Starting a Business as a Foreigner in Saudi Arabia in 2026
Saudi Arabia has implemented significant reforms to attract foreign investment, making it easier than ever for foreign entrepreneurs to establish businesses in the Kingdom. As of early 2026, these reforms include allowing 100% foreign ownership in most sectors and streamlining the registration process. This guide provides a comprehensive overview of how to start a business as a foreigner in Saudi Arabia in 2026.
Registration Process
The business establishment process primarily involves these three steps:
1. Register with the Ministry of Investment (MISA)
The first step for foreign investors is to register with the Ministry of Investment (MISA) to obtain an Investment Registration Certificate (IRC). This registration, which replaces the traditional foreign investment licence under the updated Saudi Investment Law (effective February 2025), serves as the modern equivalent, providing official recognition as a foreign investor permitted to engage in specified economic activities and ensures eligibility to proceed with company formation.
2. Obtain Commercial Registration (CR) with the Ministry of Commerce
After MISA registration, the next step is to incorporate your entity and secure Commercial Registration with the Ministry of Commerce and Investment. This is a mandatory procedural step that follows investment registration.
3. Register with Additional Government Agencies
Complete registration with relevant government bodies, including the Chamber of Commerce and tax offices.
Required Documentation
International companies must prepare extensive documentation, typically accompanied by Arabic translations and attestation:
- Certificate of incorporation from your origin country
- Articles of Association
- Audited financial statements
- Passport copies of shareholders and directors
- Detailed business plan and financial projections
Attention to document authenticity, translation accuracy, and proper attestation can mitigate application delays and compliance challenges.
Ownership and Investment Rights
Foreign Ownership Structure
100% foreign ownership is now permitted in most sectors, eliminating the mandatory local partnership requirement that previously existed. This provides greater flexibility and control for foreign investors.
Real Estate Acquisition
From January 2026, foreign investors are permitted to own real estate in most Saudi cities under defined conditions. Non-Saudi companies must register with the Ministry of Investment before acquiring real estate, and ownership becomes effective only upon registration with the Real Estate General Authority (REGA). Ownership restrictions apply in Makkah and Madinah: if non-Saudi ownership exceeds 49%, real estate must be used as headquarters; if 49% or less, real estate may be acquired for other purposes.
Capital Market Access
Effective February 1, 2026, the Saudi Capital Market Authority opened the stock market to all categories of foreign investors, eliminating the previous Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) framework. Foreign investors can now buy shares directly on the Saudi Exchange (Tadāwul) without minimum asset requirements. However, ownership limits remain: non-resident foreign investors cannot own 10% or more of any listed issuer's shares, and aggregate foreign ownership across all investor categories cannot exceed 49%.
Strategic Context
These reforms align with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 initiative, which aims to reduce dependence on hydrocarbons while developing tourism, technology, and renewable energy sectors. The regulatory changes signal the kingdom's commitment to attracting multinational corporations and private investors by providing scale, stability, and regulatory clarity.

