E8 through Finland and Norway



E8 is a European route through Finland and Norway, from Turku in south-western Finland to Tromsø in the Arctic region of Norway. Along the route you see most of Finland's landscapes, with the exception of larger lakes and deep forests, and typical Norwegian scenery. This guide is mostly for driving the road, but there are some advice for bikers and those using public transport (see Other than by car below).

Understand


The route goes along the west coast of Finland, through the mostly flat Ostrobothnia and Western Oulu regions, by the Swedish border along the Torne river and its tributaries in Finnish Lapland, along the border through remote fell landscapes, through a mountain pass in Norway and then the last stretch along the Norwegian fjords to Tromsø, the capital of the county Troms. Although quite small, Tromsø is one of the most important Arctic cities.

There are archipelagos all along the coast: the extensive Archipelago Sea in the south until Uusikaupunki, the UNESCO World Heritage Kvarken by Vaasa, and other islands nearly everywhere else. The sea and archipelagos have been important for the population along the coast, and you should probably make some sidetrips there, although the modern route mostly goes a little more inland. Some minor roads close to the coast are suggested in the itinerary (some more in the section By bike), but taking a boat tour farther out could certainly be worthwhile.

Most of the coast is traditionally regarded part of Ostrobothnia, and there is one administrative region carrying the name Österbotten as such. It is a mostly Swedish-speaking area. All of Ostrobothnia is characterized by large plains traversed by rivers. By the coast there are large fields, while farther north large mires dominate. There is also widespread forest, as expected in Finland.

The route along the coast has been historically important. Until the 1960s its roads' traditional form of navigation was on foot or by horse. As the route was straightened, stretches of the old route remain as local roads, which may be your best option if you travel by bike or otherwise want to explore the countryside.

The first stretch of the old route is part of the historic Great Post Route (see King's Road) leading from Stockholm to Turku. Farther north it provided access by land when the sea was frozen (thus impassable for ships), possibly extended all the way around the Gulf of Bothnia already in medieval times; drivable by carriage to Korsholm (Vaasa) by the 1550s; and to Tornio by the 1750s. It worked as postal route all the way from Stockholm from 1644. It is marketed as the tourist route Pohjanlahden rantatie. To the northern inland most transport was traditionally by river.

The valleys of Tornionjoki and Muonionjoki are in Finnish Lapland, in the reindeer husbandry area, with wilderness not far from the road, but still with villages quite regularly and few fells visible. Recreational fishing is big here. The road continues along the border river but the environment becomes wilder, and before entering Norway there are not only the rounded fells typical of Finland, but also some more alpine landscapes. In Norway there are the fells and fjords that make that country famous.

There are a few stretches of motorway; mostly the road is undivided two-lane. It is paved and generally in good condition.

In Finland the roads used are also signposted by their national numbers (mostly national roads 8, 4 and 21), and by street names in some environments, and these are usually better known locally; along national road 8 Kasitie/Riksåttan ("road eight"/"national eight") is used colloquially. Addresses are given with the "street" name whether signposted or not. The E8 sign is used throughout.

Note the time zone change after Kilpisjärvi, and if doing any sidetrips to Sweden.

Prepare


The road goes mostly through countryside, but until Muonio in the Torne/Muonionjoki river valley, there are towns and villages not too far apart, including the main cities of the west coast of Finland. After that however, you drive through Arctic wilderness, with the few "major" villages having just over a hundred inhabitants, until you reach the fjords. The mountain pass in Norway after Kilpisjärvi has traffic restrictions in winter, so that you may have to wait for a snow plow and drive in the line after it.

Make sure you check advice for winter driving and cold weather if driving through the remote areas any time but July–August. Temperatures are severe only in winter, but occasional snowfall and freezing nights are possible all year along the highest stretch. Check weather forecasts. Also make sure you have enough fuel, and anything you need in case of having to wait for help after a breakdown.

You might want to hike up a fell or even make an overnight hike to a wilderness hut. To find your way back through the fell birch forest a compass may be needed (and a large-scale topographic map is useful for finding a good route). For the open wilderness huts you need own hiking mattresses, sleeping bags, matches, cutlery, toilet paper etc. – and anything that may be needed in foul weather above the treeline, if that's where you venture (see Hiking in the Nordic countries). For other cabins own linen may be needed, and will save some euros otherwise. Binoculars can be useful for bird watching and for views from lookout towers and fells.

Mosquitoes are common in the Finnish countryside, and some parts of this itinerary experience hordes of them from sometime in June through July (and significant numbers are left in August). They carry no diseases, but their bites are itchy and trying to avoid them can spoil your experience. Have suitable clothes and insect repellent.

