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how to appeal an employment court decision in Saudi Arabia

How to Appeal an Employment (labour) Court Decision in Saudi Arabia, Step‑by‑step Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 day ago

Understanding how to appeal an employment court decision in Saudi Arabia is critical for any employee or employer who has received an unfavourable first‑instance labour court judgment. The appeal process Saudi Arabia provides is structured around strict deadlines, most importantly a 30‑calendar‑day window from notification of the judgment, and follows a clear judicial hierarchy: Labour Court, Labour Appeals Court, and in narrow cases the Supreme Court. This guide sets out every procedural step, document requirement, cost estimate and deadline that applies in 2026, reflecting the reforms introduced by Royal Decree No. M/51 and subsequent ministerial decisions that have strengthened digital filing through the Najiz portal and expanded administrative dispute resolution via the Qiwa platform.

Whether you are an employee challenging a dismissal award or an employer contesting a compensation order, the procedural playbook below will help you act within the rules.

Last reviewed: June 24, 2026. The Arabic text of the Labour Law prevails for statutory interpretation; the English references in this guide are provided for practitioner convenience.

Overview of the Appeal Process and Who It Applies To

Saudi Arabia’s employment disputes are heard by specialised Labour Courts, which sit within the general court system under the Board of Grievances reform that transferred jurisdiction to the Ministry of Justice. The appeal process Saudi Arabia established for labour matters follows a two‑tier judicial model:

  • First instance, Labour Court. Hears the original claim (unfair dismissal, unpaid wages, end‑of‑service benefits, contract disputes).
  • Second instance, Labour Appeals Court. Reviews first‑instance judgments on questions of both fact and law.
  • Limited further review, Supreme Court. Available only on narrow points of law or procedural irregularity, not a full re‑hearing.

Either party, employee or employer, may file a labour court appeal Saudi courts will accept, provided the appeal is lodged within the statutory deadline. Before resorting to litigation or appeal, parties are generally expected to attempt Qiwa dispute resolution through the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (HRSD) administrative channels. Where an amicable settlement is reached during the Qiwa process, the matter may not proceed further. Where settlement fails, the dispute is referred to the Labour Court for a first‑instance hearing, and from there to the appeals process described in this guide.

If you need to file an initial complaint rather than an appeal, the process begins with a pre‑complaint through the Qiwa platform, followed by referral to the local labour office and then the Labour Court. For a full guide to first‑instance filing, see the resources available through our employment litigation practice area.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for a Labour Court Appeal Saudi Parties Must Meet

Both employees and employers are entitled to appeal a first‑instance Labour Court judgment, subject to the following prerequisites:

  • Jurisdiction. The original claim must have been heard by a Labour Court. Appeals from administrative decisions by HRSD or Qiwa that have not been referred to a court follow a different path.
  • Exhaustion of administrative dispute resolution. Where the Labour Law or ministerial guidance requires a pre‑litigation settlement attempt via Qiwa or HRSD, that step must have been completed (or demonstrably attempted) before the first‑instance hearing. Failure to document this step can weaken the appeal.
  • Standing. The appellant must be a party to the original proceedings, the employee, the employer, or their duly authorised legal representative.
  • Timeliness. The appeal must be filed within the appeal deadline (30 calendar days from judgment notification for standard cases).

When an Appeal Is Barred

An appeal will not be entertained where:

  • The judgment has become final because the appeal deadline has passed without a filing.
  • The parties have entered a binding settlement (whether through Qiwa, HRSD mediation, or a court‑endorsed compromise) and the settlement has been ratified.
  • The appellant has expressly waived the right to appeal in writing.
  • The doctrine of res judicata applies, the same matter between the same parties has already been conclusively adjudicated on appeal.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure to Appeal an Employment Court Decision in Saudi Arabia

The following numbered steps trace the full appeal process from receipt of judgment to final outcome. Each step identifies who acts, which documents are needed and the typical duration.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Obtain certified judgment copy Parties / court registry 1–3 business days
Internal review & Qiwa/HRSD settlement attempt Employee or employer (via HR / counsel) / Qiwa sessions Up to 15 days (HRSD guidance)
File appeal to Labour Appeals Court Appellant (through counsel or self) via Najiz / court registry Within 30 calendar days of judgment notification (standard); 10 days for urgent judgments
Serve appeal on respondent Court registry / appellant via official channels 3–7 days after filing
Case management hearing / evidence exchange Parties / court 4–12 weeks (varies by court workload)
Appeal decision issued Labour Appeals Court 1–6 months typical
Further appeal to Supreme Court (limited grounds) Appellant (with leave) Strict procedural grounds; timelines vary

