Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
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Saudi Arabia’s enforcement law landscape changed fundamentally on 20 April 2026, when Royal Decree No. M/237 introduced a new Enforcement Law replacing the Kingdom’s previous enforcement framework with a comprehensive regime that strengthens judicial tools, widens the categories of enforceable documents, and imposes stricter obligations on both private parties and government entities. For in-house counsel, compliance teams, and senior management overseeing operations in the Kingdom, the enforcement law Saudi Arabia now operates under demands immediate attention, particularly in relation to administrative decisions, quasi-judicial committee orders, and the accelerated timelines for asset disclosure and registry cooperation.
This guide breaks down the critical changes, maps out the procedural obligations, and provides a practical 10-step action plan for responding to enforcement proceedings under the new regime.
Before diving into the detail, here are the eight most consequential takeaways from the 2026 enforcement law reforms:
Royal Decree No. M/237 was issued on 3/11/1447H (20 April 2026), following Council of Ministers Resolution No. 884. The law creates a comprehensive statutory framework that both consolidates and modernises the Kingdom’s approach to compulsory execution of rights established by court judgments, committee decisions, and other qualifying documents.
The Enforcement Law governs the compulsory execution of rights established by enforcement documents. Under the prior framework, originally issued by Royal Decree No. M/53 dated 13/8/1433H, enforcement was limited to a narrower set of instruments and operated with fewer judicial tools. The 2026 law redefines the categories of enforceable documents, strengthens the procedural architecture, and equips enforcement judges with enhanced powers.
At its core, the law provides that compulsory execution may only be carried out with an enforcement document for a due and specified right. Enforcement documents include final court judgments, decisions and orders of committees with quasi-judicial mandates, arbitral awards, notarised instruments, and certain commercial papers, all executed in accordance with the Enforcement Law and its implementing regulations.
The 2026 enforcement law Saudi Arabia now recognises extends its reach to a broad range of parties. Creditors, whether private individuals, corporations, or government entities, may initiate enforcement proceedings. Critically, the law also imposes obligations on third parties, including banks, asset registries, and government bodies, requiring them to cooperate with enforcement court orders within specified timeframes.
The following table summarises the core statutory changes introduced by the 2026 regime:
| Topic | Previous Framework | New Law (Royal Decree M/237) |
|---|---|---|
| Enforceable documents | Court judgments, limited committee decisions, notarised instruments | Expanded to expressly include decisions and orders of committees with quasi-judicial mandates |
| Asset disclosure and tracing | Basic disclosure mechanisms; limited registry cooperation obligations | Enhanced tools for asset disclosure, tracing, and registry coordination; mandatory compliance timelines for government entities |
| Digital enforcement | Largely paper-based processes | Framework for digital enforcement procedures, electronic documentation, and automated notifications |
| Registry compliance timeframe | No explicit statutory deadline for government entity response | Government entities must comply with enforcement orders within three business days (per reported operational framework) |
| Creditor-debtor balance | Ad hoc judicial safeguards | Codified balanced approach with clear judicial safeguards for both creditors and debtors |
| Enforcement judge powers | More limited procedural toolkit | Strengthened powers including freezing orders, tracing, and coordination with law enforcement |
The Enforcement Law does not operate in isolation. The Ministry of Justice has issued implementing regulations that provide the procedural detail necessary for enforcement courts to operationalise the law’s provisions. These regulations address the powers of enforcement judges, documentation requirements, service procedures, and cooperation mechanisms with government agencies.
According to the Ministry of Justice press release of 13 April 2026, the law improves enforcement mechanisms and procedures, particularly by enhancing tools for asset disclosure and tracing and by strengthening cooperation between enforcement courts and other government agencies. The Saudi Press Agency reported on 15 April 2026 that the Justice Minister highlighted the law’s balanced approach to creditor and debtor obligations, with clear judicial safeguards built into the framework.
Industry observers expect the following implementation law amendments to have the most immediate practical impact on businesses and public bodies:
One of the most significant expansions under the 2026 enforcement law Saudi Arabia framework concerns the enforcement of administrative decisions. The law provides that enforcement courts shall enforce decisions or orders of committees with quasi-judicial mandates, in accordance with the Enforcement Law and its implementing regulations. This brings a wide range of administrative and regulatory decisions within the enforcement court’s jurisdiction.
The categories of enforceable administrative instruments are likely to include, though not be limited to:
For compliance teams, the critical question is whether a particular administrative decision qualifies as an enforcement document under the law. The following triage checklist helps assess enforcement risk:
If the answer to all four questions is yes, the decision is likely enforceable under the new regime, and the entity subject to enforcement should activate its response protocol immediately.
The enforcement courts in Saudi Arabia operate as specialised judicial bodies within the Ministry of Justice’s court structure, with dedicated judges empowered to oversee and execute enforcement proceedings. Under the 2026 law, the enforcement judge’s powers have been materially expanded.
The implementing regulations detail the enforcement judge’s jurisdiction, which includes the power to review enforcement documents, verify their validity, order asset disclosure, direct tracing of debtor assets across registries and financial institutions, issue freezing orders, and coordinate with law enforcement agencies where necessary to secure compliance. The enforcement judge also has the authority to impose penalties on parties who obstruct or delay enforcement proceedings.
The enforcement judge’s powers extend to reviewing enforcement documents relating to private financial rights in criminal cases, further widening the scope of matters that can be channelled through enforcement courts.
The law provides for emergency enforcement measures in circumstances where delay could result in the dissipation of assets or irreparable harm to the creditor. These measures may include provisional attachment of assets, travel bans, and orders directing banks and financial institutions to freeze accounts pending resolution of the substantive enforcement proceedings.
