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appeal Saudization decision Saudi Arabia 2026

How Employers Can Comply With, and Appeal, Saudization Changes in Saudi Arabia (saudization 2026: Administrative Law Guide)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Employers seeking to appeal a Saudization decision in Saudi Arabia in 2026 face an unusually compressed timeline: the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (HRSD) has mandated 100 % Saudization across 69 additional administrative support roles, with sectoral quota increases in marketing and sales taking effect in the same window. For businesses that believe they have been incorrectly classified or disproportionately penalised, understanding the administrative appeals framework, from internal Ministry review through Najiz e‑filing to the administrative courts, is now operationally critical. This guide provides a step‑by‑step compliance and appeals playbook designed for HR leaders, in‑house counsel and private employers operating in the Kingdom.

Executive Summary, Key Saudization 2026 Changes, Immediate Actions and Appeal Options

The early‑2026 Saudization expansion represents one of the most significant Saudi labour regulation 2026 updates in recent years. Below is a concise snapshot of what changed and what employers must do now.

  • 69 new administrative support roles are now subject to 100 % Saudization, meaning only Saudi nationals may fill these positions once the effective date passes.
  • Sectoral quotas raised, marketing and sales roles have seen Saudization targets increased, with industry observers noting the new threshold at approximately 60 %.
  • Enforcement is active, HRSD is issuing compliance notices, and penalties range from fines to suspension of transaction privileges on the Qiwa platform.
  • Appeals are available, employers can challenge classification decisions and enforcement actions through internal HRSD review, Najiz e‑filing, and the administrative courts.

48‑Hour Action Plan:

  1. Audit your current headcount against the 69 newly Saudized administrative roles and identify any non‑Saudi nationals in those positions.
  2. Begin assembling your compliance documentation file, payroll records, contracts, job descriptions and recruitment evidence (see Section 2 for the full checklist).
  3. If you have already received an enforcement notice, file a request for internal HRSD review immediately and preserve all correspondence.

1. What Changed in Saudization 2026, The Rules, Dates and Affected Roles

Official Decisions and Deadlines

HRSD announced the expansion of Saudization requirements through a series of ministerial decisions published in early 2026. The core measure added 69 administrative support professions to the list of roles subject to mandatory 100 % localisation. Employers were given an implementation window, but the practical effect is that no new non‑Saudi hires may be placed into these positions, and existing non‑Saudi employees in affected roles must be transitioned out or reassigned. The decisions were published on the HRSD media centre and referenced in the Ministry’s procedural manual for employer compliance.

The 69 Additional Saudization Administrative Roles in Saudi Arabia, Scope and Examples

The 69 roles span a broad range of administrative support functions classified under the Unified Saudi Occupational Classification (USOC). The roles are not limited to traditional “office” jobs, they include any position whose primary duties fall within the administrative support category as defined by the HRSD classification system. Below is a sample illustrating the breadth of the changes.

Role (Example) Typical Responsibilities Immediate Employer Impact
Secretary / Administrative Assistant Calendar management, correspondence, document filing 100 % Saudization, cannot fill with non‑Saudi nationals
Translator (in‑house) Document translation, liaison interpretation 100 % Saudization, review current expat contracts
Receptionist / Office Clerk Visitor management, switchboard, record‑keeping 100 % Saudization, plan redeployment or replacement
Data Entry Operator Electronic record input, database maintenance 100 % Saudization, audit outsourced arrangements
Office Manager / Administrative Coordinator Workflow coordination, procurement, vendor liaison 100 % Saudization, assess succession planning

The full list of 69 professions is published in the HRSD decision and cross‑referenced to USOC codes. Employers should download the official classification list from the HRSD knowledge centre and map each code against their internal position titles to determine exposure.

Sectoral Quotas

Beyond the 100 % Saudization mandate for administrative roles, HRSD also raised percentage‑based quotas for other professions. Marketing and sales positions have seen targets increase, with the likely practical effect being that most private‑sector employers in these functions will need to ensure roughly 60 % of relevant headcount comprises Saudi nationals. Healthcare, engineering, and finance sectors are also affected by incremental quota increases announced in the same cycle.

2. Immediate Employer Saudization Compliance Checklist

Employer Saudization compliance under the 2026 changes requires a systematic approach. Failing to act promptly exposes your business to enforcement action and weakens any future defence or appeal. The checklist below is designed to be completed within the first two weeks of learning that your organisation is affected.