Finland and Norway are both part of the Schengen Area and the Nordic passport union (as is Sweden, for sidetrips), so border control formalities are next to non-extant. Norway is not in the EU, so you should still declare some items, and pets need some documents and treatments, which you should take care of well in advance.

Get in


Turku is quite well-connected. The most common option is to take a ferry from Sweden. Air connections are somewhat sparse, but the well connected Helsinki Airport is a 2½-hr drive away.

There is another ferry halfway up the Finnish coast, to Vaasa, and in the Tornio/Muonionjoki river valley there are several border crossings from Sweden (except at Tornio these are from very sparsely inhabited areas). The last border crossing is between Karesuvanto and Karesuando, the latter the northernmost village of any size in Sweden.

There are connecting roads from the east all along the road. Between Oulu and Kemi it shares tarmac with E 75. Cars can be taken to Oulu or Kolari on some trains from Helsinki. The main railroad to the north follows the coast between Kokkola and Kemi and a branch continues to Kolari. While there is no railroad along the southern part of the coast, most of the bigger towns have rail connections inland.

At the northern end the tarmac is shared with E6, the main road of Norway ("Eseksen"), between Skibotn and Nordkjosbotn 80 km from Tromsø. Tromsø has an airport, which is the hub for air transport in Northern Norway, with daily connections from Oslo and some international flights. Tromsø is also on the Hurtigruten ferry line along the Norwegian coast.

For dramatic effect, the route is best taken from south to north, with the landscapes becoming increasingly exotic for people from southern more densely populated regions. This direction mostly avoids having the sun in your eyes while driving.

Turku to Pori
The route starts in with Koulukatu in the west part of the centre leading under the railway, to north-west by Naantalin pikatie. It soon forks away from the Naantali road as Rauman valtatie leading by Raisio toward Rauma, Pori and Vaasa. You could also take the older route: start from the cathedral, drive Aninkaistenkatu by the bus station, continue by Satakunnantie to Raisio and take the E8 motorway from there. After leaving Turku and Raisio the landscape is rural, with forest and flat fields. 20 km of the first stretch is motorway. In Nousiainen it becomes two-lane. Until Liminka near Oulu 500 km farther, E8 is also known as National Road 8, colloquially Kasitie/Riksåttan.

The medieval is at the location of the first bishop seat of Finland, moved to Turku in 1229 or 1249. It is part of the pilgrimage route from the place where Henrik – Finland's regarded patron saint and first bishop – was murdered according to legend, to the cathedral in Turku.



You now enter the Vakka-Suomi region. Some distance from Turku, in, is the old crossroads of the Great Post Route (see King's Road) leading from Stockholm to Turku over the Sea of Åland and via Åland, the archipelago, Kustavi and Mynämäki.

The last town in Finland Proper is, with a crossroads to Kalanti and , the latter with cruises to the.



Soon after the regional border to Satakunta, the road passes. It is an old port city, and its wooden old town is a UNESCO World Heritage site. Rauma is also known to Finns for its peculiar dialect, with lots of Swedish loans. It was one of the first Finnish dialects to have its own literature, thanks to Hj. Nortamo, who wrote several books in this tongue around 1900. There are cruises to the lighthouse islands of Kylmäpihlaja and Kuuskajaskari in the Bothnian Sea National Park. About 20 km inland from Rauma (still administratively part of Rauma) is the village of Lappi with another world heritage site, the bronze age burial site.

The next city is ; its neighbour Ulvila is one of the first chartered towns in Finland. Pori itself is the regional seat, an industrial town most known for its excellent Yyteri beach and the Pori Jazz festival (with jazz nowadays in a lesser role). It also has some interesting architecture and a national urban park. There is a bird watching tower at the bay Preiviikinlahti close to Yyteri. Pori has train connection to Tampere, which is on the main railway.

Pori to Kokkola
Around Pori, there are already place names with Swedish origin, such as Noormarkku ("Nordmark"). After the regional border to Ostrobothnia, most of the countryside has only a small minority of Finnish-speakers, and the regional seat Vaasa (Vasa) and tiny Kaskinen (Kaskö) are the only towns with a Finnish majority. Half of Finland's Swedish-speaking population lives here, and most speak their local dialects at home and with fellow dialect speakers.

The village and rapids of (Långfors) in Merikarvia (Sastmola) is a popular rest spot. They are a nationally important cultural milieu, witnessing late 19th-century small-scale industrialisation. There is a large café with meals, geared towards charter coaches and lorry drivers, with long hours year-round; and a smaller café, Köffi and Kahvimylly. 6 km farther has a nice lunch (weekends and peak season?).

Some 45 km from Pori you drive through Lappfjärd with crossroads to, the southernmost Ostrobothnian town. It is a nice small town by the sea, with a large wooden old town and the motto The Good Life. After Kristinestad the road is often a straight line over plains, with just minor hills.

