Many asylum seekers can and do seek help from reception centres in order to find new living arrangements, but if unsuccessful they're forced to turn to private and pricey brokers.
An asylum seeker from Iraq who wishes to remain anonymous says he has been trying for some time now to find a rental property in the Helsinki area but doesn't think he'll get one.
"I have searched dozens, if not hundreds of homes, without result," he says.
The number of people competing for flats is evidently so large that even his newly-gained residence permit, his college education and his fluent English don't appear to be adequate.
Usually when people look for a rental apartment, agents ask them for previous and current addresses and their place of employment.
"The only thing I have to write on the application is my name, phone number and my email address," the man who still lives in a reception centre says. "There isn't a chance that anyone will pick me."
"Things don't get any easier when you have an Arabic name," he adds.
He says that he applied to rent two different flats in the Haaga district of Helsinki, saying that one of the criteria he needed was to be able to speak Finnish.
"Speak Finnish, don't be a foreigner"
The housing cooperative of the other apartment said that they do not rent flats to foreigners, he says.
"It's clearly discrimination but it can't be proven," he says.
Since he still lives at the reception centre, he's able to look for help but resources are limited.
"Many of those who look for apartments without the centre's help are forced to turn to expensive, unofficial real estate brokers who charge a thousand euros to find an apartment," he says.
The majority of asylum seekers would prefer to live in the capital region, according to him, and he is one of them.
He says that he doesn't want to be forced to move out of the area because his contacts in Finland - and his internship position - are all based in Helsinki.
_UPDATE: This article was edited on September 21, to remove the name of the asylum seeker in the story, at his request. _