The 2026 law codifies important safeguards that constrain enforcement powers. Judgments, decisions, and orders may not be subject to compulsory execution as long as they are challengeable, unless they are self-executing or subject to expedited enforcement provisions. The law also preserves protections for a debtor’s essential assets, including minimum subsistence and housing protections that ensure the enforcement process does not strip debtors of their basic livelihood.
For in-house counsel and compliance officers, being served with an enforcement document under the new law triggers an immediate response obligation. The following 10-step action plan provides a structured approach to managing enforcement risk:
Early indications suggest that the enforcement courts are processing applications under the new framework at an accelerated pace, making the first 48 to 72 hours after service particularly critical for preserving appeal rights and managing asset exposure.
Not every enforcement order is final. The 2026 enforcement law Saudi Arabia framework preserves meaningful challenge and appeal mechanisms, but exercising them requires procedural precision and strict adherence to deadlines.
An enforcement order may be challenged on several grounds, including:
The challenge and appeal pathway depends on the nature of the underlying decision and the specific enforcement measure being contested. For administrative decisions enforced through the enforcement courts, the procedural roadmap typically involves:
| Action | Deadline | Forum |
|---|---|---|
| File objection to enforcement application | Within the period specified in the enforcement notice (varies by document type) | Enforcement court |
| Apply for stay of execution | Immediately upon filing objection, urgent application | Enforcement court (enforcement judge) |
| Challenge underlying administrative decision | Per the applicable administrative appeal period for the issuing authority | Administrative court / Board of Grievances (Diwan al-Mazalim) |
| Appeal enforcement court ruling | Within statutory appeal period from date of ruling | Appeal court (enforcement circuit) |
| Request review of emergency measures | At any time during proceedings, subject to changed circumstances | Enforcement court |
Obtaining a stay of execution is often the most critical immediate objective for a party challenging enforcement orders. The enforcement court will assess whether the challenge raises a genuine legal issue, whether enforcement would cause irreparable harm, and whether the applicant can provide adequate security. Industry observers expect that enforcement judges will require compelling evidence and, in many cases, a bond or guarantee to secure a stay, reflecting the law’s emphasis on enforcement efficiency.
The burden of proof rests on the party challenging enforcement. Documentary evidence, including proof of payment, jurisdictional objections, and evidence of procedural defects, should be compiled and filed with the stay application to maximise the prospects of success.
The 2026 Enforcement Law continues to provide for the enforcement of arbitral awards through the enforcement courts, but the interaction between administrative enforcement and arbitration raises important coordination questions for international creditors and investors.
Foreign arbitral awards may, on the basis of reciprocity, be enforced under the conditions stipulated in the laws of the country where the award was issued, subject to the Enforcement Law’s procedural requirements. The recognition step for foreign awards remains a prerequisite, and enforcement courts retain discretion to review awards for compliance with Saudi public policy.
The likely practical effect of the 2026 reforms for international creditors will be:
The 2026 enforcement law Saudi Arabia framework imposes significant new obligations on government entities, banks, and public asset registries. These bodies are no longer passive participants in the enforcement process, they are active compliance subjects with binding obligations and potential exposure to sanctions for non-compliance.
Government entities, including those overseeing or registering assets, must comply with court enforcement orders within three business days, according to reporting on the law’s operational requirements. This represents a material acceleration from the previous framework, where response timelines for government cooperation were less clearly defined.
Banks and financial institutions face parallel obligations to execute garnishment and freezing orders within the timelines specified by the enforcement court. Non-compliance may expose institutions to judicial sanctions and, depending on the circumstances, liability to the creditor for losses caused by delay.
The enforcement judge also has the power to escalate non-compliance by public bodies, including referral to supervisory authorities and, where the implementing regulations provide, the imposition of financial penalties. This represents a meaningful shift in the enforcement dynamics between private creditors and public entities.
| Issue | Private Debtor | Public Body / Government Entity | Foreign Investor / International Creditor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enforceable via enforcement court? | Yes, standard enforcement proceedings apply | Yes, but subject to sovereign immunity analysis and specific cooperation obligations | Yes, recognition step required for foreign judgments/awards; reciprocity principle applies |
| Typical enforcement measures | Asset seizure, bank garnishment, travel bans, registry holds, tracing orders | Registry cooperation orders, disclosure mandates, escalation to supervisory authority | Same tools as private debtors; additional coordination for cross-border asset recovery |
| Compliance timeline | As specified in enforcement notice and court orders | Three business days for registry and asset-related compliance (per reported framework) | Subject to recognition proceedings timeline plus standard enforcement timelines |
| Key risk | Asset freezing, travel ban, inability to transact | Judicial sanctions, supervisory referral, reputational exposure | Delayed enforcement due to recognition step; sovereign immunity defences by respondents |
| Primary remedy if non-compliant | Contempt proceedings, financial penalties, imprisonment in certain cases | Escalation, financial penalties, supervisory intervention | Application to enforcement court for compliance orders; diplomatic channels in sovereign disputes |
The 2026 enforcement law Saudi Arabia reform is the most significant change to the Kingdom’s enforcement framework in over a decade. For businesses operating in or transacting with Saudi counterparts, immediate action is necessary, whether that means auditing existing exposure to administrative decisions that may now be enforceable, updating internal compliance protocols, or preparing response plans for enforcement proceedings.
Companies and public bodies that have already been served with enforcement documents under the new regime should treat the matter as urgent and engage qualified local counsel without delay. The tight procedural timelines and enhanced judicial powers under Royal Decree M/237 mean that the window for preserving appeal rights and managing asset exposure is narrow.
For a detailed assessment of your exposure under the new Enforcement Law, or for immediate assistance responding to enforcement proceedings, contact a qualified administrative law specialist through the Global Law Experts network.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohammed Alhashem at Mohammed AlHashem Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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