An ancient settlement existed in the area of the present settlement as early as the first millennium BC. Its traces were found in 1935 by the
Finnish archaeologist Sakari Pälsi. Vyartsilya was first mentioned in the salary books for 1499–1500 years, the village then numbered three courtyards and was part of the Vodskaya Pyatina of
Novgorod Land. In 1617, according to the
Stolbovsky Treaty, the territory on which Vyartsilya was located was transferred by Russia to
Sweden. Later, the settlement became part of the
Grand Duchy of Finland of the
Russian Empire. In 1834, a small
sawmill was built. In 1851, a metallurgical plant was built in Vyartsilya on the site of a sawmill for melting lake and swamp
iron ore (it works to this day, but
cast iron and
steel smelting is no longer produced). The Finnish engineering company
Wärtsilä traces its history back to the creation of these enterprises. Since 1918, it has been part of independent
Finland. During the
Soviet-Finnish War of 1939-1940, the village suffered greatly. Vyartsilya became part of the
Karelo-Finnish SSR of the
USSR under the terms of the
Moscow Treaty of 1940.
Urban-type settlement status was granted to it in 1946. ==Administrative and municipal status==