utpala2011 wrote:I guess people are not bound to take any kind of insurance at all.
Everyone who lives permanently in Finland is covered by Kela.
Prerequisite for a non-EU citizen for obtaining a Residence Permit as a student is a valid health insurance.
Family member of a non-EU citizen whose work contract is for less than 2 years is a special case you are running into, and the easiest solution for the Finnish government would be to make in such cases a valid health insurance for the family member a prerequisite for obtaining the Residence Permit.
utpala2011 wrote:There are exchange students who come for one year or less with families sometimes,
If the student is an EU citizen coming from another EU country, he and his family usually stay covered by the health insurance of the country they are coming from - which often entitles him and his family to the same access to the Finnish public healthcare system as Finns.
Prerequisite for a non-EU citizen for obtaining a Residence Permit as a student is that he already has health insurance for himself.
If a non-EU citizen wants to come as a student to Finland and bring his wife, he must show that he has at least € 15,120 in his own bank account for obtaining a one year Residence Permit. With two children, he needs € 25,920 in his bank account.
For EU citizens coming to Finland from another EU country there is EU legislation ensuring that they are at any time a member of the social security system of exactly one country.
Non-EU citizens coming as students with their family to Finland are extremely rare.