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Two regulatory changes that took effect in early 2026 have fundamentally altered the compliance landscape for M&A lawyers in Saudi Arabia and the acquirers they advise. The Ministry of Commerce (MoC) published new Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO) rules that became effective on 4 January 2026, requiring every Saudi entity to maintain a beneficial ownership register, file data through the Saudi Business Center (SBC) and notify changes within 15 days. Separately, the Capital Market Authority (CMA) opened the Saudi Main Market (Tadawul) to all categories of foreign investors effective 1 February 2026, dismantling the former Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) framework.
Together, these reforms reshape due diligence workflows, deal documentation and closing timetables, and any transaction signed without accounting for them carries material regulatory risk.
Before reading the full playbook, transaction teams should note six immediate compliance actions triggered by the 2026 changes:
In short: the 2026 reforms add mandatory UBO verification steps, tighter filing deadlines and broader foreign‑investor access to every Saudi M&A transaction. Deals that proceed on pre‑2026 assumptions risk regulatory penalties, delayed closings and post‑acquisition liability.
| Date | Rule / Event | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| 26 November 2025 | MoC publishes UBO Ministerial Decision | Review new beneficial ownership obligations; begin register preparation |
| 4 January 2026 | UBO rules become effective | All Saudi entities must maintain a UBO register; SBC filings and 15‑day update rule in force |
| 6 January 2026 | CMA Board announces amendments to FIS Rules | Review amended foreign‑ownership provisions; reassess deal structuring for foreign bidders |
| 1 February 2026 | Tadawul Main Market opened to all foreign‑investor categories | Foreign acquirers can invest directly via Saudi custodians; QFI regime no longer required |
| Ongoing | Annual UBO confirmation requirement | Companies must confirm or update UBO data with MoC/SBC at least annually |
The two pillars of the 2026 reforms operate through separate but complementary instruments. Understanding which regulator issued what, and where enforcement sits, is critical for M&A lawyers in Saudi Arabia advising on deal structure and risk allocation.
The UBO disclosure regime derives from the Companies Law and associated ministerial decisions issued by the MoC. The Ministerial Decision published on 26 November 2025 (effective 4 January 2026) establishes the obligation for all companies registered in Saudi Arabia to identify their ultimate beneficial owners, defined as natural persons who, directly or indirectly, own 25 % or more of the entity’s share capital or exercise effective control through other means. The Decision mandates maintenance of a UBO register at the company’s registered head office, electronic filing through the SBC platform and notification of any change within 15 calendar days.
The CMA amendments to the FIS Rules were announced by the CMA Board on 6 January 2026 and became operative on 1 February 2026. These amendments removed the QFI categorisation requirement, opened the Tadawul Main Market to all categories of foreign investors and revised the applicable ownership‑limit framework. The practical effect is that non‑resident investors may now open investment accounts with Saudi‑authorised custodians and trade directly, subject to the remaining notification thresholds for significant holdings.
Enforcement of UBO obligations sits with the MoC. Administrative fines may be imposed on the company and, where the breach involves wilful non‑compliance or inaccurate filings, on individual directors and managers. The Companies Law 2026 provides for escalating penalties, including potential suspension of certain commercial registrations for persistent violations. Industry observers expect the MoC to take an active enforcement stance given the Kingdom’s commitments under the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) mutual evaluation process.
CMA enforcement of the FIS Rules is handled separately. Violations of foreign‑ownership notification requirements or exceeding prescribed caps can result in CMA‑imposed fines, forced divestiture orders and, in serious cases, referral for criminal prosecution. For acquirers of listed companies, the practical risk is that a failure to notify a significant holding within the prescribed timeframe may stall, or unwind, a public M&A transaction.
The UBO disclosure rules apply to every Saudi‑registered entity. For M&A purposes, both target companies (sell‑side) and acquiring vehicles (buy‑side) must comply. The playbook below addresses who must file, what data is required and when filings must be made.
A UBO is any natural person who ultimately owns or controls the entity. The 25 % ownership threshold is traced through the entire chain of corporate ownership. Where no natural person holds 25 % directly or indirectly, the rules require identification of persons who exercise effective control by other means, for example, through shareholder agreements, board‑appointment rights or veto powers over key decisions. In multi‑layered structures common in private‑equity‑backed acquisitions, each intermediate holding entity must be “looked through” until a natural person is identified.
