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enforcing arbitral awards saudi arabia

Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Saudi Arabia (2026): a Practical Step‑by‑step Guide for Foreign Companies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Enforcing arbitral awards in Saudi Arabia has undergone a material transformation since the Draft Arbitration Law was published on 24 September 2025, followed by the new Enforcement Law consultations in early 2026. For foreign claimants holding an award against a Saudi‑based respondent, the enforcement route now runs through a clearer but more demanding procedural pipeline, from the Saudi Centre for Commercial Arbitration (SCCA) through to the Enforcement Courts and, ultimately, execution against assets. This guide provides a practical, step‑by‑step playbook covering documents, timelines, costs, common defences, and the tactical decisions that determine whether a paper award becomes collected cash.

Below is the high‑level enforcement flowchart that frames the rest of this article:

  1. Obtain the final award, confirm it is signed, reasoned, and dated.
  2. Prepare enforcement documentation, certified translations, authentication, power of attorney (POA).
  3. File with the competent Enforcement Court, submit the enforcement application with all supporting materials.
  4. Service and respondent notification, formal service on the award debtor via court channels.
  5. Respond to any challenge or defence, rebut objections based on public policy, due process, or jurisdiction.
  6. Execution, garnishment, asset seizure, travel bans, or auction as ordered by the Enforcement Judge.

Quick Checklist: Immediate Steps After You Receive an Award

The first 30 days after receiving a favourable arbitral award are critical. Early preparation prevents the most common procedural delays when enforcing arbitral awards in Saudi Arabia. Use this checklist to ensure your enforcement file is ready before approaching the courts.

  • Authenticated copy of the award. Obtain the original or a certified true copy signed by the presiding arbitrator or the arbitral institution (e.g., the SCCA). If the award was rendered outside Saudi Arabia, have it notarised in the country of origin.
  • Certified Arabic translation. The Enforcement Courts require all documents in Arabic. Commission a certified translation from a translator accredited by the Saudi Ministry of Justice. Translations of lengthy awards can take two to four weeks, begin immediately.
  • Copy of the arbitration agreement. Provide the original clause or separate agreement, plus its Arabic translation, to prove the respondent consented to arbitration.
  • Power of attorney (POA). A Saudi‑licensed lawyer must appear before the Enforcement Court on your behalf. Execute a POA that specifically authorises enforcement proceedings, asset attachment, and collection. Have it legalised by the Saudi embassy or consulate in your home country.
  • Proof of service or notification. Evidence that the respondent was properly notified of the arbitration proceedings and given an opportunity to present its case. This is one of the most commonly contested points.
  • Corporate documentation. Certificate of incorporation or commercial registration of the claimant, plus any authorisation showing who may act on behalf of the company, all translated and legalised.
  • Apostille or consular legalisation. If the award originates from a country party to the Hague Apostille Convention, an apostille suffices. Otherwise, documents must undergo full consular legalisation through the Saudi embassy.
  • Pre‑enforcement asset identification. Begin informal asset tracing in Saudi Arabia. Identify bank accounts, real property, commercial registrations, and vehicles. This intelligence shapes your execution strategy and informs any application for precautionary attachment.

Completing these steps within the first month positions a claimant to file without delay and signals preparedness to both the Enforcement Court and the respondent.

The Legal Framework in 2026: Draft Arbitration Law and New Enforcement Law

Saudi Arabia’s arbitration and enforcement landscape rests on two pillars that are both in flux. Understanding what changed, and what the 2026 reforms mean in practice, is essential before initiating any enforcement of an arbitral award in KSA.

The Draft Arbitration Law (Published 24 September 2025)

The draft arbitration law Saudi Arabia published in September 2025 represents the most significant proposed overhaul since the 2012 Arbitration Law (Royal Decree No. M/34). The draft clarifies and narrows the grounds on which courts may intervene in the arbitral process, tightens the relationship between the SCCA and the judiciary, and aligns more closely with international best practice, particularly the UNCITRAL Model Law. Key enforcement‑related provisions include a more explicit articulation of the grounds for setting aside awards, a defined role for the SCCA in assisting with enforcement, and procedural safeguards designed to reduce delay.

