Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
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The rollout of new employment contracts in Saudi Arabia has fundamentally altered the legal landscape for employers and employees alike, introducing mandatory digital authentication, direct court enforceability and tighter procedural obligations that carry real litigation consequences. The Unified Employment Contract system, launched through the Qiwa platform in October 2025 and progressively expanded through 2026, transforms what was once a paper-based employment relationship into a digitally documented, government-verified obligation enforceable through the Najiz judicial portal. For general counsel, HR directors and employees across the Kingdom, the practical question is no longer whether these Saudi labor law updates matter, it is whether current contracts, termination procedures and payroll systems are compliant before the next enforcement deadline arrives.
This article delivers a litigation-focused playbook covering key dates, the Qiwa termination process, employer compliance checklists, and detailed claim-and-defence strategies for wrongful termination disputes under the 2026 framework.
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (HRSD) have jointly implemented the Unified Employment Contract initiative, requiring all employment agreements to be digitally authenticated through the Qiwa platform. According to the MOJ’s announcement, the contract formalises the employment agreement, specifies rights and obligations, and elevates documented wage clauses to the status of enforceable instruments, enabling employees to file enforcement requests directly through the Najiz platform to the Enforcement Court.
The employment contract transition is rolling out in phases: the initial launch occurred in October 2025, fixed-term contracts became directly enforceable via Najiz from March 6, 2026, and a final phase covering open-ended contracts is reported for August 6, 2026. Employers who have not authenticated their contracts through Qiwa face increased exposure to direct enforcement actions, wage claims and administrative penalties.
Industry observers expect enforcement activity to intensify as each phase deadline passes. The immediate priority for in-house counsel is a three-step action plan:
The Unified Employment Contract initiative represents the most significant structural change to employment documentation in the Kingdom in over a decade. As reported by Clyde & Co, the system launched in October 2025 and makes wage recovery faster and fully digital, the wage clause in a documented contract is treated as an enforceable clause, allowing employees to file enforcement requests directly through Najiz. This framework changes the calculus for employers who previously relied on informal or partially documented arrangements.
An authenticated employment contract is a legal agreement between employer and employee that has been formalised and verified through the government’s digital infrastructure. According to the HRSD, an employment contract must be concluded between an employer and a worker under which the latter undertakes to work under the employer’s management or supervision for remuneration. The Unified Employment Contract standardises this process by channelling all creation, modification and termination steps through the Qiwa platform, giving each contract a government-verified digital record.
As TASC Outsourcing notes in its summary of Saudi labour law updates, employers must ensure all contracts are authenticated through Qiwa to gain full legal validity, unregistered or manually signed contracts will no longer carry the same enforcement weight. This is a critical shift: the fixed-term contract transition in Saudi Arabia means that legacy paper agreements are increasingly vulnerable to challenge.
The Najiz portal, operated by the Ministry of Justice, serves as the digital gateway for judicial enforcement in Saudi Arabia. Under the new framework, the wage clause within a documented and authenticated employment contract is treated as a directly enforceable instrument. According to the MOJ’s announcement, the contract seeks to strengthen legal and judicial protections for all parties by making the employment agreement an enforceable document, especially concerning wages.
The likely practical effect is significant: employees no longer need to file a full labour dispute claim to recover unpaid wages if they hold an authenticated contract, they can proceed directly to the Enforcement Court via Najiz. For employers, this means any wage discrepancy between payroll and the authenticated contract creates immediate exposure to enforcement proceedings, without the procedural delays of a traditional labour tribunal.
| Date | Rule / Event | Practical Impact for Employers |
|---|---|---|
| October 2025 | Unified Employment Contract launch (initial phase) | Begin digital authentication; wage clause treated as enforceable document via Najiz. |
| March 6, 2026 | Fixed-term contracts become directly enforceable via Najiz | All fixed-term contracts must be authenticated; increased risk of direct enforcement actions upon renewal. |
| August 6, 2026 | Final phase for Unified Employment Contract rollout (open-ended contracts) | Full coverage for indefinite-term contracts, complete Qiwa integration recommended before this date. |
The Qiwa platform now serves as the primary mechanism for recording, managing and executing employment contract terminations in Saudi Arabia. According to Qiwa’s own guidance, both employees and employers can terminate an employment contract through their respective Qiwa accounts, but the platform requires specific procedural steps that, if missed, can create significant litigation exposure. Understanding the Qiwa termination process is essential for both sides of the employment relationship.
