Two-day matchmaking and deal-making event held annually in Helsinki each June, gathering startup founders, venture capital investors, and institutional allocators from the Nordic and Baltic region for structured 1:1 meetings, workshops, and innovation showcases.
Arctic15 is an annual two-day event held at the Cable Factory in Helsinki, focused on startup matchmaking and venture deal-making in the Nordic and Baltic region. Now in its fifteenth edition, it brings together startup founders and venture capital investors for structured 1:1 meetings through a dedicated Deal Room system, alongside open-format programme content. It sits within the spring cluster of the European tech and private capital calendar, with a geographic centre of gravity that is distinctly Nordic.
The fifteenth edition of Arctic15 takes place on 11 and 12 June 2026 at the Cable Factory in Helsinki. No edition theme has been announced publicly as of verification. The organiser's website carries a preliminary programme page, but the full speaker list for 2026 has not been published. Two confirmed speakers have been identified through a third-party aggregator; the organiser itself notes that keynotes, panels, and fireside conversations will form part of the programme without disclosing the confirmed lineup at this stage.
June in Helsinki places Arctic15 at the tail end of the European spring events cluster, after the denser concentration of private capital gatherings in Amsterdam and Paris during May. For investors and founders operating across Scandinavia and the Baltic states, the timing aligns with the Nordic summer fundraising window before activity quiets in July and August. The event's positioning as the region's principal venture matchmaking forum gives it a distinct slot: there are few competing gatherings of equivalent scale in the Nordic geography during the same fortnight.
The number of stages operating simultaneously is not publicly disclosed. Specific session names, confirmed speakers, and the full thematic track breakdown for the 2026 edition are not available as of verification. The organiser has noted fifteen thematic tracks in its event description, but track names and assignments are not published.
The Deal Room is the operational centre of Arctic15. Investors and founders request and pre-schedule 1:1 meetings ahead of the event, creating a structured agenda before either party arrives in Helsinki. LP applications are reviewed by the organiser, meaning institutional allocators do not self-register without a qualification step. This filter is designed to maintain a minimum quality threshold in the investor pool accessible to founders.
The matchmaking infrastructure extends beyond the Deal Room into roundtables and workshops, giving participants additional structured contact points beyond the bilateral meeting format. No official networking application is disclosed for the 2026 edition; the scheduling mechanism operates through the registration and application process on the organiser's website.
Arctic15 is positioned as a generalist event within the startup and venture capital space, without a declared sector focus. The thematic orientation is determined by the Nordic innovation economy, which concentrates on technology, digital infrastructure, and adjacent sectors. The organiser describes fifteen thematic tracks for the event, though the individual track names are not publicly available. Core programme dimensions, based on available data, include:
Arctic15 draws both venture capital fund managers and institutional LPs. The GP constituency is primarily composed of Nordic-focused VCs and international funds with active Nordic deal flow. On the LP side, the event extends complimentary access to a broad range of institutional allocators, from pension funds and sovereign wealth funds to family offices, endowments, and development finance institutions. The LP qualification process requires an application reviewed by the organiser rather than open self-registration.
It is structurally both. The Deal Room and LP complimentary access programme give it genuine private capital infrastructure: institutional allocators attend specifically to meet GPs and assess deal flow, not to watch panels. At the same time, the event's public identity centres on startups and Nordic innovation, and its open-access pricing for founders makes it significantly more accessible than closed institutional LP and GP summits. The balance tilts toward venture-stage deal-making rather than buyout or private credit.
Five cases where the event is a poor fit. First, late-stage or growth equity investors focused on Series C and beyond will find the deal flow concentrated in early and mid-stage rounds; the startup population skews earlier. Second, private credit, infrastructure, and real assets managers have no natural constituency here: the programme and attendee base are oriented toward equity and venture, not debt or hard assets. Third, LPs seeking GP-to-LP meetings with established large-cap buyout funds will not find that population in material numbers. Fourth, non-Nordic founders or investors without existing or intended Nordic exposure may find the geographic specificity of the deal flow and network limiting relative to pan-European events. Fifth, participants who prefer passive conference formats with dense keynote schedules over structured meeting commitments will find Arctic15's architecture works against them: the Deal Room dynamic rewards those who prepare and pre-schedule rather than those who attend to observe.