Records to Gather

Begin by consolidating every document that demonstrates your current workforce composition and your good‑faith efforts to localise. At a minimum, collect the following:

  • Payroll records, current and historical (minimum 12 months), showing Saudi versus non‑Saudi headcount by role.
  • Employment contracts, for all employees in affected roles, including any fixed‑term or outsourced arrangements.
  • Job descriptions, mapped to USOC codes, with clear role‑title alignment to HRSD’s 69‑role list.
  • Recruitment advertisements, evidence of attempts to hire Saudi nationals for affected positions (Taqat postings, recruitment agency contracts).
  • Professional registration certificates, HRSD and General Organisation for Social Insurance (GOSI) enrolment records for all Saudi employees.
  • Training and development records, documentation of any Saudi employee upskilling programmes.

Audits and Internal Reclassification

Conduct an internal audit comparing your position titles and actual job duties against the official USOC codes listed in the HRSD decision. Many employers discover that role titles in their HR system do not match the Ministry’s classification, which creates both compliance risk and, if misclassification is the Ministry’s error, a potential ground to appeal a Saudization decision. Recommended audit fields for your spreadsheet include: employee name, nationality, current role title, USOC code (as classified internally), USOC code (as classified by HRSD), match or mismatch flag, and recommended action.

Where mismatches exist, document them thoroughly. If your internal “Office Coordinator” role genuinely involves engineering project coordination rather than administrative support, that distinction may be decisive in an appeal. Businesses that have recently established an LLC in Saudi Arabia as foreign investors should be especially vigilant, as initial role classifications may not have anticipated the expanded Saudization list.

Operational HR Changes

Simultaneously, begin implementing operational changes to close any compliance gap:

  • Recruitment plan, activate Saudi hiring pipelines for all affected roles. Register vacancies on the Taqat national employment portal.
  • Retention measures, review compensation benchmarks for Saudi employees in administrative roles; industry observers expect salary pressure to intensify as demand for qualified Saudi administrative professionals rises.
  • Salary floor checks, confirm that all Saudi employees meet the minimum salary thresholds required for Saudization credit under Nitaqat.
  • Qiwa platform updates, verify your establishment’s Nitaqat classification on the Qiwa platform and request an updated Nationalisation certificate reflecting any workforce changes.

Companies that have recently set up a travel and tourism company in Saudi Arabia or established a foreign branch should align these HR changes with their sector‑specific licensing conditions.

Top 10 Documents to Save for a Potential Appeal:

  1. HRSD enforcement notice (original, date‑stamped)
  2. Payroll register for the 12 months preceding the notice
  3. Employment contracts for all affected roles
  4. Job descriptions mapped to USOC codes
  5. Taqat recruitment postings and applicant logs
  6. Recruitment agency contracts and correspondence
  7. GOSI enrolment certificates for Saudi employees
  8. Internal audit spreadsheet (with mismatch flags)
  9. Training and upskilling programme documentation
  10. All correspondence with HRSD (emails, portal messages, letters)

3. Enforcement, Penalties Saudization Non‑Compliance and Likely Administrative Actions

HRSD has a broad enforcement toolkit, and penalties for Saudization non‑compliance can escalate rapidly. Understanding the full spectrum of potential consequences is essential for calibrating your response, and for determining whether to appeal a Saudization decision.

Penalty Trigger Immediate Employer Response
Administrative fine Failure to meet quota for a targeted role within the implementation window Lodge internal review request with HRSD, gather hiring evidence, contact HRSD helpline
Suspension of transaction privileges Repeated non‑compliance identified during audit or inspection Request temporary stay of enforcement, prepare formal appeal (see Section 4)
Denial of Nationalisation certificate Missing certified Saudization evidence at time of certificate renewal Compile professional registrations and payroll proof; file emergency review
Restriction on new work permits / visa issuance Establishment falls into Red or Low Green Nitaqat band Accelerate Saudi hiring; seek reclassification review on Qiwa
Exclusion from government contracts Non‑compliant Nitaqat classification for government procurement eligibility Engage legal counsel to file administrative review before next tender deadline

The likely practical effect of these measures is cumulative: an employer that ignores a fine may find its ability to renew visas, hire new employees, or bid on government contracts progressively restricted. Early indications suggest that HRSD is prioritising enforcement for the 69 administrative roles, making prompt compliance, or a well‑prepared appeal, essential.