The Qiwa system distinguishes between several termination categories, each with different procedural and legal consequences:
Every termination action recorded in Qiwa generates a digital trail that is accessible to both parties and, critically, to the enforcement authorities through Najiz. Employers should treat the Qiwa termination record as the primary evidentiary document in any subsequent dispute. Best practice includes:
Early indications suggest that the most frequent employer errors in the Qiwa termination process include selecting an incorrect termination reason code (which can be challenged as evidence of bad faith), failing to upload supporting evidence at the time of termination, and neglecting to serve the contractual notice period before submitting the termination request. For employees, the primary risk is initiating a unilateral termination without fully understanding the financial consequences, particularly under fixed-term contracts, where early termination without valid cause may trigger compensation obligations.
The new enforcement landscape created by the Unified Employment Contract system and the Najiz portal has materially increased litigation risk for employers who fail to comply with the employment contract transition requirements. Industry observers expect the volume of enforcement actions and labour disputes to rise as employees become aware of the streamlined enforcement pathways now available to them. What follows is a practical litigation playbook for both claimants and employers navigating wrongful termination claims under the 2026 rules.
Employees and their counsel are increasingly deploying the following lines of argument in disputes arising from the new employment contracts in Saudi Arabia:
Employers defending against litigation for wrongful termination in Saudi Arabia under the 2026 framework should consider the following defence strategies:
Whether acting as claimant or respondent, parties should assemble the following evidence package for any dispute arising under the new framework:
Given the speed of Najiz enforcement for wage claims, early indications suggest that early settlement is often the most cost-effective strategy for employers facing meritorious claims. The likely practical effect of the new system is to compress the timeline for resolution: once a wage enforcement request is filed through Najiz, the employer faces potential asset freezes and travel bans. Settlement negotiations should therefore begin before the employee files, ideally at the point of Qiwa termination or immediately after. A structured settlement offer, covering outstanding wages, end-of-service benefits and a mutually agreed release, is typically more efficient than contesting enforcement proceedings.
Achieving full employer compliance in 2026 requires a structured remediation programme. The following checklist is designed for general counsel and HR directors managing large or mixed workforces in Saudi Arabia.
Employers should maintain a centralised termination log that records, for each termination event: employee name and Iqama number, contract type (fixed-term or indefinite), termination date and Qiwa confirmation reference, reason code selected, notice period served (yes/no/waived), supporting evidence uploaded, and final settlement amount and date paid. This log serves as the employer’s primary litigation-readiness tool and should be reviewed by counsel quarterly.
For employees transitioning from legacy paper contracts to authenticated Qiwa contracts, employers should issue a formal transition letter confirming: the date of transition to the new contract format, a statement that all existing contractual terms (including wages, benefits and tenure) are preserved, the Qiwa contract reference number, and instructions for the employee to verify and accept the contract through their Qiwa account. This letter mitigates the risk of employees later claiming that the transition altered their contractual entitlements.
The new employment contract framework interacts directly with Iqama (residency permit) transfer rules, creating additional compliance obligations for employers of non-Saudi workers. The Qiwa platform now serves as the interface for managing employment transfers, and the authenticated contract status of the employee directly affects their ability to transfer sponsorship.
In most cases, Iqama transfer still requires sponsor (employer) consent. However, the Qiwa amendments have introduced limited administrative pathways for transfer in specific circumstances, such as when a fixed-term contract expires and is not renewed through the platform. Employers who fail to properly record a contract’s expiry or termination in Qiwa may inadvertently enable an unsanctioned transfer, creating operational disruption and potential regulatory scrutiny.
Industry practitioners have noted that recent Qiwa amendments provide non-Saudi employees with defined grace periods following contract termination, during which they may seek alternative employment or transfer sponsorship. Employers should factor these grace periods into workforce planning and ensure that final settlement payments and Iqama-related obligations are completed within the prescribed timeframes to avoid administrative penalties.
When a claim, enforcement request or Najiz filing lands, the first 72 hours are critical. The following triage checklist should be actioned immediately:
The 2026 employment contract reforms represent a permanent shift in Saudi Arabia’s labour enforcement architecture. Employers who treat compliance as optional face direct enforcement via Najiz, compressed litigation timelines and escalating financial exposure. The recommended legal posture is clear: audit all contracts immediately, prioritise the authentication of fixed-term agreements, reconcile payroll against documented wage clauses and update termination procedures to align with Qiwa’s procedural requirements. Employees, in turn, should verify that their contracts are authenticated and understand the enforcement tools now available to them. Early legal advice, before a dispute crystallises, remains the single most effective risk-mitigation step for both parties navigating the new employment contracts in Saudi Arabia.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Faisal A. Siddiqui at Faisal A. Siddiqui Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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