If you like smaller roads, you could drive along the coast from Kristinestad, starting with (Skrattnäsvägen) towards Pjelax, then road 6761 (Kristinestadsvägen) towards Närpes.

Some 20 km from Lappfjärd is the crossroads to (Kaskö), Finland's smallest town, with fewer than 1,300 inhabitants, chartered in 1785. As in most traditionally Swedish towns in Finland, people moving from Finnish Finland to work in the industries have made the majority Finnish.

The next town (5 km from E8) is Finland's tomato capital, with the most archaic dialect around, unintelligible also for most Swedish speakers. Like elsewhere, people know standard Swedish and English. The need for workers in the greenhouses has made Närpes multicultural, an example of successful immigrant integration (despite some abuse scandals, surfaced in 2021).

If you drive via Närpes centre, you can take road 673 (Strandvägen) via and  to Vaasa. E8 is straighter and faster, going by Pörtom (now part of Närpes).



After Malax the road enters (Vasa), the seat of the region. Off the coast is the, a UNESCO World Heritage Site together with Höga kusten ("the high coast") on the Swedish side. The glacial rebound makes the land rise, which combined with the shallowness of the sea makes new ground appear year by year, a haven for pioneer ecosystems.

E12 and the Blue Highway from Mo i Rana on the Atlantic coast lead by ferry from Umeå over the Gulf of Bothnia to Vaasa, the former continuing to Helsinki, the latter to Petrozavodsk and Pudozh in Russian Karelia. Vaasa also has train connections via Seinäjoki.

The road passes, where you could take a sidetrip through the archipelago and back at Kaitsor, and leads through. The Battle of Oravais was the bloodiest of the 1808–1809 war. The Fänrik Ståls center, signposted "Furirbostället", has a museum on the time (limited hours) and guided tours of the battlefield (for groups). Also in Oravais (before the crossroads to the centre), at the café Fjärdens kaffestuga, is a view to the sea, perhaps the only one you get without detours.

The next town is, with the junction in Ytterjeppo, with the river Lappo å. You could take road 749 (Jakobstadsvägen) from Nykarleby or drive via in Pedersöre, with the train station of the pretty town Jakobstad.



Among the industry in is Nautor's Swan, a company that builds luxury sailing yachts. A nice wooden district, Skata, is a former sailors' and workers' district. The botanic park Skolparken is also nice. With some luck you can see Jacobstads Wapen – built using blueprints of 1755 by the famous naval architect af Chapman – or at least the centre created as offspring from the project.

In Nautor's offspring Baltic Yachts also builds luxury sailing yachts, but with somewhat less emphasis on sailing than Nautor's. Larsmo is a small rural archipelago municipality, nearly monolingually Swedish. The Læstadian religious revival movement, which is important in most of northern Finland and Sweden, is especially strong here. Larsmo can be visited as a sidetrip from Jakobstad, perhaps driving over the main island directly to Kokkola ("Road of Seven Bridges").

The E8 continues on the mainland via rural.

(Karleby) is the last town of the Swedish-speaking Ostrobothnia and already part of Central Ostrobothnia. It is the largest town after Vaasa and until Oulu. It is an important port and industrial city. Some 200 railway wagons worth of iron were brought daily from Russian Kostomuksha for use locally and for shipping onwards – until 2022, when transport was stopped and the wagons confiscated as part of EU sanctions towards Russia. There is a nice park stretching from the centre to the coast.

Kokkola to Oulu
, the first town after Kokkola, is still in Central Ostrobothnia, but soon after, the road crosses into Northern Ostrobothnia. In (part of Kalajoki) the road crosses the Lestijoki river, one of the more notable of the many rivers flowing into the Bay of Bothnia in the region. In addition to the rivers, the region is, like many parts of Finland, known for its mires.

Halfway from Himanka towards Kalajoki you pass Rahja. The can be explored by canoe or by boat, one more good place to see the effects of the ice age and glacial rebound, and old fishing bases. Pick bilberry, lingonberry and buckthorn berries. In spring and autumn there is an abundance of migrating birds.

Just before, the road passes near what is probably the most famous beach in Northern Finland;. In Kalajoki, the road crosses the namesake river, and you can check out the old town Plassi. Here the EV10 cycling route makes a detour via Merijärvi.

, the following town, also sits next to a namesake river. The river is split into a delta, with an island in the middle. The following city,, was founded by Per Brahe, Governor General of Finland in the 17th century, and its Swedish name is indeed Brahestad ("Brahe city"). Raahe is known for its large Rautaruukki steel plant, but also has a nice wooden old town. Traditionally it is known for shipping, with the largest merchant fleet in Finland 1867–1875, and it still is one of Finland's main ports.