Arctic15 is geographically concentrated in a way that pan-European events such as Web Summit or Slush are not. Its scale (2,000 delegates according to the organiser) is smaller than the largest European tech gatherings, and its matchmaking-first design means the ratio of meetings per participant is prioritised over speaker programme density. For investors and founders specifically seeking Nordic deal flow, this geographic and format specificity is an asset. For those seeking a pan-European sweep in a single event, it is a constraint.
The Cable Factory (Kaapelitehdas in Finnish) is a former Nokia cable manufacturing plant converted into one of Helsinki's principal cultural and events venues. Located in the Ruoholahti district near the city's western waterfront, it covers roughly 50,000 square metres across several interconnected halls and is used year-round for exhibitions, concerts, and large-format professional gatherings. The scale of the building accommodates both the Deal Room's meeting infrastructure and the expo and showcase areas simultaneously without significant crowding. Side events and informal gatherings in the adjacent neighbourhood are a practical extension of the main programme; the venue's industrial architecture and proximity to the city centre make it well suited to the after-hours schedule that typically accompanies events of this type.
ArcticStartup Media Oy is a Finnish commercial publisher and event operator. The company operates the Arctic15 event and runs ArcticStartup, a media platform covering Nordic startup and technology news. As a commercial publisher with an events arm, it combines editorial reach across the Nordic startup community with direct event production. The founding year of the company and the full size of its event portfolio are not publicly disclosed as of verification.
Arctic15 is the Nordic region's most structured venue for early-stage venture matchmaking: the Deal Room format and the reviewed LP qualification process give it infrastructure that casual tech conferences lack, while the Cable Factory setting and Helsinki's position in the Baltic geography keep the geographic focus unusually tight for an event of 2,000 delegates.
Arctic15 operates an open registration model with tiered pricing. For the 2026 edition, early bird rates are 49 EUR for startups (requiring a valid Business ID) and 149 EUR for investors. Qualifying institutional LPs attend at no cost, provided their application is reviewed and approved by the organiser. Eligible LP categories include representatives from banks, corporate investors, development finance institutions, endowments, family offices, foundations, insurance companies, investment consultants, pension funds, registered investment advisers, and sovereign wealth funds. Registration is processed through the official website at arctic15.com. Stand and sponsorship pricing is not publicly disclosed as of verification.
Institutional LPs apply through the organiser's registration system on arctic15.com. The application is reviewed by ArcticStartup Media Oy before a complimentary pass is confirmed. Eligible profiles span a broad range of institutional allocator types, from pension funds and sovereign wealth funds to endowments, family offices, and registered investment advisers. The review step means access is not automatic, even for qualifying profiles.
No geographic restriction on founders is stated in available materials. The event's focus on the Nordic startup ecosystem means the deal flow and investor population have a strong Nordic orientation, but participation is not limited by the founder's country of origin. The startup ticket requires a valid Business ID, which is a registered company identifier rather than a Finnish-specific requirement.
As of verification (8 May 2026), the full speaker lineup for the 2026 edition has not been published on the official website. The organiser's site references a preliminary programme and confirms that keynotes, panels, and fireside conversations will take place, but confirmed speaker names are not listed in full. Two speakers have been identified through a third-party aggregator; the complete list remains unavailable.
Ticket cancellation and transfer terms are not publicly disclosed as of verification. Prospective attendees should consult arctic15.com directly or contact the organiser for current policy details.
| Official website | https://arctic15.com/ |
| Register | https://arctic15.com/ |
| Programme | not disclosed |