Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
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Last reviewed: 5 May 2026
Foreign investors operating through branches in Saudi Arabia face a pivotal decision window in 2026. The New Companies Law 2026 has introduced tighter beneficial-ownership disclosure, refreshed governance standards and clarified the permissible corporate forms available to overseas entities, making branch conversion Saudi Arabia 2026 a live compliance and commercial priority. Simultaneously, the Capital Market Authority (CMA) has rolled out foreign-investment amendments that reshape ownership mechanics, while the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul) continues to refine its listing framework. This guide delivers a practical, three-part playbook, covering the branch-to-company conversion decision, joint venture restructuring and IPO readiness, so that general counsel, CFOs and in-market legal teams can act with confidence in the months ahead.
Three overlapping regulatory developments define the foreign investor structuring Saudi environment in 2026. Understanding how they interact is the first step toward an informed conversion, JV renegotiation or IPO timeline.
The New Companies Law 2026, administered by the Ministry of Commerce, modernises the corporate framework that governs every entity registered in the Kingdom. Its most significant impacts for foreign branch operators include mandatory beneficial-ownership (BO) disclosure, updated rules on permissible company forms (LLC, Joint Stock Company, Simplified Joint Stock Company), streamlined registration procedures via the Ministry of Commerce portal, and heightened corporate-governance expectations for boards and audit committees. Industry observers expect these changes to accelerate the trend of foreign companies converting branches into locally incorporated subsidiaries to meet governance and contracting requirements.
The CMA foreign investment amendments 2026 have broadened the pathways through which non-Saudi investors can participate in the Kingdom’s capital markets. Key measures include the relaxation of certain Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) requirements, expanded scope for direct foreign participation in listed securities, proposed shelf-registration mechanics designed to speed up repeat issuances, and enhanced disclosure obligations aligned with international standards. These reforms are administered jointly by the CMA and the Saudi Exchange.
In April 2026 the Ministry of Commerce published updated implementing rules that clarify procedural matters for company registration, conversion filings and BO disclosures. These rules tighten timelines for submission and introduce standardised forms through the Business Platform (business.sa). Foreign branches that have not yet aligned their internal records with the new requirements face potential administrative penalties and delays in licensing renewals.
The law raises disclosure and governance expectations, clarifies the permissible company forms and streamlines certain Ministry of Commerce procedures. However, a branch conversion still requires full asset and contract transfers, fresh regulatory filings, and may trigger tax and employment obligations. The net effect is that conversion is now procedurally clearer but substantively more demanding in terms of ongoing compliance.
| Legislative change | Practical impact | Immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| New Companies Law 2026, BO disclosure | All locally incorporated entities must file beneficial-ownership details with the Ministry of Commerce | Prepare BO register and supporting corporate chain documents |
| CMA foreign-investment amendments (early 2026) | Broader foreign participation in listed securities; eased QFI hurdles | Review ownership caps and assess direct-listing eligibility |
| Ministry of Commerce implementing rules (Apr 2026) | Standardised conversion forms and tighter submission timelines via business.sa | Confirm branch registration data is current; pre-populate new forms |
Deciding whether to convert a branch to a subsidiary in Saudi Arabia requires a structured evaluation of commercial drivers, regulatory triggers and operational readiness. This section provides the decision tree, procedural steps and documentation checklists that foreign investor structuring Saudi teams need.
Conversion is typically triggered by one or more of the following commercial or regulatory catalysts:
The two principal options when you convert a branch to a subsidiary in Saudi Arabia are the Limited Liability Company (LLC) and the Joint Stock Company (JSC). The LLC offers simpler governance, a manager or board of managers, fewer mandatory committees, and suits most commercial and industrial operations. The JSC requires a formal board of directors, an audit committee and, for listed companies, additional CMA-mandated governance structures. The Simplified Joint Stock Company introduced under the New Companies Law 2026 offers a middle ground with greater flexibility on share classes and transfer restrictions, making it attractive for venture-stage and pre-IPO entities.
This is the question investors ask most frequently: what assets and contracts must be transferred when converting a branch to a subsidiary in Saudi Arabia? The answer is comprehensive, every local asset and obligation should transfer to the new entity to avoid orphaned liabilities.
Practical tip: prepare a master transfer schedule listing every asset, contract, licence and account, with the responsible person, required consent, target transfer date and status column. This document becomes the single source of truth for the conversion project.
Employees must be transferred to the payroll of the new entity. Under Saudi labour law this typically involves terminating the employment relationship with the branch and re-hiring under the new entity, which can trigger end-of-service benefit (EOSB) calculations. Work permits and Iqamas (residency permits) must be sponsored by the new entity. Saudisation (Nitaqat) compliance should be recalculated for the newly registered company, the new entity starts with its own headcount, which may affect its Nitaqat band.
The transfer of assets from a branch to a newly incorporated subsidiary is a taxable event that requires careful planning:
| Step | Estimated duration | Key dependency |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate structuring decision and board approval | 2–4 weeks | Internal governance and parent-company sign-off |
| Drafting articles of association and shareholder resolutions | 2–3 weeks | Entity-type selection (LLC vs JSC) |
| Ministry of Commerce / business.sa registration | 2–6 weeks | Document completeness; MISA licence (if required) |
| ZATCA tax registration and VAT transfer | 2–4 weeks | TOGC eligibility assessment |
| Asset and contract transfers (novations, assignments) | 4–12 weeks | Counterparty consents; number and complexity of contracts |
| Employee transfers and GOSI re-registration | 2–4 weeks | EOSB settlement; Iqama sponsorship transfer |
| Branch de-registration | 2–4 weeks | Clearance of all branch obligations and final tax filing |
End-to-end, a straightforward branch conversion Saudi Arabia 2026 project typically takes three to six months. Complex cases involving regulated industries, large contract portfolios or sectoral licensing can extend to six to twelve months.
