Helsinki
Kids scramble over Market Square's cobblestones, grab fresh cinnamon rolls at a café, then sprint to the Design District's quirky shops and Suomenlinna island's sea fortress.
12 spots · 1 itinerary
Itineraries
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Food & Drink
3
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Old Market Hall (Vanha Kauppahalli)
Duck into this beautiful 1889 red-brick market hall right on the South Harbor for an easy family lunch, with stalls selling reindeer sandwiches, smoked salmon, Finnish meatballs, and fresh berry juices. It is compact enough that even restless kids can handle it, and the vendors are used to curious browsers.
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Fazer Cafe on Kluuvikatu
End the afternoon at Fazer, Finland's most beloved confectionery brand, at their flagship Helsinki cafe for hot chocolate and a korvapuusti, the oversized Finnish cinnamon bun that is denser and more cardamom-forward than anything you have had before. This is a genuine local institution, not a tourist trap, and the pastry case alone is worth the stop.
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Suomenlinna Brewery Restaurant
Before catching the ferry back, stop at the Suomenlinna Brewery Restaurant for an early dinner with water views, where the menu includes kid-friendly options like fish and chips alongside the craft beers adults will appreciate. The outdoor seating in warmer months looks directly out over the Baltic, and the atmosphere is relaxed and unhurried.
Activities
9
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Finnish Museum of Natural History (Luonnontieteellinen museo)
A short tram ride from the harbor, this museum houses a massive blue whale skeleton hanging from the ceiling and a crowd-pleasing dinosaur hall that children aged 5 to 14 consistently love. The exhibits are well labeled in English and the building itself is a grand, slightly dramatic space that feels like an adventure.
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Hietaranta Beach
Helsinki's most popular urban beach is a quick walk or bus ride from the Design District and offers sandy shores, a summer cafe, and calm Baltic water that families can wade or swim in during the warmer months. Even outside peak summer, the beach walk along the waterfront is breezy and beautiful and gives kids a chance to burn energy before the flight home.
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Design District Helsinki Shopping
A short walk south brings you into the Design District, a compact grid of streets lined with Finnish design shops, toy stores, and boutiques where you can pick up Marimekko prints, Moomin figurines, and handmade wooden toys that make far better souvenirs than airport gifts. The Moomin Shop on Iso Roobertinkatu is a particular hit with children of all ages.
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Temppeliaukio Church (Rock Church)
This extraordinary church was blasted directly into solid bedrock in the 1960s, and the result is one of the most unusual buildings children will ever walk into, with rough rock walls, a copper dome ceiling, and acoustics that make every whisper sound otherworldly. Arrive when it opens at 10am to beat the crowds and give kids room to explore the circular interior.
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Suomenlinna Fortress Walls and Cannons
Spend the afternoon exploring the grassy ramparts, old cannons, and tunnels that run through the island, which functions like a giant open-air playground for kids who love to climb and explore. Pack a picnic from the Old Market Hall the day before or grab a lunch at Cafe Chapman on the island itself.
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Suomenlinna Museum and Toy Museum
The Suomenlinna Museum gives families a quick and engaging overview of the fortress's 250-year history using a well-produced film and scale models, while the nearby Suomenlinna Toy Museum is a small gem with vintage Finnish toys and dolls that younger children find genuinely fascinating. Both are within easy walking distance of the ferry dock.
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HSL Ferry to Suomenlinna
Board the public HSL ferry from Market Square, which is covered by a standard Helsinki transit ticket and takes about 15 minutes across the harbor to the UNESCO-listed sea fortress island. Kids love the boat ride itself, and the ferry runs year-round every 20 to 40 minutes depending on season.
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Allas Sea Pool
Cap the trip at Allas Sea Pool, a floating complex in the South Harbor with heated pools, a sauna, and a relaxed waterside restaurant called Allas Bar and Kitchen where families can eat with a view of the harbor ferries coming and going. The pools are suitable for children, and experiencing a Finnish sauna culture moment, even a mild one, is something kids genuinely remember.
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