The New Enforcement Law (Early 2026 Consultations)

In parallel, the new enforcement law Saudi Arabia consultations have confirmed that Enforcement Courts hold exclusive jurisdiction to recognise and enforce both domestic and foreign arbitral awards. According to the Saudi Ministry of Justice, the Saudi judiciary has been processing a steadily increasing volume of enforcement applications, including foreign arbitral awards, under reciprocal international agreements. This consolidation of enforcement powers into a single judicial track is intended to accelerate execution timelines and create greater procedural consistency across the Kingdom.

Issue Position Before 2026 2026 Change
Court competence for enforcement Split between general courts and enforcement judges; jurisdictional disputes common Enforcement Courts have exclusive jurisdiction for recognition and enforcement of foreign awards
Grounds for setting aside Broad judicial discretion; inconsistent application Draft Arbitration Law codifies narrow, UNCITRAL‑aligned grounds
SCCA role in enforcement Administrative support only SCCA may assist with enforcement coordination, emergency measures, and judicial liaison
Translation and filing requirements Ad hoc local practice; inconsistent standards Standardised filing requirements and certified translation protocols
Emergency / interim relief Limited availability; slow processing SCCA emergency arbitrator mechanism strengthened; court‑ordered precautionary attachments streamlined

Saudi Arabia is a signatory to the New York Convention (1958), which provides the primary treaty basis for recognition of foreign awards in Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom acceded with a reciprocity reservation, meaning it will enforce awards only from other contracting states, and a commercial reservation, limiting enforcement to disputes considered commercial under Saudi law.

Who Does What: SCCA, Enforcement Courts, and Ordinary Courts

Understanding which institution handles which function is the first tactical decision in any enforcement campaign. The SCCA enforcement process, the Enforcement Courts, and the ordinary courts each play a distinct role.

The SCCA (Saudi Centre for Commercial Arbitration)

The SCCA administers arbitrations seated in Saudi Arabia under its own rules. For awards rendered under SCCA administration, the Centre provides procedural assistance, including certifying copies of awards, facilitating communication with courts, and, under recent rule amendments, supporting applications for emergency relief. The SCCA does not itself enforce awards, but its institutional support can materially accelerate the path from award to court filing. For parties who arbitrated under SCCA rules, engaging the Centre’s secretariat early is a practical advantage. For more on SCCA arbitration procedure and timelines, consult the dedicated procedural guide.

Enforcement Courts (Exclusive Jurisdiction)

Under the 2026 framework, Enforcement Courts have exclusive jurisdiction to recognise and enforce both domestic and foreign arbitral awards. These specialised courts, present in Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam, and other major cities, are staffed by judges trained in execution and asset recovery. The claimant files an enforcement application, attaches the required documentation, and the court issues a summons to the respondent. If no valid objection is raised, the judge orders execution. The trend, according to industry observers, is toward faster processing as the Enforcement Courts build institutional capacity and procedural familiarity with arbitral award enforcement.

Ordinary Courts (Limited Setting‑Aside Role)

Ordinary courts retain a residual role in challenges to awards, specifically, applications to set aside domestic awards or refuse recognition of foreign awards on narrow statutory grounds. Importantly, the draft law limits the ordinary courts’ ability to re‑examine the merits of the underlying dispute. This is a significant development for foreign claimants, as it reduces the risk of local court intervention in international arbitration that historically delayed enforcement.

Step‑by‑Step Enforcement Procedure for Foreign Awards in Saudi Arabia

This section provides the practical playbook for how to enforce an award in Riyadh and other Saudi cities. The procedure applies to both New York Convention awards and awards rendered in states with bilateral enforcement treaties with Saudi Arabia.

Step 1: Filing the Enforcement Application

Submit the enforcement application to the Enforcement Court with jurisdiction over the respondent’s domicile or the location of the assets to be seized. The application must include a jurisdictional statement confirming the basis for enforcement (New York Convention, bilateral treaty, or domestic law), together with all documents from the checklist above. Filing is increasingly handled through the Ministry of Justice’s electronic platform (Najiz), though physical filing remains available.

