Takaisin blogiin
EnglishApril 15, 202610 min lukuaika

Mastering the YKI Writing Task: How to Structure a Formal Email or Complaint in Finnish (B1-B2)

Learn how to write a formal Finnish email or complaint for the YKI exam with structure templates, polite phrases, and an annotated sample response.

YKI Trainer

Mastering the YKI Writing Task: How to Structure a Formal Email or Complaint in Finnish (B1-B2)

If you are preparing for the YKI intermediate exam (keskitaso), you have probably noticed that the Writing section almost always includes one task that feels different from the others: a formal message to a company, a landlord, a school, or a public office. This is the task where many candidates lose points, not because their Finnish is weak, but because their register is wrong, their structure is incomplete, or their politeness markers are missing.

The good news? Formal writing is the most teachable, most predictable part of the YKI Writing section. Once you internalize a clear structure and a small set of polite phrases, you can produce a strong B1-B2 formal message in 15 to 20 minutes.

This guide gives you the structure, vocabulary, grammar, and a fully annotated sample answer. Bookmark it and use it for every practice attempt.

📝 Why the Formal Writing Task Matters in YKI

The YKI keskitaso Writing section typically contains three tasks:

  1. A short informal message (to a friend or family member)
  2. A formal message (complaint, request, inquiry, application)
  3. An opinion or narrative text

The formal message is scored on the same scale as the other tasks, but examiners pay particular attention to:

  • Task fulfillment: Did you address every point in the prompt?
  • Register: Is the tone appropriate for an unknown adult recipient?
  • Structure: Does the message have an opening, body, and closing?
  • Accuracy: Are conjugations, cases, and word order correct enough to be understood without effort?

A candidate who writes fluent but casual Finnish will be marked down. A candidate who writes simpler but correctly formal Finnish often scores higher. Register matters more than vocabulary range at the B1-B2 level.

💡 Key insight: YKI raters do not expect literary Finnish. They expect a polite, complete, and clearly organized message that an actual Finnish customer service agent could read and reply to.

🏗️ The Five-Block Structure of a Formal Finnish Email

Every formal message in YKI can be built from five blocks. Memorize this skeleton.

Five-block structure diagram for formal Finnish email

Block 1: Greeting (Tervehdys)

Unlike English, Finnish formal greetings are short and neutral. Choose one:

  • Hyvä asiakaspalvelu, (Dear customer service,)
  • Hyvä vastaanottaja, (Dear recipient,)
  • Hyvät [Yritys X] -asiakaspalvelu, (Dear [Company X] customer service,)
  • Hei, (Hello,) — acceptable in semi-formal contexts

👉 Avoid "Rakas" (it means "dear" in a romantic sense) and avoid name-based greetings unless the prompt gives a specific name.

Block 2: Reason for Writing (Syy)

State clearly why you are writing in the first sentence. Use these openers:

  • Kirjoitan teille, koska... (I am writing to you because...)
  • Otan yhteyttä asiassa, joka koskee... (I am contacting you about a matter concerning...)
  • Haluaisin valittaa... (I would like to complain about...)
  • Haluaisin tiedustella... (I would like to inquire about...)

Notice the conditional mood (haluaisin, not haluan). This is the single most important politeness marker in formal Finnish. Use it.

Block 3: Background and Details (Taustatiedot)

This is where you describe the situation. Include:

  • What happened
  • When it happened (date or time)
  • Where it happened
  • Any reference numbers, order numbers, or names

Use past tense for events, and try to use the passive voice when describing problems. Passive voice softens accusations.

  • Tuotetta ei toimitettu sovittuna päivänä. (The product was not delivered on the agreed day.)
  • Compare to: Te ette toimittaneet tuotetta. (You did not deliver the product.) — too direct

Block 4: Request or Expectation (Pyyntö)

State what you want the recipient to do. Be specific but polite.

  • Toivoisin, että... (I would hope that...)
  • Pyytäisin teitä... (I would ask you to...)
  • Olisin kiitollinen, jos voisitte... (I would be grateful if you could...)
  • Voisitteko ystävällisesti... (Could you kindly...)

Block 5: Closing (Lopetus)

Finnish closings are short. Pick one closing phrase, then your name.

  • Ystävällisin terveisin, (Kind regards,)
  • Kunnioittavasti, (Respectfully,)
  • Parhain terveisin, (Best regards,)

Then write your full name on the next line. If the prompt provides a name, use it. If not, invent one.

