want to be arsey, I reckon they could refuse it. UK drivers licences are not an official ID document in the UK never mind over here. It's a form of photo ID, so if you present it together with a Finnish card showing your name and henkilotunnus (ddmmyy-xxxx) (e.g. a photoless Kela card), then it will be accepted, but on it's own it doesn't help ... they want the henkilotunnus ... or a passport.