Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
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Saudi Arabia’s property market entered a new era in January 2026 when the Law of Real Estate Ownership by Non‑Saudis, enacted under Royal Decree No. (M/14), came into force and opened designated zones across the Kingdom to foreign buyers for the first time. The reform permits non‑Saudi individuals and legal entities, whether resident or non‑resident, to acquire freehold ownership and other transferable real rights in specific areas, with applications processed through the Real Estate General Authority’s (REGA) digital “Saudi Properties” platform.
For foreign investors, in‑house counsel and real estate lawyers in Saudi Arabia, the practical challenge is no longer whether foreign ownership is possible but how to navigate the compliance framework, zone restrictions, REGA registration procedures and transactional risks that accompany this landmark shift. This guide maps the full legal regime, provides step‑by‑step procedural checklists and highlights the dispute‑prevention strategies that experienced practitioners recommend.
Royal Decree No. (M/14), published in the Official Gazette on 14 August 2025, approved the Law of Real Estate Ownership and Investment by Non‑Saudis. The law entered into force on 21 January 2026, at which point REGA activated the Saudi Properties portal and began accepting ownership applications from foreign nationals and entities.
In essence, non‑Saudis can now own real estate outright or hold other transferable rights in real estate within designated zones. The regime covers residents inside the Kingdom as well as non‑residents, and extends to non‑Saudi companies and non‑profit entities, subject to specific legal controls and documentation requirements. Makkah and Madinah remain subject to special restrictions, and all properties must be registered on the national title platform before a transfer can proceed.
The practical implications for buyers and their advisers are significant:
The non‑Saudi property ownership law represents the Kingdom’s most comprehensive legislative overhaul of foreign real estate rights, replacing a patchwork of older regulations with a single, codified framework. Understanding its statutory architecture is essential for any real estate lawyer advising on cross‑border Saudi transactions.
Royal Decree No. (M/14), dated 19/01/1447 H (corresponding to 14 August 2025 in the Gregorian calendar), was published in the Official Gazette and approved the Law of Real Estate Ownership and Investment by Non‑Saudis. The law’s implementing regulations and REGA’s procedural guidance followed, with the full regime becoming operational on 21 January 2026 when REGA began accepting applications through the Saudi Properties digital portal.
The law applies to every non‑Saudi natural person (any individual who does not hold Saudi nationality) and every non‑Saudi legal entity (any company, partnership or non‑profit organisation that is not wholly Saudi‑owned or does not qualify as a Saudi entity under applicable regulations). It distinguishes between two buyer categories:
The law defines real estate broadly to include land, buildings and units within buildings. Designated zones are geographic areas identified by REGA where non‑Saudi acquisition is permitted; each zone carries its own set of permissible uses and buyer‑category rules.
Non‑Saudis may acquire freehold ownership as well as other transferable real rights, including usufruct and long‑term lease rights, depending on the designated zone and the nature of the property. Industry observers expect that mortgages and encumbrances over non‑Saudi‑owned properties will be permitted in line with the Kingdom’s broader real estate finance regulations, although the practical availability of mortgage products from Saudi lenders to non‑resident buyers remains limited in the law’s early months.
The law explicitly excludes acquisition by non‑Saudis in Makkah and Madinah, except under narrowly defined circumstances that the regulations may prescribe. Properties outside designated zones remain off‑limits regardless of the buyer’s residency status or entity type.
One of the most critical tasks for real estate lawyers in Saudi Arabia advising foreign buyers is confirming whether a target property falls within a REGA‑designated zone. The law permits non‑Saudi ownership only in zones that REGA has formally gazetted, and each zone may carry distinct restrictions on property type, permitted use and buyer eligibility.
According to REGA guidance and market analysis published by leading advisory firms, designated zones for foreign buyers include areas within the following cities and developments:
| Designated Zone | Allowed Buyers | Key Restrictions |
|---|---|---|
| Riyadh (specified districts) | Non‑Saudi individuals (resident and non‑resident); non‑Saudi entities | Only registered properties; REGA approval required; residential and commercial use permitted in designated districts |
| Jeddah (specified districts) | Non‑Saudi individuals (resident and non‑resident); non‑Saudi entities | Only registered properties; proximity restrictions near holy sites apply |
| NEOM | Non‑Saudi individuals and entities | Subject to NEOM‑specific investment regulations and zone master‑plan conditions |
| Economic cities and special economic zones | Non‑Saudi entities meeting investment thresholds | May require minimum capital commitments or specific sector alignment |
| Other REGA‑gazetted areas | As specified per zone notice | Conditions vary; counsel should verify current REGA zone register before any transaction |
Critical practice note: Zone designations may be updated by REGA without legislative amendment. Practitioners should check the current REGA zone register at the time of each transaction rather than relying on historical lists. Makkah and Madinah are expressly excluded from foreign ownership under the law.
The REGA Saudi Properties platform is the sole channel through which non‑Saudis may apply for property ownership approval. No transfer of real estate to a non‑Saudi buyer can be registered without a completed and approved application on this portal. The following step‑by‑step process reflects the procedural framework established by REGA’s guidance documentation.
| Document | Individual Buyer | Entity Buyer |
|---|---|---|
| Valid passport (certified Arabic translation) | Required | Required (for authorised signatory) |
| Saudi residency permit (Iqama), if resident | Required | N/A |
| Commercial registration / certificate of incorporation | N/A | Required (legalised and translated) |
| Board resolution or power of attorney for acquisition | N/A | Required |
| Proof of funding source / bank reference | Required | Required |
| Title deed reference of target property | Required | Required |
| KYC/AML declarations | Required | Required |
Common pitfalls: Applications are frequently delayed by missing Arabic translations of passports and corporate documents, incomplete powers of attorney for entity buyers, and failure to verify that the target property is registered in the national title system before submitting the REGA application.