After Raahe, the road turns inland (or rather the land bulges outward into the sea). In the village of, Siikajoki river, another quite wide river is crossed. Next is, with one of the most important bird wetlands in Finland: Liminganlahti (visitor centre 5 km from the crossroads). Just after passing the centre E8 merges with national road 4 (E75) coming in from Jyväskylä and all the way from Helsinki. At that point, the road turns into motorway leading you into Oulu.

In Kempele, halfway from Liminka, is a crossroads to Oulunsalo and, the largest island of the Bothnian Bay. There is a free ferry or a 9-km ice road (in late winter). Sights include the Marjaniemi lighthouse, the villages and the unique nature, charachterised by sand and the glacial rebound: dunes, pine forest, mires, and wet meadows.



is the fourth most-populous metropolitan area of Finland. Nowadays it is a high tech city, with the main university of Northern Finland and an important Nokia subsidiary. IRC was invented here. It is also the town with most bicycling in Finland, despite its northern location.

Oulu to Muonio
The hinterland of Northern Ostrobothnia was reached by the big rivers, and timber and tar could be brought from the endless forests. Tar shipping was a big business for Oulu, one of Finnish towns providing tar for the fleets of the British Empire and other western countries in the age of sail. Kemijoki, with its mouth in Kemi, is the longest river in Finland, with its sources near Urho Kekkonen National Park.

Between Oulu and Kemi you enter Lapland, although little changes in the landscape (and indeed, Ostrobothnia as a non-administrative region continues). Also the reindeer husbandry area begins, including most ground outside the few cities. Look out for reindeer, pass them carefully, and call 112 if you might have hurt one. Here in "the south" most people in the reindeer husbandry are Finns, while there is a Sámi de facto near monopoly on it farther north.

In Tornio you enter the Tornionjoki river valley, and later the valley of Tornionjoki's tributary Muonionjoki, the rivers marking the border to Sweden. Until somewhere past Muonio the valleys are quite densely populated by Lapland standards, although the villages are mostly small.

The next town after Oulu,, has a nice wooden old town (Hamina, "the port"). It became the centre of a huge parish and an important centre of commerce in the medieval times. In the 18th century Ii was a forerunner in industrialisation. Now it is a small town. Here the latitude is halfway between that of the southernmost and northernmost points of Finland, and likewise the longitude is halfway between that of the westernmost and easternmost points.



Simojoki, flowing through, is one of only a few rivers that have retained their original breeding Baltic Sea salmon population. Fishing is the main reason for tourists to come here. There are also two villages, Simonkylä and Simoniemi, that survived the Lapland War during World War II, and by Simonkylä a stretch of museum road. They are nationally important cultural scenic views. The landscape is flat as in most of Northern Ostrobothnia (though you just passed the border to Lapland), with large mires. You might want to visit the (a sidetrip of some 2×35 km). By the coast there are wind mills.

Next the road transforms into motorway and soon you enter, an industrial town with airport, in winter also ice breaker cruises and a hotel made of ice (visits possible). In its hinterland Keminmaa E75 forks off and after a while you reach Tornio, where the motorway ends.

and Haparanda are twin towns, with the hardly noticeable country border at a fork of the river Tornionjoki (Swedish: Torne älv). The town Tornio, oldest in Lapland, became part of the Russian Empire 1809 and Sweden built a market town on their shore. Now they are a prime example of cross-border cooperation, with commuting for work and shopping in both directions and shared police patrols. Also on the Swedish side Finnish is commonly spoken – the 1809 border was not a linguistic one. The border closures caused by the immigration crisis in 2015 and the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 hit hard. E4, running by most of the Swedish east coast, ends here, at E8.

The tower of the Alatornio church is part of the Struve Geodetic Arc. Also Aavasaksa a bit ahead is such a point by the road. There are a few more of the points reasonably near the road on the Swedish side.

E8 follows national road 21 upstream. You are going to follow Tornionjoki and its tributaries for some 500 km along the border to Sweden. This is one of the longest stretches of river without dams in all of Europe. The road along the river is called the "Aurora Borealis Route". There are no more northern lights here than elsewhere in Finnish Lapland, but you are indeed approaching regions where they are common in the dark seasons.

There are roads on both sides of the river most of the time, on the Swedish side national road 99 to Karesuando, E8 on the Finnish side. Bridges connect the countries in every municipality, and many villages have one half in Sweden and one in Finland, separated by the border since Finland became part of the Russian Empire in 1809. The Nordic Passport Union and later the Schengen Area have made passing the border quite easy for locals, Nordic citizens, and now close to anybody.



The 13 km upstream from Tornio are a popular resting spot (with a camping site on the Swedish side). The next bridge is at Swedish, just after Finnish parish village (yli=över), but conveniently at the fell , the main sight around. It is the southernmost point where midnight sun can be seen in Finland, and was therefore an important destination before road travel was possible in Lapland. Its top is one of the points on the Struve Geodetic Arc and provides magnificent views. The Russian emperor planned a visit, and facilities built for the occasion remain, with service for tourists.