Joint ventures remain a cornerstone of foreign investor structuring Saudi market-entry strategies, particularly in sectors where local knowledge, licensing or government relationships are essential. The 2026 reforms reshape several aspects of JV governance and foreign-ownership mechanics.
Foreign investors typically choose between three JV structures:
Yes. The CMA foreign investment amendments 2026 expand the avenues through which foreign investors can hold and trade Saudi equities. The easing of QFI requirements means foreign partners in a listed JV vehicle may now hold larger stakes or access secondary-market liquidity more readily. However, sectoral foreign-ownership caps (for example in banking, insurance and media) continue to apply under separate legislation. Practical structuring still depends on licensing conditions, BO disclosure obligations and any conditions imposed by the Ministry of Investment.
Robust JV governance requires a clear allocation of decision-making authority. Industry observers expect the 2026 reforms to prompt many existing JVs to refresh their governance documentation. Key elements include:
Exit clauses should be negotiated at the outset, not when a dispute arises. Standard mechanisms for joint venture structuring Saudi Arabia include:
For foreign investors whose long-term strategy includes a public listing, whether of the JV vehicle, a converted subsidiary or a Saudi holding company, the IPO readiness Saudi 2026 landscape presents both opportunity and complexity. The convergence of the New Companies Law 2026 and CMA reforms means that pre-IPO restructuring must now address a wider set of compliance milestones.
A branch cannot list on Tadawul. Only a Joint Stock Company (or, in limited cases, a Simplified Joint Stock Company) is eligible for a public offering. If an IPO is on the strategic horizon, conversion from branch to JSC, or from LLC to JSC, should be initiated at least eighteen months before the target listing date to allow time for governance alignment, audited financial statements and CMA pre-filing.
CMA corporate-governance regulations require listed companies to have a board of directors with a minimum number of independent members, an audit committee composed entirely of non-executive directors (with at least one having financial expertise), a nomination and remuneration committee, and documented policies on related-party transactions, conflict of interest and insider trading. Early adoption of these structures signals readiness to the CMA and potential investors.
Prospective issuers must present audited financial statements prepared under IFRS for a look-back period specified by the CMA (typically three years). The New Companies Law 2026 beneficial-ownership disclosure requirements must be fully satisfied before the CMA will approve a prospectus. Issuers should also prepare management discussion and analysis (MD&A) sections, risk-factor disclosures and pro-forma financials if any pre-IPO restructuring has occurred.
The CMA review process generally follows this sequence:
The CMA has also consulted on introducing shelf-registration mechanics, which would allow approved issuers to conduct subsequent offerings without repeating the full review process. Early indications suggest this will benefit frequent issuers and convertible-instrument programmes.
A realistic timetable from restructuring decision to first day of trading is typically twelve to eighteen months. Key red flags that can delay the process include incomplete BO disclosures, unresolved tax assessments with ZATCA, ongoing material litigation, gaps in the audited financial track record, and governance structures that do not yet meet CMA standards.
| Entity option | Key regulatory / commercial difference | When preferred |
|---|---|---|
| Branch of foreign company | No separate legal personality in KSA; some tenders and licences restrict branch participation; simpler initial setup but exposes parent to unlimited local liability | Short-term market entry, limited local contracting, testing market demand |
| Locally incorporated subsidiary (LLC / JSC) | Separate legal personality; eligible for most tenders and licences; triggers BO, tax and governance obligations under the New Companies Law 2026 | Long-term market presence, government contracts, regulatory or licensing requirements, IPO plans |
| Conversion (branch → local company) | Requires asset/contract transfers, regulatory filings and may trigger tax and social-insurance obligations; eliminates direct parent operational liability | When strategic permanence is decided, or to comply with regulatory, tender or IPO prerequisites |
| Date / period | Regulatory event | Regulator | Action for foreign investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early 2026 | CMA foreign-investment amendments take effect | CMA / Saudi Exchange | Review ownership structures and QFI status |
| April 2026 | Updated implementing rules for companies published | Ministry of Commerce | Align conversion filings with new standardised forms on business.sa |
| Ongoing 2026 | BO disclosure regime fully operative | Ministry of Commerce | File BO registers for all locally incorporated entities |
| Ongoing 2026 | CMA consultation on shelf registration | CMA | Monitor outcome; assess impact on capital-raising strategy |
Branch conversion document pack:
JV amendment pack:
IPO readiness document pack:
Note: these checklists are for general guidance only, seek local counsel for advice specific to your transaction.
Every corporate restructuring Saudi project carries risks that can be mitigated through early identification and structured negotiation. Below are the ten most common red flags, followed by practical negotiation pointers.
The convergence of the New Companies Law 2026, CMA foreign-investment amendments and updated implementing rules means that maintaining a branch without re-evaluating your structure is, in itself, a risk decision. Whether the answer is a branch conversion Saudi Arabia 2026 project, a JV governance refresh or the start of an IPO readiness programme, the following role-specific action plan provides a clear path forward.
For country-specific guidance, visit our Saudi Arabia country page or explore the corporate practice area for further resources on structuring, governance and capital-markets readiness.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Faisal A. Linjawy at Law Firm of Hassan Mahassni, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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