Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
Last reviewed: 16 May 2026
The Saudi Organization for Chartered and Professional Accountants (SOCPA) has reshaped the regulatory landscape for every accounting practice in the Kingdom through Decision 46268 and a sweeping package of 2026 amendments that tighten licensing criteria, expand zakat and tax reporting duties, and raise the bar for audit documentation. For CFOs, managing partners and compliance officers who must navigate the evolving SOCPA accounting rules Saudi Arabia framework, these changes demand immediate, structured action, not a wait-and-see posture. This guide breaks down the new obligations, maps them to firm-level deadlines, and delivers a ready-to-use compliance checklist so that no critical requirement falls through the cracks.
Decision 46268 and the accompanying SOCPA amendments 2026 affect virtually every firm that provides accounting, auditing, zakat or tax services within Saudi Arabia. The reforms consolidate several previously scattered circulars into a single, binding regulatory framework and introduce enforcement powers that carry real financial consequences. Before diving into the detail, here are the actions every accounting firm should prioritise right now:
| Firm type | Directly affected? | Priority action |
|---|---|---|
| Licensed audit firms (sole practitioners & partnerships) | Yes | Licence renewal, audit documentation upgrade, QA review |
| Accounting and bookkeeping firms | Yes | Licence verification, service-scope review |
| Zakat & tax advisory practices | Yes | Reporting alignment with ZATCA, engagement letter updates |
| Foreign branch offices providing accounting services | Likely yes | Confirm local representative requirement, licensing eligibility |
| In-house accounting departments (listed companies) | Indirectly | Ensure external auditor compliance, update internal controls |
Decision 46268 represents the most significant single regulatory action SOCPA has taken in years. Rather than issuing incremental circulars, SOCPA has consolidated its position on licensing scope, permitted services, zakat and tax regulation and audit-quality expectations into one decision, supplemented by the broader 2026 amendment package that was opened for public feedback through the national eParticipation platform. Together, these instruments rewrite many of the ground rules that accounting firms have operated under since the previous regulatory cycle.
The amended rules under the SOCPA accounting rules Saudi Arabia framework apply to any natural or legal person that offers, or holds itself out as offering, accounting, auditing, assurance, zakat-calculation or tax-advisory services within the Kingdom. This includes Saudi-registered partnerships, sole practitioners, and branches of foreign firms that maintain a local presence. Critically, the 2026 amendments clarify that firms providing only bookkeeping or payroll services are now brought within the licensing perimeter if those services involve the preparation of financial statements that feed into statutory filings. Industry observers expect this wider net to capture a significant number of smaller practices that previously operated without a formal SOCPA licence.
Decision 46268 introduces several new licensing duties that go beyond the previous baseline. Among the most notable changes:
These requirements are designed to ensure that only adequately qualified, actively supervised professionals perform the services that SOCPA considers within its regulatory mandate. Firms that have relied on informal arrangements or lapsed memberships must now formalise their compliance posture.
The 2026 amendments redraw the line between what a licensed accounting firm may and may not do. Key changes include:
In practical terms, the likely effect of these changes is that many firms will need to restructure their service lines. Practices that combine audit and tax under a single engagement partner may need to split responsibilities or decline certain mandates. These are not optional best-practice recommendations, they are now binding regulatory requirements tied to accounting firm licensing in Saudi Arabia.
Timing is one of the most urgent questions for compliance officers. The table below consolidates the key milestones that accounting firms must track. Where SOCPA has published specific dates, they are noted; where the regulator has indicated a compliance window without a fixed calendar date, firms should monitor SOCPA’s media centre and the eParticipation portal for updates.
| Date / Period | Rule or Decision | Action required by firms |
|---|---|---|
| Decision 46268 publication date | Decision 46268 gazetted and published on SOCPA website | Download full text; begin internal gap analysis |
| eParticipation consultation window | 2026 SOCPA amendments open for public comment via eParticipation portal | Submit comments; document firm position on proposed rules |
| Licensing compliance deadline (per SOCPA transition guidance) | All firms must hold a compliant licence or have submitted a renewal/upgrade application | Complete licence applications, gather CPD evidence, designate compliance partner |
| First reporting period under new zakat/tax rules | New zakat and tax reporting standards apply to engagements commencing in the relevant period | Update zakat calculation methodologies, revise client engagement letters |
| Audit documentation standards effective | Amended audit documentation and quality-assurance rules become mandatory | Update work-paper templates, implement digital records retention, schedule peer review |
| Ongoing, annual licence renewal cycle | CPD verification and compliance-partner attestation required at each renewal | Maintain CPD log; retain supporting records for a minimum period as specified by SOCPA |
Firms should not wait for the final compliance deadline to begin action. Industry observers note that SOCPA’s administrative processing times for licence applications can extend several weeks, and any documentation gaps will trigger requests for supplementary evidence that further delay approval. The prudent approach is to begin the gap analysis immediately and submit applications as early as the portal allows.