Step 2: Service and Translation

The Enforcement Court serves the respondent with the enforcement application and all supporting documents. Service must be in Arabic. If the respondent is located outside Saudi Arabia, service follows the applicable international conventions or is conducted through diplomatic channels, a process that can add two to six weeks. Ensuring all translations are pre‑certified and complete at the time of filing avoids the most common cause of delay at this stage.

Step 3: Precautionary Attachment and Interim Measures

If there is a genuine risk that the respondent will dissipate assets, the claimant may apply for precautionary attachment simultaneously with, or even before, filing the main enforcement application. The Enforcement Judge may order a freeze on bank accounts, a travel ban on the debtor’s principals, or an attachment of real property. Early asset intelligence (gathered during the preparation phase) is critical to a successful attachment application.

Step 4: Bond and Security Considerations

In some cases, the Enforcement Judge may require the claimant to post a bond or bank guarantee as a condition of granting precautionary measures. The amount typically ranges from 10% to 25% of the award value, though this varies by judge and case. Foreign claimants should anticipate this requirement and have arrangements in place with a Saudi bank before filing.

Step 5: Enforcement Remedies and Execution

Once the Enforcement Court confirms the award and any challenge period has lapsed or been resolved, the judge issues an execution order. Available remedies include garnishment of bank accounts, seizure and auction of movable and immovable property, imposition of travel bans, and, in the case of corporate debtors, restrictions on commercial registrations and government contracts. The enforcement officer (appointed by the court) coordinates the physical execution of these orders.

Stage Typical Timeline (Best Case) Typical Timeline (Contested)
Document preparation and filing 2–4 weeks 4–8 weeks
Service on respondent 1–2 weeks (domestic) 4–8 weeks (international service)
Court review and initial hearing 2–4 weeks 6–12 weeks
Challenge / defence period N/A (no challenge) 8–16 weeks
Execution order and asset recovery 2–6 weeks 8–24 weeks
Total estimated range 3–4 months 8–18 months

Tackling Common Defences: What to Expect When Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Saudi Arabia

Award debtors in Saudi Arabia typically raise one or more of the following defences. Understanding and pre‑empting these objections is essential to an efficient enforcement campaign.

Common Grounds for Resisting Enforcement

  • Public policy (ordre public). The broadest and most frequently invoked ground. The respondent argues that enforcing the award would violate Saudi public policy, which encompasses Sharia principles and fundamental rules of Saudi law. This has historically been the most unpredictable defence, though the draft arbitration law narrows its scope.
  • Lack of due process. The respondent contends it was not given proper notice of the arbitration or was unable to present its case. This defence targets deficiencies in service, procedural fairness, or language access during the arbitration.
  • Invalid or non‑existent arbitration agreement. A challenge to the enforceability of the arbitration clause, typically arguing incapacity, lack of authority to sign, or that the clause did not cover the specific dispute.
  • Arbitrator bias or lack of impartiality. Allegations that the tribunal was improperly constituted or that an arbitrator had an undisclosed conflict of interest.
  • Excess of jurisdiction (ultra petita). The respondent argues the tribunal decided matters beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement or awarded relief not requested by the claimant.

Tactical Rebuttals and Evidentiary Preparation

Effective enforcement counsel will prepare rebuttal evidence in advance. For each potential defence, the claimant’s filing should include:

  • Against public policy: A legal memorandum demonstrating that the award’s subject matter and remedies are consistent with Saudi commercial law and Sharia, including expert opinions on Sharia compliance where the award involves interest, penalties, or damages calculations.
  • Against due process objections: A complete service log, proof of notification at every stage of the arbitration, and evidence that the respondent participated or had the opportunity to participate.
  • Against arbitration agreement challenges: The signed agreement, board resolutions authorising the signatory, and any correspondence confirming the respondent’s acceptance of arbitration.
  • Against arbitrator bias: The tribunal’s disclosure statements, the institutional appointment process documentation, and challenge records from the arbitration itself.
  • Against ultra petita claims: A side‑by‑side comparison of the claimant’s requests for relief and the tribunal’s award, demonstrating the award falls within the scope of what was pleaded.