Where a company genuinely cannot identify a 25 %‑plus owner or controller, the rules require identification of the senior managing official (e.g. the CEO or managing director) as the reportable person. This fallback position should be treated as a last resort, not a compliance shortcut.
The UBO register and SBC filing must include, for each identified beneficial owner:
There are three critical timing obligations:
The following table summarises UBO reporting obligations by entity type, a reference M&A lawyers in Saudi Arabia should keep on every deal checklist:
| Entity Type | UBO Reporting Trigger / Threshold | Filing & Timing Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Saudi joint stock company (listed) | 25 % ownership or effective control by any means | Maintain UBO register at head office; update MoC via SBC within 15 days of change; annual confirmation |
| Limited Liability Company (LLC) | 25 % ownership or de facto control | Same: local UBO register; SBC filing within 15 days; annual confirmation |
| Foreign branch / foreign company | Effective control or local representative identified | UBO identification and filing via SBC; cooperate with Saudi regulators and banks for Wathq verification checks |
The introduction of mandatory UBO disclosure has direct, measurable consequences for M&A due diligence in Saudi Arabia. Transaction teams must now expand their document‑request lists, revise standard representations and warranties and rethink disclosure‑letter drafting, or accept post‑closing liability that did not exist before January 2026.
Buyers should add the following items to their standard M&A due diligence Saudi checklist:
The transactional disclosure requirements now demand explicit UBO‑focused provisions in share‑purchase agreements. The following illustrates representative drafting language:
“The Seller represents and warrants that (a) the Company maintains a complete and accurate register of ultimate beneficial owners in compliance with the Ministerial Decision of the MoC effective 4 January 2026; (b) all filings required to be made with the MoC via the Saudi Business Center in respect of UBO information have been made within the prescribed timeframes and are accurate in all material respects; (c) no UBO of the Company is a Sanctioned Person or a Politically Exposed Person that has not been disclosed to the Buyer in the Disclosure Letter; and (d) no change to UBO information has occurred since the date of the most recent SBC filing that has not been notified to the Buyer in writing.
Sellers should covenant to maintain the UBO register accurately through closing and to notify the buyer immediately of any change. Buyers should negotiate a specific indemnity, uncapped or subject to a meaningful cap, covering losses arising from any breach of UBO representations, including regulatory fines, forced remediation costs and third‑party claims.
For detailed guidance on how disclosure letters function in M&A transactions generally, see our guide on why disclosure letters are crucial in M&A deals.
The CMA’s decision to open the Saudi Main Market to all categories of foreign investors, effective 1 February 2026, represents the most significant liberalisation of the foreign investor rules Saudi capital markets have seen since the initial QFI framework was introduced in 2015. The amended FIS Rules remove the requirement for foreign investors to register as QFIs before trading on Tadawul.
Under the prior regime, non‑resident foreign investors needed to apply for, and maintain, QFI status through a CMA‑authorised person. The CMA amendments 2026 eliminated this category entirely. Foreign investors may now open investment accounts directly through Saudi‑authorised custodian banks and trade on the Main Market without prior CMA qualification. This applies to institutional investors, corporate acquirers and, significantly, high‑net‑worth individuals.
However, certain safeguards remain. Notification obligations apply when a foreign investor’s holdings in a single listed company reach certain thresholds. Strategic investor restrictions may also apply where a foreign acquirer seeks to acquire a controlling stake or exceed sector‑specific ownership limits. Early indications suggest the CMA will continue to monitor large foreign holdings through its existing significant‑ownership disclosure framework.
For public M&A transactions, including tender offers and negotiated share purchases of listed companies, the Tadawul foreign access reforms have several practical implications:
For background on foreign ownership of Saudi companies more broadly, our guide on whether foreigners can own 100 % of a company in Saudi provides useful context.