4. Can You Appeal a Saudization Decision? Administrative Appeals in Saudi Arabia, Review and Judicial Options

Yes, employers can appeal a Saudization decision in Saudi Arabia in 2026. Saudi administrative law provides multiple routes for challenging government classification decisions, enforcement notices, and penalty orders. The key is to act within the applicable deadlines and to select the correct procedural path.

Administrative Review (Internal Ministry Review)

The first step when you receive an enforcement notice or adverse classification is to request an internal administrative review from HRSD itself. This is typically the fastest and least costly route. The HRSD procedural manual sets out a process for employers to submit a formal request for reconsideration, supported by documentary evidence. The standard steps are:

  1. Receive the notice, note the date of delivery carefully, as deadlines run from this date.
  2. Request clarification, if the notice is ambiguous, submit a written request for clarification through the HRSD portal or helpline within the first few days.
  3. File a formal review request, submit your administrative review application through the designated HRSD channel, attaching all supporting documents.
  4. Await the Ministry’s response, HRSD will review the evidence and may request additional information before issuing a revised decision or confirming the original finding.

Industry observers expect the internal review process to take approximately four to eight weeks in most cases, though complex classifications may take longer. The standard of review at this stage is essentially a de novo assessment of the facts, the Ministry re‑examines whether the role classification and penalty were correct.

Electronic Filing: Najiz (Ministry of Justice Platform) and My.Gov.sa Services

If the internal HRSD review does not resolve the matter, or if the employer wishes to proceed directly to judicial review, the Najiz platform operated by the Ministry of Justice provides electronic filing for appeals to the administrative courts. The step‑by‑step process is as follows:

  1. Log in to Najiz, access the platform via the National Single Sign‑On (NSSO) credentials linked to your Absher or My.Gov.sa account.
  2. Select “Judiciary Services”, navigate to the e‑services menu and choose the relevant administrative appeal or case‑filing option.
  3. Complete the appeal form, provide details of the HRSD decision being challenged, the grounds for appeal, and the remedy sought.
  4. Attach supporting documents, upload all evidence (PDF format recommended), including the HRSD notice, your review request, any Ministry correspondence, and the documentary evidence from your compliance file.
  5. Submit and pay any applicable fees, court filing fees vary; the Najiz platform will display the applicable amount before final submission.
  6. Receive case number and hearing date, once accepted, the system assigns a case reference and schedules the initial hearing.

Administrative Courts, Grounds for Judicial Review, Standard of Review and Remedies

Saudi Arabia’s administrative judiciary (the Board of Grievances / Diwan al‑Mazalim administrative courts) has jurisdiction over disputes between private parties and government agencies, including challenges to HRSD decisions. When you appeal a Saudization decision through administrative courts in Saudi Arabia, the court will assess:

  • Legality, whether the Ministry acted within its statutory authority and followed proper procedures.
  • Factual accuracy, whether the classification of the role, the headcount assessment, or the penalty calculation was based on correct facts.
  • Proportionality, whether the penalty imposed was proportionate to the violation.

Available remedies include annulment of the decision, reduction of penalties, or an order directing HRSD to reclassify the employer’s establishment. Early indications suggest that administrative courts are receptive to well‑documented appeals, particularly where an employer can demonstrate good‑faith compliance efforts or factual errors in the Ministry’s assessment. The typical timeframe from filing to initial hearing is three to six months, with total resolution (including any further appeal to the appellate administrative tribunal) potentially extending to twelve months or more.

Practical Appeals Checklist and Sample Grounds

The most commonly cited grounds for a successful appeal of a Saudization decision include:

  • Misclassification of job role, the position’s actual duties do not match the USOC code applied by HRSD (e.g., a role classified as “administrative assistant” is genuinely a technical specialist position).
  • Procedural defect, the Ministry failed to follow its own procedural manual (e.g., insufficient notice period, failure to provide reasons for the decision).
  • Factual error, the headcount, payroll data, or qualifications relied upon by the Ministry were inaccurate.
  • Disproportionate penalty, the fine or restriction imposed exceeds what is warranted given the nature and extent of the violation.
  • Good‑faith compliance efforts, the employer can demonstrate active recruitment and training of Saudi nationals, even if full compliance has not yet been achieved.

