Ruokolahti

Ruokolahti
Ruokolax
Municipality
Ruokolahden kunta
Ruokolax kommun
Church in Ruokolahti
Location of Ruokolahti in Finland
Coordinates: 61°17.5′N 028°49′E / 61.2917°N 28.817°E / 61.2917; 28.817
Country Finland
RegionSouth Karelia
Sub-regionImatra
Charter1868
Government
  Municipal managerJukka-Pekka Bergman
Area
 (2018-01-01)
  Total
1,219.85 km2 (470.99 sq mi)
  Land942.09 km2 (363.74 sq mi)
  Water276.4 km2 (106.7 sq mi)
  Rank81st largest in Finland
Population
 (2025-03-31)
  Total
4,719
  Rank171st largest in Finland
  Density5.01/km2 (13.0/sq mi)
Population by native language
  Finnish95.6% (official)
  Swedish0.2%
  Others4.2%
Population by age
  0 to 1412.2%
  15 to 6452.7%
  65 or older35.1%
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
ClimateDfc
Websitewww.ruokolahti.fi

Ruokolahti (Finnish: [ˈruo̯koˌlɑhti]; Swedish: Ruokolax; literally translated the "Reed Bay") is a municipality of Finland, situated in south-eastern Finland, in the region of South Karelia. Neighbouring municipalities are Imatra, Lappeenranta, Taipalsaari, Puumala, Sulkava, Punkaharju, Parikkala and Rautjärvi. Ruokolahti covers an area of 1,219.85 square kilometres (470.99 sq mi) of which 23% is water.

The municipality has 4,719 inhabitants (31 March 2025), but the population doubles in summer as holidaymakers occupy the 3,000 summer cottages in the region.

Ruokolahti is known for its natural environment, for example Kummakivi is a balancing rock located at 61° 29' 36.4596" N, 28° 25' 45.5016" E in Ruokolahti and is protected. In the west there is the Lake Saimaa and in the east there are hundreds of smaller lakes. The Salpausselkä ridges run through the area.

The famous sniper Simo Häyhä lived in Ruokolahti for 57 years after the 1939–40 Winter War. He is buried there in the graveyard of Ruokolahti Church.

The municipal coat of arms of Ruokolahti is a canting arms that directly refers to the name of the municipality, including reeds appearing in it. Wave line is usually used to describe a local body of water. The coat of arms was designed by Gustaf von Numers and was confirmed for use on September 11, 1951.