Model |
Origin |
Type |
Number |
Image |
Details |
Pistols |
9.00 PIST 2008 (Glock 17) | Austria | Pistol | | | Specially made RTF2 checkering texture around the grip, 20 N (4.5 lbf) trigger pull, self illuminating tritium sights and a 17+1-round magazine. |
9.00 PIST 2003 (P99) | Germany | Pistol | | | Special forces and military police. |
9.00 PIST 80–91 (FN HP-DA) | Belgium | Pistol | | | |
9.00 PIST SIG Sauer | Germany | Pistol | | | Peace-keepers and military marching bands. |
Assault rifles |
7.62 RK 62 7.62 RK 76 | Finland | Assault rifle | 350,000 | | Will be supplemented by RK 62M |
7.62 RK 95 TP
| Finland | Assault rifle | 20,000 | | Modernized standard assault rifle |
7.62 RK 72 TP | East Germany | Assault rifle | | | East German-made AKMS (MPi-KMS-72). Purchased in the 1990s in large numbers for reserve troops. Folding stock version is used by various tank, APC and IFV crewmen. |
7.62 RK 56 and 7.62 RK 56 TP | China | Assault rifle | | | Chinese-made copies of the AK-47, purchased in the 1990s in large numbers for reserve troops, but not commonly used. |
Heckler & Koch G36 | Germany | Assault rifle | | | Operated by the border guards rapid response unit. |
FN SCAR | Belgium | Assault rifle | 300–500 | | Used by special forces[15] |
Shotguns |
12 HAUL REM 870 | United States | Shotgun | | | Standard shotgun. |
Sniper rifles |
8.6 TKIV 2000 | Finland | Sniper rifle | | | |
7.62 TKIV 85 | Finland | Sniper rifle | | | |
7.62 TKIV Dragunov | Soviet Union | Sniper rifle | | | |
12.7 RSTKIV 2000 | United States | Sniper rifle | | | Barrett M82A1. |
12.7 RSTKIV 2000 | United States | Sniper rifle | | | Barrett M95[16] |
Submachine guns |
9.00 KP 2000 (MP5) | Germany | Submachine gun | | | Special forces. |
Support weapons |
7.62 KK PKM 7.62 KK PKT | Soviet Union | General-purpose machine gun | | | Standard general-purpose machine gun. 7.62 KK PKT is used in all IFV's in the Finnish army. |
7.62 KVKK 62 | Finland | Light machine gun | | | Being gradually replaced by PKM. |
12.7 ITKK 96 | Soviet Union | Anti-aircraft machine gun | | | Standard heavy machine gun |
12.7 RSKK 2005 | United States | Heavy machine gun | | | Found on the Patria AMV's Kongsberg weapon turrets. |
7.62 KK MG3 | Germany | General-purpose machine gun | | | Light armament on Leopard 2 tanks and NH90 helicopters. |
M134D-H Minigun | United States | Minigun | | | Used as light armament on NH90 helicopters by the Utti Jaeger Brigade.[17] |
40 KRKK 2005 | Germany | Grenade machine gun | | | |
40 KRPIST 2002 | Germany | Grenade launcher | | | |
Mortars |
AMOS-FIN (XA 361) | Finland Sweden | Mortar carrier | 18[1] | | 120mm twin-barrel mortar on a Patria AMV platform. |
120 KRH 92 | Finland | Mortar (weapon) | 698[1] | | |
81 KRH 71 Y | Finland | Mortar | | | |
Anti-armour |
102 RSLPSTOHJ NLAW | Sweden United Kingdom | Anti-tank weapon | 2,500[12] | | Disposable, man-portable, short range fire-and-forget anti-tank guided missile system. |
PSTOHJ 2000 PSTOHJ 2000M
RO 06 |
Israel | Anti-tank missile
Anti-tank missile Anti-ship missile |
140
45[18]
18 |
| 140[19] launch units for anti-tank purpose MR version. 18 ER version launchers for anti-ship use. 500 Spike-MR missiles and 200 Spike-ER missiles. 45 GILL launchers were purchased from the Netherlands in 2013. These were modified by the Finns to Spike-LR.[20] |
PSTOHJ 83 MA (BGM-71E) PSTOHJ 83 MB (BGM-71F) | United States | Anti-tank missile | | | |
112 RSKES APILAS | France | Anti-tank weapon | | | Portable one-shot 112 mm recoilless anti-tank weapon. Colloquially known as jumppaputki ("Gym tube"). Will be taken out of service by 2020.[21] |
66 KES 12 (M72 EC LAW Mk.I) 66 KES 88 66 KES 12 RAK (M72 ASM RC) | United States | Anti-tank weapon Anti-structure weapon | <70,000 | | Colloquially known as kessi. 66 KES 88 will be taken out of service by 2020.[21] |
95 S 58-61 | Finland | Anti-tank weapon | <1,000 | | 95mm recoilless anti-tank weapon. Colloquially known as musti ("Blackie"); the weapon makes a loud, distinctly dog bark-like sound when fired. In reserve. Will be taken out of service by 2020.[21] |
Land mines |
VP 2010 | Finland | Directional fragmentation weapon | | | Anti-personnel command-detonated directional fragmentation weapon with 1.3 kg FPX R1 (PBX type) explosive.[22][23] |
VP 84 | Austria | Anti-vehicle mine | | | Anti-vehicle directional fragmentation mine with 11.5 kg hexotol (a mixture of hexogen (RDX) and TNT similar to Composition B).[23] Used against lightly armored vehicles.[24] |
VP 01 | | Anti-vehicle mine | | | Anti-vehicle directional fragmentation mine with 10.3 kg Composition B.[23] Used against lightly armored vehicles. |
TM 65 77 | Finland | Anti-tank mine | | | Blast mine with 9.5 kg TNT and a pressure fuze.[25] |
Moniherätepanssarimiina 12 | Finland/ East Germany | Anti-tank mine | | | 11.4 kg mine, with 6.9 kg either East German or Finnish made TM-62 explosive, and a Finnish multiple sensor fuze.[23][26][27] |
POM 87 | Finland | Anti-tank mine | | | Shaped charge mine with 4 kg hexotol. Magnetic and seismic sensor fuze.[23] |
POM 87 94 | Finland | Anti-tank mine | | | Shaped charge mine with 4 kg hexotol. Magnetic and seismic sensor fuze, main explosive is similar to POM 87 but the fuze can also be programmed with a run-over counter and for self-deactivation.[23][28] |
KP 87 | Finland | Anti-vehicle mine | | | Off-route EFP anti-vehicle mine with 1.6 kg hexotol.[23][29] |