The next municipality is. In the village of, 25 km after the Aavasaksa bridge, you cross the Arctic Circle. In theory this is where you start to see the midnight sun in Midsummer and the polar night before Christmas. In practice it is more complicated, but around Midsummer the sun is indeed above the horizon at midnight, unless obscured by fells or forest.

A Frenchman, Pierre de Maupertuis, determined the shape of the Earth by making measurements in the Tornionjoki valley 1736–1737, a century before Struve. The northernmost point he used was close to the modern centre of Pello.



Some 20 km to east-southeast is the, suitable for boating, canoeing and hiking.

Some 4 km after Pello the road 21/E8 makes a slight shortcut to Kolari away from the river. In between Tornionjoki ceeses being the border river, and you will be following its tributary Muonionjoki (Sámi: Rádjeeatnu, "border river") instead. If you want to follow the river, you have to take the local road along its shore.

has the northernmost passenger train station in Finland. In the spring ski season there are daily overnight trains from the south, taking also cars from some stations. 35 km to the north-east is the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park, the most popular national park of Finland, and the ski resorts Äkäslompolo and Ylläsjärvi.

Next is. From here the park is 20 km to the east, 10 km more for the. The road (and coaches) from the Kittilä airport and Rovaniemi farther away also come in through the park. As in most places in Lapland, it is easy to find tourist businesses offering fishing trips and whitewater sports.

Muonio to Kilpisjärvi
Make sure you have enough fuel and anything else you might need. Karesuvanto is 100 km away and Kilpisjärvi 100 km more. From here to Kilpisjärvi the road is sometimes called Neljän tuulen tie ("the road of four winds"). The official name is Kilpisjärventie. The highest point of any Finnish public road is on this stretch, which means winter driving can be a real issue.

After leaving Muonio centre you pass the villages of Yli-Muonio, Kätkäsuvanto and Sonkamuotka. The village Yli-Muonio survived the Lapland War (during World War II), and is thus a rare example of pre-war village architecture of Finnish Lapland.

In Sonkamuotka you enter Enontekiö (Sámi: Eanodat; "river maker") and the Sámi native region. Here Northern Sámi is an official language, spoken by some 10% of the population. After the municipality border you also pass the northern limit of spruce forest, the rest of the journey coniferous forest will be of pine only, and also those will end – at the highest passes there will not even be fell birch.

In winter snowmobiles are in wide use, essential to be able to look after reindeer while living in a permanent house, and also useful for ice fishing and general getting around where roads are few. Before the snowmobiles, people with large herds had to move with the reindeer. Not all Sámi (and few Finns) had large herds though. Large scale reindeer husbandry came with the Northern Sámi, who now dominate in Finland (and is the largest Sámi group overall). There is an extensive network of snowmobile routes (and "snowmobile tracks") covering most of Finland; the Victoria Route along the river, named after the Swedish crown princess, goes all the way to the three border mark by Kilpisjärvi, as a cross-border cooperation.

On the next 17 km there is just the tiny village of Äijäjoki. The following, (Bálojohnjálbmi) with some 100 inhabitants, had a church 1827–1856, and later a boarding school (later used as community centre and tourist lodging). Here is the crossroads with E45 (which shares tarmac with E8 for the next 40 km) to Hetta and farther to Kautokeino in the Norwegian Finnmark. That route is also one for Nordkapp.



is the administrative centre of Enontekiö (with the Enontekiö airport), a place to meet Sámi culture, a trailhead for the Pallas–Ylläs hiking route through Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park (which you have followed at some distance since Kolari), and a starting point for visiting Pöyrisjärvi (Bievrrašjávri) or Pulju Wilderness Area. Behind Pulju is Lemmenjoki National Park, the largest in Finland. The theme continues. Enontekiö has the second lowest population density in Finland, with less than 2,000 people on more than, so there is indeed room for wilderness.

The next village of some size is (Gárasavvon), with the northernmost border crossing from Sweden (E45 turns there). The village's namesake Karesuando is across the river, with more services and the house of Lars Leevi Laestadius as vicar. The Leastadian revival movement still has great influence in the northern parts of Finland and Sweden (do you remember Larsmo in Ostrobothnia?). Here you could also make a sidetrip to the (Darvvatvárri) Wilderness Area. In that wilderness, close to the Norwegian border, Stuorrahanoaivi was on the Struve Geodetic Arc, a four-day hike to visit that point. Tynnyrilaki of the Pingisvaara fells, on the Swedish side 30 km before Karesuando, was the previous one.