🎯 The Politeness Toolkit: Conditional and Passive

These two grammar tools transform a B1 message into a polished B2 message.

Conditional mood (-isi-)

DirectPolite (Conditional)
Haluan tietää...Haluaisin tietää...
Voitte korvata...Voisitteko korvata...
Toivon, että...Toivoisin, että...
Pyydän teitä...Pyytäisin teitä...
Olen kiitollinen...Olisin kiitollinen...

The conditional adds the meaning of "would" and signals respect. In formal Finnish writing, you can hardly overuse it.

Passive voice

Finnish passive does not specify the doer. This is perfect when you do not want to blame anyone directly.

  • Tuote tilattiin 5.3.2024. (The product was ordered on 5.3.2024.)
  • Asiaa ei ole hoidettu. (The matter has not been handled.)
  • Sähköposteihini ei ole vastattu. (My emails have not been answered.)

In complaints, the passive lets you state facts without sounding aggressive.

Person practicing formal Finnish email writing for YKI exam

📋 Annotated Sample Response: A Complaint About a Faulty Product

Let's apply everything to a typical YKI prompt.

Prompt: You bought a coffee maker online from the company Kahvikulma two weeks ago. The product arrived broken. You contacted customer service by phone but received no help. Write a formal email of complaint. Explain the situation and state what you want the company to do.

Here is a model B2-level answer (around 160 words, which fits the YKI expected length):


Hyvä Kahvikulman asiakaspalvelu,

Kirjoitan teille, koska haluaisin valittaa viallisesta tuotteesta, jonka tilasin verkkokaupastanne kaksi viikkoa sitten.

Tilasin kahvinkeittimen 10. maaliskuuta (tilausnumero 45821). Tuote saapui viiden päivän kuluttua, mutta paketti oli vaurioitunut ja itse laite ei toiminut lainkaan. Otin heti yhteyttä asiakaspalveluunne puhelimitse, mutta valitettavasti asiaa ei hoidettu. Minulle luvattiin, että minuun otetaan yhteyttä seuraavan päivän aikana, mutta yhteydenottoa ei ole tullut.

Toivoisin, että saisin viallisen tuotteen tilalle uuden tai vaihtoehtoisesti rahat takaisin. Olisin myös kiitollinen, jos voisitte vahvistaa sähköpostitse, miten asia etenee.

Vastaan mielelläni lisäkysymyksiin. Liitän mukaan kuvan vaurioituneesta paketista.

Ystävällisin terveisin, Maria Korhonen


Why this works (block by block)

BlockElement from sampleWhy it scores well
GreetingHyvä Kahvikulman asiakaspalveluSpecific, formal, no name guessing
ReasonKirjoitan teille, koska haluaisin valittaaConditional + clear topic in sentence 1
Detailstilausnumero 45821, dates, prior contactConcrete facts; rater sees task fulfillment
Passiveasiaa ei hoidettu, yhteydenottoa ei ole tullutAvoids direct accusation
RequestToivoisin, että saisin... Olisin kiitollinen, jos voisitte...Two requests, both in conditional
ClosingYstävällisin terveisin + nameStandard, correct, complete

Notice the message addresses every point in the prompt: what was bought, what went wrong, the failed customer service contact, and the desired outcome. YKI raters check the prompt point by point.

⚠️ Common Mistakes That Cost YKI Points

After reviewing thousands of practice answers, the same errors appear again and again.

1. Mixing puhekieli into a formal text

Do not write mä, sä, mun, sun, oon, tuun in a formal email. Use minä, te, minun, teidän, olen, tulen. If you trained your ear with puhekieli (and you should, for the Listening section), keep it strictly out of formal writing.

2. Using "sinä" instead of "te"

When writing to a company or unknown person, use the formal plural te form. Verbs follow accordingly.

  • Voisitteko auttaa minua?
  • ❌ Voisitko auttaa minua?

3. Forgetting the closing

Every year candidates write a perfect message and forget the Ystävällisin terveisin + name. This is a structural element. Missing it lowers the score for task fulfillment.

4. Being too aggressive

A complaint is not an attack. Phrases like Tämä on aivan käsittämätöntä! or Vaadin korvauksen heti! sound rude in formal Finnish. Stay measured. The angrier you sound, the less seriously a Finnish reader takes you.