Accounting firm licensing in Saudi Arabia under the 2026 framework is more rigorous than under the previous regime. The process below outlines the core steps that firms must follow, whether applying for a new licence or renewing an existing one.
Step 1, Eligibility check. Confirm that every individual who will sign statutory reports holds active SOCPA membership and meets the minimum experience threshold. Verify that the firm’s legal structure (sole practice, partnership or branch) is eligible for the licence category sought.
Step 2, Assemble documentation. Prepare the following:
Step 3, Submit via SOCPA’s electronic portal. Applications are submitted online. Ensure all attachments are in the prescribed format and that any Arabic-language documents include certified translations where required for foreign-qualified professionals.
Step 4, Respond to queries. SOCPA may request supplementary evidence or clarification. Assign a single point of contact within the firm to handle these queries promptly, delays in response extend the overall processing time.
Step 5, Receive licence and publish details. Once granted, the licence must be displayed at the firm’s registered office and referenced in all engagement letters and reports. SOCPA publishes a register of licensed firms, and clients increasingly check this register before appointing an auditor or accountant.
SOCPA’s licensing framework distinguishes between provisional licences, typically issued to newly established firms or individual practitioners who have not yet completed the full experience requirement, and full licences that authorise the entire range of regulated services. Under Decision 46268, firms holding a provisional licence face tighter restrictions on the types of engagements they may accept. If your firm currently operates on a provisional licence, early planning for the upgrade to a full licence is essential, as the qualifying criteria have been recalibrated. Entities looking to establish an LLC in Saudi Arabia as a vehicle for professional services should factor these licensing tiers into their corporate structuring decisions from the outset.
Use the checklist below as a starting point. A downloadable version is available in the Downloads & Templates section of this guide.
One of the most consequential elements of the SOCPA amendments 2026 is the formal integration of zakat and tax obligations into the regulated services framework. Historically, zakat compliance in Saudi Arabia sat largely within the domain of ZATCA, with SOCPA playing a supporting role through its accounting standards. The 2026 changes make explicit that any firm offering zakat-calculation, zakat-assurance or tax-advisory services must do so under a SOCPA-endorsed licence and in accordance with updated technical standards.
Under the updated rules, accounting firms that prepare or certify zakat calculations for clients must follow the SOCPA-endorsed methodology, which aligns with ZATCA’s own computational rules but adds an assurance layer. This means the accountant must not merely calculate the zakat base and liability, they must also document the basis of their calculation, retain supporting workpapers, and issue a formal opinion or certificate that is subject to SOCPA’s quality-review process. The interaction between SOCPA and ZATCA is crucial: ZATCA remains the filing and collection authority, but SOCPA now governs the professional standards under which the advisory work is performed.
For firms advising foreign-owned entities or branches subject to corporate income tax rather than zakat, the SOCPA amendments impose parallel requirements. Tax advisory engagements must be documented to the same standard as zakat engagements, and the engagement partner must confirm that no independence conflict exists. Companies considering setting up a foreign branch in Saudi Arabia should be aware that their appointed accounting firm must now hold the appropriate SOCPA endorsement to provide these services. Meanwhile, the question of whether foreigners can own 100% of a company in Saudi Arabia directly affects whether the entity falls under the zakat or corporate income tax regime, and therefore which set of SOCPA rules applies to the accounting firm’s engagement.
| Obligation | LLC (Saudi-registered) | Foreign branch |
|---|---|---|
| SOCPA licensing required for the accounting firm | Yes, local licence plus SOCPA member signatory required | Yes, may require a locally licensed representative or partnership arrangement |
| Zakat filing responsibility | Company-level zakat, accountant prepares, certifies and retains evidence | Depends on ownership structure, accountant must advise and document the applicable regime |
| Corporate income tax filing | Applicable only to the foreign-owned share (if any), accountant must split calculations | Full corporate income tax applies, accountant must follow SOCPA tax-engagement standards |
| Withholding tax advisory | Accountant must identify and advise on WHT obligations for cross-border payments | Same, plus additional documentation requirements for related-party transactions |
| Engagement letter requirements | Must reference SOCPA standards and confirm independence | Must reference SOCPA standards, confirm independence, and disclose any offshore affiliations |
The 2026 amendments raise the minimum standard for audit evidence, documentation and internal quality control. These changes apply not only to statutory audits but also to assurance engagements, agreed-upon-procedures reports and any other service where the accountant issues a formal opinion or certificate.