Procedural Timelines Comparison:

Route Typical Deadline to File Likely Timeframe to Resolution
Administrative review at HRSD File promptly upon receipt of notice (check specific decision for stated deadline; typically within 15–30 days) 4–8 weeks
E‑filing via Najiz to administrative court File within the statutory appeal period stated in the HRSD decision (verify on the decision itself) 3–6 months (initial hearing)
Appellate administrative tribunal File within 30 days of the first‑instance administrative court judgment 6–12 months+

5. Evidence, Disclosure and How to Structure a Winning Appeal of a Saudization Decision

The quality and organisation of your evidence is often the single most important factor in the outcome of an administrative appeal. Saudi administrative courts and HRSD review panels assess documentary proof rigorously. Present your evidence as a structured, indexed file.

Evidence Checklist

  • Payroll records, monthly payroll summaries for the 12 months prior to the enforcement notice, clearly distinguishing Saudi and non‑Saudi employees by USOC‑classified role.
  • Job descriptions, current versions, signed by the employee, with duties mapped to specific USOC codes.
  • Recruitment advertisements, Taqat postings, recruitment agency agreements, and records of Saudi applicants considered or interviewed.
  • Professional licences and certifications, GOSI enrolment records, professional body memberships, and any HRSD‑issued licences.
  • Training records, evidence of investment in Saudi employee development (training programmes, certifications completed, mentoring schemes).
  • Correspondence with HRSD, all portal messages, emails, letters, and any records of telephone calls (notes, dates, reference numbers).
  • Organisational chart, showing the reporting structure and the actual role of the positions in question.
  • Certified Arabic translations, any document originally in English or another language must be accompanied by a certified Arabic translation for submission to administrative courts.

Witness Statements and Expert Evidence

In some cases, it may be appropriate to include witness statements from HR managers or operational directors who can attest to the actual duties performed by employees in disputed roles. Expert evidence, for example, from an HR classification specialist or an industry association, can support a misclassification argument. Any witness statement should be sworn or notarised in accordance with Saudi procedural requirements and translated into Arabic where necessary. For broader context on cross‑border business structuring considerations, employers may wish to review our guide to international commercial law.

6. Practical Defence Strategies for Saudization Enforcement Notices

When an employer receives an enforcement notice, the first 48 hours are critical. Reacting promptly and methodically can significantly reduce the risk of penalty escalation and strengthen your position in any subsequent appeal of a Saudization decision.

Template Initial Response to an Enforcement Notice

Use the following framework as the basis for your initial response:

  • Acknowledge receipt, confirm in writing (via the HRSD portal or registered mail) that you have received the notice, noting the exact date of receipt and the decision reference number.
  • Request a detailed breakdown, ask HRSD to specify the exact roles, USOC codes, and headcount figures relied upon in the decision.
  • Reserve your rights, state expressly that you reserve the right to seek administrative review and/or file an appeal to the administrative courts.
  • Outline compliance efforts, provide a brief summary of the steps you have already taken to localise the affected positions (recruitment advertisements, training programmes, Saudi hires in progress).
  • Request a temporary stay, if the penalty includes suspension of transaction privileges or restriction on work permits, request that enforcement be stayed pending resolution of your review or appeal.
  • Engage legal counsel, if you have not already done so, instruct a qualified administrative law practitioner in Saudi Arabia to review the notice and advise on the optimal route for challenge.

The goal of this initial response is threefold: to preserve your procedural rights, to demonstrate good faith, and to buy time to assemble a comprehensive evidence file. Administrative law in Saudi Arabia affords employers meaningful procedural protections, but only if those protections are invoked within the prescribed timeframes.

7. Templates and Annexes

To assist employers in navigating the Saudization 2026 compliance and appeal process, the following sample templates are available. Each template is provided as a starting point and should be adapted to the specific circumstances of your case. Jurisdictional verification by a qualified Saudi administrative law practitioner is recommended before submission.

  • Template 1: Request for Administrative Review to HRSD (Short Form), a structured letter template for requesting internal reconsideration of an HRSD classification or enforcement decision. Includes standard fields for decision reference, grounds for review, and evidence index. Sample, jurisdictional verification recommended.
  • Template 2: Najiz E‑Filing Checklist and File Index, a step‑by‑step checklist for preparing and filing an appeal through the Najiz platform, including document formatting requirements, required attachments, and fee payment instructions. Sample, jurisdictional verification recommended.
  • Template 3: Evidence Index Spreadsheet (CSV), a pre‑formatted spreadsheet for organising and indexing all documentary evidence supporting your appeal. Fields include document title, date, source, relevance to specific ground of appeal, and Arabic translation status. Sample, jurisdictional verification recommended.