Understanding the landscape of setting aside arbitral awards in Saudi Arabia, and preparing for it proactively, can shave months off the enforcement timeline.

Emergency and Provisional Measures in Saudi Arabia

When asset dissipation is a real concern, waiting for the main enforcement process is not an option. Saudi law provides two parallel channels for urgent relief.

The first is through the SCCA’s emergency arbitrator mechanism. Under SCCA rules, a party may apply for the appointment of an emergency arbitrator who can order interim measures, including asset freezes and preservation orders, within days. This route is available before or during the arbitration, and SCCA emergency orders can subsequently be presented to the Enforcement Court for recognition.

The second is a direct application to the Enforcement Court for precautionary attachment. This route is typically faster for purely domestic enforcement scenarios and does not require an ongoing SCCA proceeding. The court may order bank account freezes, travel bans, and property attachments on an ex parte basis, subject to the claimant posting a bond.

Industry observers expect the parallel availability of SCCA emergency measures and court‑ordered attachments to become one of the most important tactical tools for foreign claimants enforcing awards in the Kingdom. The likely practical effect is that well‑prepared claimants who act within the first week of receiving an award can secure precautionary protection before the respondent has time to move assets.

Enforcement in Riyadh: Practical Local Tips

Riyadh is the most common venue for enforcement of arbitral awards in KSA, given the concentration of corporate headquarters and government entities in the capital. For parties seeking to enforce an award in Riyadh, several local practices deserve attention.

  • Filing logistics. The Riyadh Enforcement Court accepts electronic filings through the Najiz platform. Physical filings at the court registry are processed during standard business hours (Sunday to Thursday). Experienced local counsel can navigate the registry efficiently, which matters when timing is critical.
  • Translation standards. Riyadh judges are particularly strict about translation quality. Use only MOJ‑accredited translators, and verify that the Arabic text matches the original precisely, discrepancies in dates, party names, or monetary figures can result in adjournments.
  • Judge expectations. Enforcement judges in Riyadh expect comprehensive filings at the first hearing. Incomplete documentation or missing translations will result in postponements. Presenting a well‑organised bundle (in both Arabic and the original language) with a clear enforcement memorandum makes a strong first impression.
  • Enforcement officers. Once an execution order is issued, an enforcement officer coordinates asset seizure. Maintaining communication with the assigned officer and providing updated asset intelligence accelerates the collection process.
  • Local counsel. Retaining Saudi‑licensed counsel with specific enforcement experience is non‑negotiable. The enforcement process involves procedural nuances, judge‑specific practices, and local advocacy norms that cannot be managed remotely. For foreign companies establishing a company in Saudi Arabia or those with existing operations through a foreign branch, local counsel relationships are even more critical.

Cost, Timelines, and Realistic Expectations

Enforcement costs vary significantly depending on the complexity of the case, the respondent’s cooperation, and whether the award is contested. The table below provides ballpark ranges based on typical enforcement proceedings in Saudi Arabia following the 2026 reforms.

Procedure Typical Timeline Estimated Cost Range (USD)
Uncontested enforcement (domestic award) 3–4 months $15,000–$40,000
Uncontested enforcement (foreign award, New York Convention) 4–6 months $25,000–$60,000
Contested enforcement with defence on merits 8–18 months $50,000–$150,000+
Emergency / precautionary attachment (add‑on) 1–4 weeks $10,000–$25,000 (plus bond)

These figures include legal fees, translation and legalisation costs, court fees, and enforcement officer expenses. They do not include the bond or bank guarantee that may be required for precautionary measures. Saudi Arabia’s position among the top countries for international arbitration reflects ongoing improvements to these timelines and cost structures.