5. Repeating the same opener

Avoid starting three sentences in a row with Minä. Vary your sentence beginnings using the passive, time expressions, or subordinate clauses.

🧰 Phrase Bank: Copy These Into Your Notebook

Here is a ready-to-use bank of phrases organized by function. Memorize at least two from each row.

FunctionUseful phrases
Opening reasonKirjoitan teille koskien... / Otan yhteyttä asiassa, joka koskee...
Stating a problemOlen pettynyt siihen, että... / Valitettavasti olen kohdannut ongelman...
Describing backgroundTilasin / ostin / varasin... [pvm]:nä / Asia tapahtui [pvm]:nä
Saying nothing happenedAsiaa ei ole vielä hoidettu. / Pyyntööni ei ole vastattu.
Making a requestToivoisin, että... / Pyytäisin teitä... / Olisin kiitollinen, jos voisitte...
Asking for confirmationVoisitteko vahvistaa, että... / Pyytäisin kirjallista vahvistusta.
Offering cooperationVastaan mielelläni lisäkysymyksiin. / Annan tarvittaessa lisätietoja.
ClosingYstävällisin terveisin, / Parhain terveisin, / Kunnioittavasti,

⏱️ A 20-Minute Writing Plan for Exam Day

In the YKI exam you have limited time per task. Use this internal clock for the formal message:

  • Minutes 0-3: Read the prompt twice. Underline every required point. List them in the margin.
  • Minutes 3-5: Sketch the five blocks. Decide your main request.
  • Minutes 5-17: Write the message. Use the conditional. Use the passive when describing problems.
  • Minutes 17-20: Proofread for: greeting present, all prompt points covered, conditional verbs spelled correctly, closing + name present.

Proofreading targets the highest-impact errors:

  1. Verb conjugation (especially te-form: -tte ending)
  2. Conditional spelling (voisin, not voisitn)
  3. Object case (partitive vs total)
  4. Final closing and name

Hand writing YKI exam practice with structural checklist

🎓 Adapting the Template to Other Formal Tasks

The same five-block structure works for every formal YKI task. You only swap the wording of Block 2 (reason) and Block 4 (request).

  • Inquiry (tiedustelu): Block 2 = Haluaisin tiedustella... / Block 4 = Olisin kiitollinen, jos voisitte lähettää lisätietoja.
  • Application or sign-up (ilmoittautuminen): Block 2 = Haluaisin ilmoittautua kurssille... / Block 4 = Pyytäisin vahvistusta paikastani.
  • Cancellation (peruutus): Block 2 = Joudun valitettavasti perumaan... / Block 4 = Toivoisin, että maksu palautetaan tililleni.
  • Permission request (lupapyyntö): Block 2 = Pyytäisin lupaa... / Block 4 = Olisin kiitollinen myönteisestä vastauksesta.

One template, four tasks. This is why structured preparation pays off so much in YKI.

✅ Self-Check Before You Submit

Before you click submit (or hand in your booklet on paper), run this six-point check:

  1. Does my message have a greeting?
  2. Did I state the reason in the first or second sentence?
  3. Did I cover every point from the prompt?
  4. Did I use the conditional at least twice?
  5. Did I include a closing phrase and a name?
  6. Did I avoid puhekieli forms (mä, sä, oon)?

If you can answer yes to all six, your message is on track for a strong B1-B2 score.

🚀 Practice Makes Polite

Formal writing in Finnish is not about talent. It is about pattern. The candidates who succeed in this YKI task are not the ones with the largest vocabulary. They are the ones who internalized the structure, drilled the phrase bank, and practiced under timed conditions until the conditional mood felt automatic.

Write three formal emails this week. Use the prompts you find in YKI sample tests, or invent realistic situations from your own life: a delayed package, a noisy neighbor reported to the landlord, a course inquiry to a työväenopisto. Apply the five-block structure every time. Within two weeks, the structure will feel natural.

Ready to put your formal writing skills to the test with feedback on every sentence? Try YKI Trainer free and get personalized writing exercises, model answers, and instant correction tailored to the YKI scoring criteria. Sign up here and bring your Finnish writing to exam-ready level.

Onnea kirjoittamiseen! ✍️

Aloita harjoittelu YKI Trainerilla

Saat tekoälypohjaisia harjoituksia, välitöntä palautetta ja edistymisen seurannan.

Aloita ilmaiseksi