Under the updated auditing rules 2026, every engagement file must contain, at a minimum:
Firms that already follow International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) as endorsed by SOCPA will recognise many of these requirements. The key difference under the 2026 framework is that SOCPA now has explicit authority to inspect these files and to take enforcement action where documentation falls short. This shifts the practical incentive from professional best practice to regulatory obligation.
SOCPA’s eParticipation consultation included proposals on digital records retention that, if adopted in their current form, will require firms to maintain engagement files in a searchable electronic format for a prescribed retention period. Firms should invest now in secure, cloud-based or on-premises document management systems that meet SOCPA’s anticipated technical specifications. Early indications suggest that the retention period will align with existing statutory limitation periods under Saudi commercial law, though the final rules may differ. The SOCPA eParticipation consultation remains the definitive source for tracking these proposals, firms are encouraged to submit comments and monitor the portal for updates.
Decision 46268 significantly expands SOCPA’s enforcement toolkit. Under the previous framework, SOCPA’s disciplinary powers were relatively narrow and enforcement was perceived as inconsistent. The 2026 amendments change this dynamic in several ways:
Industry observers expect that SOCPA will pursue a phased enforcement approach, prioritising awareness and voluntary compliance during the initial transition period, then moving to active inspections and penalties. Firms should not rely on this grace period lasting indefinitely. The most effective risk-mitigation step is to complete a thorough self-assessment now, identify gaps, and remediate them before SOCPA’s inspection programme reaches full capacity.
The following action plan translates the regulatory requirements into a prioritised, time-bound work programme. Assign each task to a named owner within your firm.
| Timeframe | Action | Responsible owner |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Download Decision 46268 and 2026 amendment texts from SOCPA. Conduct internal gap analysis against current licence, service lines and documentation practices. | Managing Partner / Compliance Partner |
| Days 1–30 | Verify SOCPA membership status and CPD records for every signatory. Initiate membership renewals where lapsed. | HR / Professional Development Manager |
| Days 31–60 | Revise engagement letter templates to reflect permitted/prohibited services and independence requirements. | Compliance Partner / Legal Counsel |
| Days 31–60 | Update audit work-paper templates, risk-assessment forms and quality-control checklists to meet the 2026 documentation standards. | Audit Methodology Lead |
| Days 31–60 | Review all active zakat and tax engagements. Confirm that each is documented to the new standard and that the engagement partner holds the required licence endorsement. | Tax / Zakat Service Line Leader |
| Days 61–90 | Submit licence application or renewal to SOCPA. Attach all supporting documentation and confirm fee payment. | Managing Partner |
| Days 61–90 | Conduct firm-wide training session on the new rules. Document attendance and content for CPD records. | Professional Development Manager |
| Days 61–90 | Notify clients of any changes to service scope, engagement terms or fee structures resulting from the amendments. | Client Relationship Partners |
To support your compliance effort, the following resources are available:
These resources are designed as starting points. Every firm should tailor them to its specific practice structure, client base and risk profile. Firms dealing with complex entity structures, such as those advising clients on setting up a technology company in Saudi Arabia or a travel and tourism company, will need to pay particular attention to the entity-type classification and its impact on zakat versus income tax obligations.
The 2026 overhaul of SOCPA accounting rules Saudi Arabia is not a minor administrative update, it is a structural shift in how the profession is licensed, supervised and held accountable. Firms that act quickly will secure their licences, protect their client relationships and position themselves for growth in a market where regulatory credibility increasingly drives business. Firms that delay face rising compliance risk and potential exclusion from regulated work.
This article is published for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal or professional advice. The regulatory landscape is evolving, and firms should seek tailored guidance based on their specific circumstances. SOCPA and ZATCA remain the authoritative sources for all regulatory requirements. Readers are encouraged to consult a qualified professional for advice on their individual compliance obligations.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abdulrahman Alshubayshiri at Abdulrhman Alshubayshiri for professional consulting Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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