Founders House Helsinki launches equity-free startup hub
Founders House Helsinki, a new founder-focused hub in the Finnish capital, has opened an equity-free workspace designed for 15 of the country’s most promising founding teams. The initiative is backed by flagship ecosystem players Slush, Lifeline Ventures, and the City of Helsinki, signalling a coordinated push to accelerate the next generation of Finnish startups.
Model inspired by Stockholm’s startup density
The team behind Founders House Helsinki includes former Slush and Wave executives, who are drawing inspiration from Stockholm’s concentrated startup communities. Stockholm’s equivalent concept has already hosted around 80 companies, and the Helsinki founders aim to replicate – and eventually surpass – that benchmark.
By gathering high-potential founders in a single, curated space, the hub is designed to create strong peer density: daily exposure to other ambitious teams, fast knowledge transfer, and easier access to capital and talent. This model reflects a broader shift in the Nordic ecosystem toward founder-first infrastructure rather than traditional coworking or purely investor-led accelerators.
Equity-free support with strong ecosystem backing
The workspace offers selected teams access to experienced operators, investors, and mentors without taking a stake in their companies. This equity-free structure is intended to lower barriers for early-stage founders while still connecting them closely to leading venture capital networks such as Lifeline Ventures and the wider Slush community.
Strategic support from the City of Helsinki underlines the belief that founder density can translate into meaningful gains for the wider economy. By helping startups scale faster, the backers expect a measurable impact on GDP growth, job creation, and Finland’s competitiveness in sectors like deep tech, software, and digital services.
Raising Finland’s profile as a startup powerhouse
With its first 15 founding teams moving in, Founders House Helsinki is positioning itself as a core node in the Nordic innovation landscape. If it can match Stockholm’s record of 80 companies and beyond, the project could become a key driver of Finland’s next wave of globally relevant startups.