These templates are designed to be used in conjunction with the procedural guidance in Sections 4, 5 and 6 of this guide. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be filed without review by qualified counsel familiar with the specific facts of your case and current HRSD procedural requirements.

9. Conclusion, Appeal Saudization Decision Saudi Arabia 2026: Recommended Next Steps

The Saudization 2026 changes demand immediate action from every employer with non‑Saudi nationals in administrative support roles. Compliance is the first priority, but where HRSD has misclassified your roles, relied on inaccurate data, or imposed a disproportionate penalty, the administrative appeals framework in Saudi Arabia provides a structured route to challenge the decision. The right to appeal a Saudization decision in Saudi Arabia in 2026 is clear, but it must be exercised promptly and supported by thorough documentation.

Three recommended next steps:

  1. Complete the compliance audit this week, use the checklist in Section 2 and the evidence index template in Section 7 to map your exposure and assemble your file.
  2. If you have received an enforcement notice, file for internal HRSD review within the deadline, use the template initial response framework in Section 6 and prepare your evidence using the checklist in Section 5.
  3. Engage a qualified Saudi administrative law practitioner, particularly if you intend to escalate to the administrative courts via Najiz or if the penalties imposed threaten your ability to operate.

Administrative law in Saudi Arabia offers meaningful protections for employers who engage with the process in good faith. Early, well‑documented action is the single most effective strategy, both for achieving compliance and for preserving your right to a successful appeal.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Human Resources & Social Development (HRSD), Announcement
  2. HRSD, Procedural Manual / Regulation & Procedures
  3. KPMG, Flash Alert 2026‑109
  4. EY / TaxNews, Saudization Briefing
  5. Najiz (Ministry of Justice), E‑Filing / Appeal Services
  6. Qiwa, Nationalisation Certificate Guidance
  7. Clyde & Co, The First Saudisation Updates of 2026
  8. Envoy Global, Saudi Arabia Expands Saudization Requirements
  9. Thriftplan, Saudization and Employee Benefits 2026

FAQs

Can an employer appeal a Saudization classification or quota decision?
Yes. Saudi administrative law provides employers with the right to challenge HRSD decisions through three routes: internal administrative review at the Ministry level, e‑filing an appeal to the administrative courts via the Najiz platform, and judicial review before the Board of Grievances administrative judiciary. The appropriate route depends on the nature of the decision and the urgency of the matter.
HRSD mandated 100 % Saudization for 69 administrative support professions, including roles such as secretary, administrative assistant, receptionist, office clerk, translator, and data entry operator. The full list is published in the HRSD ministerial decision and classified according to USOC codes. See the roles table in Section 1 of this guide for representative examples.
Deadlines vary depending on the route. For internal HRSD review, employers should file promptly, typically within 15 to 30 days of receiving the enforcement notice. For Najiz appeals to the administrative court, the statutory appeal period is specified in the HRSD decision itself. Employers should check the stated deadline on the specific decision they wish to challenge and file well in advance of the expiry date.
Penalties for Saudization non‑compliance range from administrative fines and denial of the Nationalisation certificate to suspension of transaction privileges on Qiwa, restrictions on new work‑permit and visa issuance, and exclusion from government contracting opportunities. See the penalties table in Section 3 for a full breakdown.
Log in to the Najiz platform using your NSSO credentials, navigate to Judiciary Services, select the administrative appeal option, complete the appeal form with the HRSD decision details and your grounds for challenge, attach supporting documents in PDF format, pay any applicable court fees, and submit. You will receive a case reference number and hearing date notification through the platform.
The Nationalisation (Saudization) certificate is issued through the Qiwa platform, which is operated by HRSD. The certificate confirms your establishment’s compliance status under the Nitaqat system. Without a valid certificate, employers may be unable to process work permits, renew visas, or participate in government tenders.
Employers can request a temporary stay of enforcement measures, such as suspension of transaction privileges, as part of either the internal HRSD review process or the Najiz court filing. There is no automatic right to a stay, but administrative courts may grant interim relief where the employer demonstrates that enforcement pending appeal would cause irreparable harm and that the appeal has a reasonable prospect of success.

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How Employers Can Comply With, and Appeal, Saudization Changes in Saudi Arabia (saudization 2026: Administrative Law Guide)

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