4 km after Karesuvanto, you arrive in the Lätäseno-Hietajoki Mire Protection Area. 3 km farther, at the upper end of the Mannakoski rapids, there is a ¼-km nature path, a shelter and a bird observation tower by the road. Still 2 km farther, at the tiny village (Boaresmárkan), Könkämäeno (Geaggáneatnu) and Lätäseno (Leahttáseatnu) join to form the Muonio river you have been following. Markkina was a market place (whence the name) with the church of a large parish since early 17th century. When the Russian Empire had conquered Finland 1809, the parish was split and the church was moved to Palojoensuu. There is a memorial at the church site. The graveyard and a pine used for votive offerings remain.

8 km after Markkina, there is a renovated German World War II fortification camp,, with museum and café. It was part of a network of such camps, built to protect the harbours of the Arctic Ocean during the Lapland War. The camp is partly dug into the bedrock. No real battles were ever fought here. The environment is the Järämä recreational forest. The northern limit for pine forest is at the east end of it, with a lonely pine at Luspa/Luspi, 2.5 km farther along the road, probably the last one you will see in Finland. Farther on all forest will be fell birch. You will also see more and more impressive fells.

26 km after the fortification you pass (Beattet), where the Sámi poet and artist Nils-Aslak Valkeapää, important for the reestablishing of Sámi proud from the 1960s onward, lived much of his life. The village has just a few houses. ½ km downstream is one of the worst rapids of Könkämäeno for paddling at high waters: Pättikkäkoski (Beattetguoika).



For the rest of your journey to Kilpisjärvi the Käsivarsi Wilderness Area will be a few kilometres to your right. There are several points where you could start a hike, with some 10 km to the nearest open wilderness hut, where you can overnight for free (with own hiking mattress and sleeping bag). The terrain is often quite easy, but in the wilderness area you are far from any help if getting lost or hurt, or taken by surprise by foul weather.

18 km after Pättikkä you reach an information post and a ⅓-km nature trail to the palsa bogs of, probably the world's most easily accessed such bog, with frost mounds raised by their permanently frozen interior. Also this is a suitable entry point for the wilderness area, with the 8 km away, and a 718 m peak of the Látnjavárit fells at its border just 3.5 km away. A compass should be enough to climb it safely, unless you hurt your legs (but a topographic map is needed to find a short route to the highest peaks).

6 km after Iitto, a 2-km road with a barrier leads to windmills at the top of the 735-m. Stay clear if there might be ice on the rotors, otherwise you should be able to enjoy the views. After 6 km more, there is a reindeer round-up site at Viššat (Saarikoski), by the 630-m Dálvas, a palsa bog and the lake Geađgejávri (Kivijärvi). Reindeer are gathered at such sites twice a year: in June for marking the calves, in autumn to take some animals to slaughter (formerly at the site, but EU norms nowadays require advanced infrastructure).

11 km farther, 23 km from Iitto, is the lake (Bearajávri) with a cottage village. Just after the crossroads is also a road to and Kummavuopio, the northernmost year-round inhabited places in Sweden. They cannot be reached directly from the Swedish road network, and also from Finland only by foot or over the ice in winter. The pedestrian suspension bridge is not an official border crossing, but who cares! Keinovuopio is close, Kummavuopio 7 km farther to the north-west got inhabited again in 2022.



6 km after Peera the road reaches (Muotkkádat), the highest point of the Finnish public road network, above the treeline at 565 m, between 700-m Leutsuvaara (Leavževárri) and Laassavaara (Lássávárri). There is a rest spot and a memorial of the Lapland War.

When you have past the saddle, you have a view to Ala-Kilpisjärvi (Vuolle-Gilbbesjávri, "lower lake Kilpis"). In the other end of the lake starts the village. Here are hotels, cottages, restaurants and grocery stores, a metropolis with a hundred inhabitants. If you come in season you certainly want to visit the Kilpisjärvi Nature Centre. A trip to the top of Saana is also among the "musts" (there used to be the longest stairs of Finland, but they have been removed). There are also a couple of other nature trails.

As a day trip, complete the third "must": take a cruise over Kilpisjärvi to the of Finland, Norway and Sweden (a less romantic concrete block by the shore of a small lake) and return through the Malla Strict Nature Reserve along a marked trail – or the other way round, or as a return cruise; the hike from the ferry is 3 km, through the reserve 11–18 km, plus 2 km to the ferry harbour. It is possible to stay the night nearby in an open wilderness hut before returning (with own mattress and sleeping bag, or own linen if you reserved a bed in the adjacent locked cabin).

If a day trip is not enough, make it a week: the route to the highest point of Finland, at (Háldičohkka), is a very popular 2×55-km trek. There are open wilderness huts and also the possibility to reserve beds in some huts (the latter with mattresses and pillows, still use own linen), but in foul weather the area is demanding, mostly above the treeline, with no shelter except the huts, and few landmarks in reduced visibility.