REGA has not published a guaranteed processing timeline, but early indications suggest that straightforward residential applications from individual residents are being processed within weeks of submission, while entity applications and more complex transactions may take longer. Processing fees are payable at the point of application submission. Practitioners should budget for additional notarisation, translation and legalisation costs that fall outside the REGA fee structure. Fee schedules are published on the Saudi Properties portal and may be updated by REGA periodically.
Compliance for foreign investors extends well beyond the REGA application itself. The following checklist covers the regulatory, financial and contractual obligations that real estate lawyers in Saudi Arabia should address in every non‑Saudi acquisition:
To mitigate the risks specific to this new regime, experienced practitioners recommend including the following clause types in sale and purchase agreements:
The end‑to‑end transaction flow for a non‑Saudi buyer, from initial offer to registered ownership, follows a sequence that integrates traditional Saudi conveyancing steps with the new REGA approval layer. Purchaser counsel should manage the process as follows:
| Step | Responsible Party | Typical Documents |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Letter of intent / heads of terms | Buyer’s counsel | LOI, NDA, proof of funds |
| 2. Due diligence | Buyer’s counsel / surveyor | Title search, encumbrance report, zoning certificate, zone‑designation confirmation |
| 3. REGA application | Buyer (via Saudi Properties portal) | Full documents checklist (see above), KYC/AML declarations |
| 4. SPA negotiation and execution | Both parties’ counsel | Sale and purchase agreement, escrow agreement, condition precedent schedule |
| 5. REGA approval received | REGA | Ownership authorisation notice |
| 6. Notarisation and transfer | Notary / title office | Notarised SPA, transfer application, payment of transfer fees |
| 7. Title registration | Title registration authority | Updated title deed in buyer’s name |
| 8. Post‑closing filings | Buyer’s counsel | Tax registrations, REGA compliance notifications, municipal registrations |
Before submitting the REGA application, buyer’s counsel should conduct a title search to confirm: (a) the property is registered in the national title register, (b) no encumbrances, liens or court orders exist against the title, (c) the property falls within a current designated zone, and (d) the seller has full authority to transfer. The title search is conducted through the Ministry of Justice’s electronic title system, and any discrepancies must be resolved before the REGA application proceeds. In the case of off‑plan or under‑construction properties, additional checks against the developer’s master title and RERA registration should be performed.
Foreign property ownership in Saudi Arabia brings financial obligations that buyers must address early in the transaction planning process. VAT at the standard rate may apply to certain real estate transactions, and the Real Estate Transaction Tax (RETT) applies to disposals of real property. Buyers should engage a Saudi tax adviser to confirm the precise treatment of their specific acquisition.
Mortgage financing for non‑Saudis remains a developing area. While the legal framework does not prohibit non‑Saudi borrowers from obtaining mortgage finance, the practical availability of such products, particularly for non‑residents, is limited. Industry observers expect Saudi banks to expand their non‑Saudi mortgage offerings as the market matures, but buyers should confirm lender appetite and terms before committing to a purchase that depends on local financing. Cross‑border remittance of purchase funds is subject to Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) regulations on foreign exchange, and buyers should confirm that their intended payment mechanism complies with these rules. A deeper analysis of taxes, financing and title fitness for non‑Saudi property owners in KSA 2026 is available as a companion resource.
The early operation of any new regulatory regime creates inherent dispute risk. The likely practical effect of the non‑Saudi property ownership law will be a new category of disputes centred on the following scenarios:
For dispute resolution, Saudi courts have jurisdiction over real estate matters within the Kingdom. However, parties may agree to Saudi‑seated arbitration under the Saudi Arbitration Law for contractual disputes arising from the SPA or related agreements. A recommended dispute escalation ladder for non‑Saudi property transactions includes: (1) direct negotiation, (2) mediation, (3) Saudi‑seated arbitration or litigation, with the choice clearly documented in the dispute resolution clause of the SPA. Enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in Saudi Arabia is possible under the New York Convention, to which the Kingdom is a party, although practical enforcement timelines vary.
The following timeline captures the critical milestones that real estate lawyers in Saudi Arabia and their clients should reference when assessing the operative legal landscape:
| Date | Event | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 14 August 2025 | Royal Decree No. (M/14) approving the Law of Real Estate Ownership and Investment by Non‑Saudis published in the Official Gazette | EY tax alert; laws.moj.gov.sa |
| January 2026 (early) | REGA publishes Q&A guidance document and procedural framework explaining designated zones and application process | REGA Q&A PDF (rega.gov.sa) |
| 21 January 2026 | Law enters into force; REGA activates the Saudi Properties portal and begins accepting non‑Saudi ownership applications | REGA media announcement |
Royal Decree M/14 has fundamentally changed the rules governing foreign property ownership in Saudi Arabia, but the reform’s complexity demands careful legal navigation. Zone eligibility, REGA registration, compliance documentation, contract structuring and dispute‑prevention strategies all require specialist guidance. Whether you are a foreign investor evaluating your first acquisition, a developer structuring a project for international buyers, or in‑house counsel updating your compliance framework, engaging experienced real estate lawyers in Saudi Arabia is the essential first step toward a lawful and commercially sound transaction under the 2026 regime.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Khalid Nassar at Khalid Nassar & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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