Practical Annexes: Filing Checklist, POA Guidance, and Attestation Steps

Enforcement Filing Checklist

  1. Original or certified copy of the arbitral award
  2. Certified Arabic translation of the award (MOJ‑accredited translator)
  3. Original arbitration agreement (or clause) plus Arabic translation
  4. Power of attorney in favour of Saudi‑licensed counsel (legalised)
  5. Proof of service / notification at all arbitration stages
  6. Corporate authorisation documents (board resolution, certificate of incorporation)
  7. Apostille or consular legalisation of all foreign documents
  8. Enforcement memorandum (Arabic) addressing jurisdiction, applicable treaty, and grounds for enforcement
  9. Asset identification memorandum (for precautionary attachment applications)
  10. Bank guarantee arrangements (if precautionary measures are sought)

POA Guidance

The power of attorney should expressly authorise the appointed lawyer to: file enforcement applications; appear before Enforcement Courts and appellate courts; apply for precautionary measures including travel bans and asset freezes; collect amounts awarded; sign settlement agreements on behalf of the client; and appoint sub‑agents. The POA must be executed before a notary, legalised by the Saudi embassy, and accompanied by a certified Arabic translation.

Translation and Attestation Steps

  1. Commission translation from an MOJ‑accredited translator.
  2. Have the translation certified by the translator with a signed statement of accuracy.
  3. Notarise the translator’s certification in the country of origin (if applicable).
  4. Apostille the notarised certification (Hague Convention countries) or obtain consular legalisation (non‑Hague countries).
  5. Submit the original document, the Arabic translation, and the attestation chain together as a single exhibit.

Conclusion and Next Steps

The 2026 reforms represent the most significant improvement to the enforcement landscape in Saudi Arabia in over a decade. Enforcement Courts’ exclusive jurisdiction, the SCCA’s expanded support role, and the narrower statutory grounds for challenge all favour well‑prepared foreign claimants. The critical success factors remain early preparation, quality documentation, experienced local counsel, and proactive asset intelligence.

For foreign companies holding arbitral awards and seeking practical guidance on enforcing arbitral awards in Saudi Arabia, the difference between a successful collection and years of procedural delay often comes down to the quality of the first filing. Engaging specialist dispute resolution counsel with deep local enforcement experience is the single most important step a claimant can take.

This article is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Enforcement outcomes depend on case‑specific facts, the applicable treaty framework, and evolving Saudi judicial practice. Readers should consult qualified Saudi‑licensed counsel before commencing enforcement proceedings.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohammed Al-Soaib at Al-soaib & Partners Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Saudi Ministry of Justice, Press Announcements
  2. Pinsent Masons, Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards in Saudi Arabia
  3. Dentons, Enforcement of Arbitral Awards
  4. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Enforcing Arbitration Awards in Saudi Arabia
  5. Attorney.sa, Enforcing Foreign Arbitration Awards in Saudi Arabia
  6. Saudi Centre for Commercial Arbitration (SCCA)
  7. Kluwer Law, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Saudi Arabia
  8. King Saud University, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards

FAQs

How do you enforce an international arbitral award in Saudi Arabia?
File an enforcement application at the competent Enforcement Court with authenticated copies of the award, a certified Arabic translation, proof of service, and a POA for Saudi counsel. The court reviews the application, serves the respondent, and, absent a valid defence, issues an execution order.
The SCCA provides administrative assistance, certifies award copies, and supports emergency relief applications. Enforcement Courts hold exclusive jurisdiction to recognise and enforce awards. Ordinary courts handle only narrow setting‑aside applications.
Grounds include public policy violation, lack of due process, invalid arbitration agreement, arbitrator bias, and excess of jurisdiction. The 2025 draft narrows these grounds and aligns them with international standards.
The new law consolidates enforcement powers in specialised Enforcement Courts, standardises filing procedures, and streamlines execution, early indications suggest shorter processing times for uncontested awards.
A certified award copy, Arabic translation, arbitration agreement, legalised POA, proof of service, corporate documents, and apostille or consular legalisation of all foreign‑origin materials.
Saudi courts cannot set aside a foreign award, but the Enforcement Court may refuse recognition on narrow grounds mirroring the New York Convention, primarily public policy, due process, and jurisdictional defects.
Uncontested enforcement typically takes three to six months. Contested proceedings, particularly those involving public policy defences or complex asset structures, may take eight to eighteen months.

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Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Saudi Arabia (2026): a Practical Step‑by‑step Guide for Foreign Companies

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