Kilpisjärvi to Skibotn


The customs is at the Finnish side, after the village and the Malla trail, 4 km before the border. Norway is part of Schengen and the EES, but not of the EU, so some items may need customs clearance, and e.g. for pets, restrictions apply. This county of Norway is Troms (since 2020: Troms and Finnmark).

The road starts descending, but the mountain pass on the Norwegian side is still often closed in bad weather, and driving in winter may be restricted to following a snowplow in line. Since 2018 there is an "intelligent road" experiment, with sensors along the road (the experiment involves the stretch all the way from Kolari, but this is the most demanding leg).

When you reach E6, Tromsø is to your left, but you could take a sidetrip to the Skibotn village some 4 km to your right.

(Ivgobahta/Yykeänperä) is on the shore of the fjord Lyngen, some 100 km from the open sea, surrounded by large mountains. It used to be an important meeting place between Norwegians, Sámi and Kven (and Finnish) people, with a yearly market.

The village has an astrophysical observatory, especially for northern lights, well away from city light pollution, a chapel from 1895 and the home of Nils-Aslak Valkeapää for another part of his life (cf Pättikkä/Beattet). The home is a museum in summer, residence for Sámi artists or researchers of Sámi culture in winter. The chapel, seating many more than the inhabitants of the village, is used for large Læstadian gatherings.

Skibotn to Tromsø


E8 shares the road with E6 southwest along the fjord through a very Norwegian landscape with fells, then the road goes inland, before arriving in the village of. Here the two road numbers part, and E8 turns north, following the shore of Balsfjorden, with an inland part, before you see on an island across the fjord. To go to the central parts of the city, turn off at Ishavskatedralen (Arctic Sea cathedral), and cross the fjord on the bridge Tromsøbrua. E8 will cross the fjord in a tunnel further north and end at a roundabout on the island north of the city centre.

Other than by car
There are coaches along the road, see Matkahuolto for timetables. Checking services between nearby towns may turn up many more connections than searches for longer legs. In the remote area between Muonio and Skibotn, there is a coach only once or twice a day, for the services between Kilpisjärvi and E6 there are even breaks for several weeks in autumn and spring. The operator there is Eskelisen Lapinlinjat, at least in summer, although they may direct you to the Matkahuolto web site. Also in Norway services may be sparse. As the coaches might not combine well at transfers and don't have long breaks suitable for sightseeing, plan your itinerary well.

Between Kokkola and Kolari, long-distance trains can be useful.

By bike
For biking, the E8 itself is not very nice, straight through the landscape as it goes, with a quite narrow shoulder and traffic passing in 80 or 100 km/h. On the few motorway stretches biking is forbidden. However, there are parallel more quiet and less straight roads for much of the distance, going through the villages and towns instead of passing by. These may be old stretches of the E8 or alternative routes, often closer to the coast. Sometimes there is no single road to follow, but roads that just happen to combine in a usable way. There are also cycleways along E8 (or nearby) at many legs, often alternating with small roads parallel with the E8.

From Turku to Kokkola, there are smaller roads to follow, avoiding the need to use E8 itself. Some of the smaller roads may still have significant traffic. Farther north there are stretches, first of a few kilometres, then also longer, where there is no sensible alternative route, as population gets sparser. The first long such stretch (8.5 km) is between Ii and Simo (starting a bit before Olhava; a cycleway will probably be built there as part of Eurovelo 10).

The Eurovelo route 10 goes from Turku to Tornio more or less parallel to E8 (it then turns west and south through Sweden). It makes some detours, but should be considered for any legs along the Ostrobothnian coast. It is not yet signposted, and north of Vaasa it is still being developed (as of February 2024). From Tornio onwards you could consider Eurovelo 7 through Sweden (follow EV 10 westward to Luleå to reach it) via Hetta towards Nordkapp (likewise still being developed, just being planned for the stretch through Finland), and Eurovelo 1 east–west in northernmost Norway. For the EV 1 (developed, not yet signposted), continue north from Skibotn to reach the ferry to Lyngen.

The EV 10 starts via Naantali, Merimasku, Askainen, Mietoinen, Taivassalo and Uusikaupunki, continues via Pyhäranta (and Reila) to Rauma, from there via Hakkila and Linnamaa to Eurajoki, makes a small detour to Irjanne in the east, then via Kuivalahti in the west, Luvia and Niemenkylä to Pori. In Pori it makes a detour to the archipelago: to Mäntyluoto, Reposaari and Lampaluoto. It continues near the coast through Ahlainen, Merikarvia, Sideby and returns via Härkmeri to a short leg on E8 before turning to Kristinestad, Kaskinen and Närpes. Still close to the coast it leads to Vaasa via Korsnäs, Molpe, Petalax, Malax, Solf, Sundom and Vaskiluoto. From Vaasa it continues zigzagging via Karperö, Kvevlax, Maxmo and Kvimo to Oravais, via Hirvlax to Munsala and Nykarleby, and via Soklot, Pörkenäs and Fäboda to Jakobstad. Then it takes the Route of Seven Bridges over Larsmo to Kokkola.