The following action matrix maps each deal stage to the specific UBO, Companies Law 2026 and CMA obligations that must be addressed. Transaction teams should use this as a living checklist from LOI through post‑closing integration.
| Deal Stage | Action | Responsible Party | Deadline / Timing | Key Documents |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre‑LOI | Request target UBO register and SBC filing confirmations | Buyer’s counsel | Before executing LOI | UBO register; SBC receipts |
| Pre‑LOI | Sanctions and PEP screening of known UBOs | Buyer’s compliance team | Before executing LOI | Screening reports |
| Due diligence | Verify UBO data accuracy; request Wathq confirmation from target’s bank | Buyer’s counsel + target | Within DD window (weeks 2–6) | Wathq verification output; bank confirmation |
| Due diligence | Confirm CMA foreign‑ownership compliance (listed targets) | Buyer’s counsel | Within DD window | CMA filings; custodian statements |
| Signing | Include UBO reps, warranties and indemnity in SPA | Both parties’ counsel | At signing | SPA; disclosure letter |
| Signing | Seller delivers UBO compliance certificate | Seller | At signing (condition precedent) | Signed UBO certificate |
| Pre‑close | CMA notification (if mandatory‑offer threshold triggered) | Buyer’s counsel | Per CMA M&A Regulations | CMA notification form |
| Pre‑close | SAMA notification (if target is a regulated financial institution) | Target / buyer’s counsel | Per SAMA requirements | SAMA change‑of‑control application |
| Closing | Update target’s UBO register to reflect new ownership | Target (with buyer input) | On closing date | Updated UBO register |
| Post‑close | File updated UBO data with MoC via SBC | Target company | Within 15 calendar days of closing | SBC filing confirmation |
| Post‑close | Notify CMA of significant holdings change (listed targets) | Buyer | Per FIS Rules notification timeline | CMA disclosure form |
| Ongoing | Annual UBO confirmation; periodic Wathq verification | Target company (new management) | Annually, per MoC rules | Annual confirmation filing |
Penalties snapshot: failure to maintain the UBO register or to notify changes within 15 days exposes the company to administrative fines imposed by the MoC. Persistent or wilful non‑compliance can result in escalating penalties, including suspension of commercial registrations. Directors and managers who knowingly file inaccurate UBO information may face personal liability. For CMA violations related to foreign‑ownership caps or notification failures, fines and forced divestiture orders are the primary enforcement tools.
For acquirers executing Shari’ah‑compliant transactions, including those involving Islamic financing structures, sukuk or Shari’ah‑governed investment funds, the UBO disclosure regime introduces additional screening obligations. Identifying the natural persons behind target entities may reveal exposures to non‑compliant activities (e.g. conventional interest‑bearing lending, alcohol or gambling revenues) that were previously obscured by layered corporate structures. Shari’ah boards and advisors should review UBO data as part of their compliance opinion process.
SAMA requires all financial institutions under its supervision to integrate with the “Wathq” service for verifying the identity of ultimate beneficial owners. In the context of an M&A transaction, this means that a buyer’s bank, the target’s bank and any financing institution involved in the deal will independently verify UBO data against the MoC/SBC records. Discrepancies, such as a UBO identified in the company register who does not appear in the Wathq database, or vice versa, can trigger freezing of accounts, delays in fund transfers and mandatory reporting to SAMA and the Saudi Financial Intelligence Unit.
Transaction teams should build a Wathq verification step into the pre‑closing timeline and ensure that the target’s banking relationships are not at risk of disruption during the transition period. For acquirers establishing an LLC in Saudi Arabia as a holding vehicle, early engagement with the chosen bank on Wathq compliance is essential.
The following illustrative timetable incorporates the 2026 UBO and CMA requirements into a standard private M&A transaction. Timings will vary depending on deal complexity, regulatory approvals required and whether the target is listed or private.
Building in buffer days at the pre‑close and post‑close stages is advisable. Industry observers expect that MoC and CMA processing times may be extended in the first year of the new regime as regulators and companies adjust to the systems. For buyers setting up new Saudi entities as acquisition vehicles, our guides on setting up a tech company in Saudi Arabia and setting up an F&B company in Saudi Arabia cover entity‑formation considerations relevant to this timetable.
The 2026 UBO disclosure rules and CMA foreign‑investor amendments have created a new compliance baseline for every M&A transaction in the Kingdom. For M&A lawyers in Saudi Arabia, the practical imperative is clear: expand due diligence to cover beneficial ownership verification, draft explicit UBO representations and indemnities, build SBC filing deadlines into closing mechanics and advise foreign acquirers on the opportunities, and remaining limits, created by the Tadawul opening. Deals that adapt to this framework will close faster and with materially lower post‑acquisition risk.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jihad Turkistani at Turkistani & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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