Another possible route from Turku to Kokkola might go Turku–Mynämäki–Vehmaa–Uusikapunki–Pyhäranta–Rauma–Eurajoki–Luvia–Pori–Merikarvia–Sideby–Lappfjärd–Kristinestad–Pjelax–Närpes–Korsnäs–Vaasa–Veikars–Lillkyrö–Vörä–Oravais–Jeppo–Nykarleby–Jakobstad–Larsmo–Kokkola. For Härkmeri–Lappfjärd, have a good big-scale map, as you might want to use a forest road or pathway on either side of Härkmerifjärden.

After Kalajoki centre, EV 10 makes a detour east via Merijärvi, where it again turns north to Pyhäjoki. Between Raahe and Liminka it leads closer to the coast via Siikajoenkylä.

You will probably want to skip most of the legs where you would have to bike along the E8 itself, and some less interesting other legs. A few bicycles can usually be taken on the coach with no problems (in the luggage department, no need to fold or pack it; Onnibus may not accept bikes at all). Having a bike allows you to make sidetrips quite far from the main road, where coaches or buses are sparse or absent.

Up north, past Tornio, you often won't have any parallel roads, but traffic is sparser than in the south, and might not really be a problem, although you should not forget about it when taking a break – always stay off the road unless keeping a good lookout. Distances are huge. Don't expect there to be lodgings in the villages unless you have arranged it. A tent and a camping stove are probably a good idea.

In Norway you still have few cycleways or parallel roads, and the shoulders may be even narrower than in the south. Check what to expect. Information on the EuroVelo "Atlantic Coast Route" may have hints.

Eat and drink
There are restaurants and cafés in the towns, and at some nice locations elsewhere. Outside towns, your main options are fuel stations, some of which are open around the clock. Between Muonio and Kilpisjärvi your only options may be Hetta as a sidetrip, Karesuvanto (and Karesuando across the border) and the café at Järämä, unless some cottage entrepreneur serves meals.

Sleep
Hotels and similar accommodation is as a rule available in cities and bigger towns; sometimes but not always in smaller towns. Cottages may be a nice alternative – and the only lodging outside towns – but as they seldom are at the road and not always available for single nights, check and book in advance. There are some campsites along the road, and camping in the woods is an option in rural areas and in the wilderness (see Right to access in the Nordic countries).

Stay safe


The road is well-maintained. Through Ostrobothnia, especially between Kristinestad and Vaasa, the road is quite straight, with a risk of losing concentration. After Muonio risks associated with remoteness and possibly cold weather may be relevant.

Animal collisions are a danger all along the road. There are elk (moose), in the south also white-tailed deer and roe deer and in the north (in Lapland and Troms), also reindeer. A collision with an elk can easily be lethal, the others are generally survivable. If the animal might have been hurt, call 112 to get local hunters or reindeer handlers trace it.

There are warning signs for elk and deer, which should be taken seriously, especially at dusk and dawn, even if they feel to be in effect most of the time. The animals often hang around at the forest edge, to suddenly cross the road. You have to be very alert to see them in time. The reindeer are easier to spot, but drive carefully until you are sure you have past all the herd, with some marginal. If an animal takes you by surprise, try to steer behind it, to let it escape forward – they may try anyway.

Note daylight hours. In midwinter in the north dawn turns into dusk without the sun rising, while the midnight sun shines in summer. In the south there is no polar night, but days are short in winter and nights light in the summer. If driving north to south in winter, the sun will shine in your eyes most of the time it is above the horizon from Muonio onward. Bring good sunglasses and have windscreen and wipers in good condition.

Go next
In the northern end, you can in addition to Tromsø explore the fjords, islands and mountains of Troms, or travel along the E6 (Norway's main highway) or Hurtigruten (the coastal ferry) east or south. The scenic archipelago of Lofoten is a bit south, whereas the region of Finnmark is to the east, and about 500 km from Skibotn along E6 and E69 is Nordkapp, the northernmost point in Europe (probably in the world) easily reachable by car.

If you've driven to the southern end, you've arrived in Turku, Finland's oldest city and third largest urban area with historic and modern attractions. Also here you have the option of exploring an archipelago – the Archipelago Sea – for example following the Archipelago Trail, or you can take the ferry to Åland and Sweden. Heading east, there are two historical routes to follow; the King's Road along the southern coast and the Hämeen Härkätie to Hämeenlinna.