Step 1, Confirm the Judgment Date and Obtain a Certified Copy

As soon as the Labour Court delivers its first‑instance judgment, request a certified copy from the court registry. The judgment notification date, not the hearing date, is the starting point for computing the appeal deadline. Ensure you receive the court registry’s stamped notice confirming the date on which you (or your counsel) were officially notified. Keep the original notification receipt in a secure location; it is the single most important document for proving that your appeal is timely. If notification was served electronically through the Najiz portal, download and save the system‑generated notification record immediately. Allow 1–3 business days for the registry to issue a certified hard copy.

Step 2, Conduct an Internal Case Review and Attempt Pre‑Appeal Settlement

Before incurring the costs of a formal appeal, review the judgment with qualified legal counsel and assess whether the grounds are strong enough to justify proceeding. A “friendly settlement”, known in Saudi practice as an amicable resolution, can be attempted through the Qiwa platform or directly between the parties. Qiwa dispute resolution sessions are facilitated by HRSD and typically scheduled within 15 days of a request.

During this stage:

  • Identify the legal and factual errors in the first‑instance judgment.
  • Assess whether the opposing party is open to negotiation (wage arrears, end‑of‑service calculation adjustments, or reinstatement terms).
  • Document every settlement offer and counter‑offer, these records become evidence if the appeal proceeds.
  • Preserve all Qiwa case reference numbers, session minutes and correspondence.

If settlement is reached and ratified, the matter concludes. If it fails, move to Step 3 without delay, the 30‑day appeal deadline continues to run regardless of settlement discussions.

Step 3, Prepare and File the Appeal Petition

This is the core procedural step. The appeal petition must be filed with the Labour Appeals Court within 30 calendar days of judgment notification for standard cases. For urgent matters, such as expedited summons cases, the appeal window may be as short as 10 calendar days.

The appeal petition should include:

  • A clear statement of the grounds of appeal, errors of law, misapplication of the Labour Law, factual errors, procedural irregularities or disproportionate awards.
  • A list of all annexed documents and evidence (cross‑referenced to the documents needed table below).
  • The certified copy of the first‑instance judgment and the notification receipt.
  • A power of attorney if filed by counsel, duly notarised and, where applicable, translated into Arabic.

Filing is done through the Najiz portal (the Saudi judiciary’s electronic services platform) or in person at the court registry. To file online, log in to Najiz using your national ID or Iqama credentials, select “Appeal” under the relevant case number, upload all required documents in PDF format, and submit. The system generates a filing receipt with a timestamp, this is your proof of timely filing. Retain a copy.

If filing in person, present all original documents and copies to the court clerk, who will stamp and receipt each document. Confirm the assigned appeal case number before leaving the registry.

Step 4, Service on the Respondent, Case Management and Hearing

Once the appeal is registered, the court registry serves the appeal petition on the respondent (the other party). Service is typically completed within 3–7 days via the Najiz system or by physical notification. The respondent then has an opportunity to file a counter‑memorandum addressing the grounds of appeal.

The Labour Appeals Court will schedule a case management hearing. During this phase:

  • Both parties exchange evidence and written submissions.
  • The court may request additional documentation, expert reports, payroll audits, or witness testimony.
  • If any documents are in a language other than Arabic, the court will require certified Arabic translations. Arrange these in advance to avoid adjournments.
  • Foreign nationals who require interpretation services should request an interpreter through the court or arrange a certified interpreter independently.

The hearing stage typically spans 4–12 weeks, though complex cases, involving multiple employees, cross‑border elements, or substantial financial claims, may take longer. Industry observers expect that 2026 court workloads in Riyadh and Jeddah remain high, making early preparation and complete document bundles essential to avoid delays.

Step 5, Receive the Appeal Decision and Consider Next Steps

The Labour Appeals Court will issue one of three outcomes:

  • Uphold the first‑instance judgment (appeal dismissed).
  • Modify the judgment (adjust the award amount, terms or findings).
  • Reverse the judgment (set aside the first‑instance decision entirely).

If the appeal is dismissed, the judgment becomes enforceable. The successful party may apply for enforcement of the labour judgment through the execution court. In limited circumstances, where a significant point of law or procedural error is identified, a further appeal to the Supreme Court may be possible, though this requires strict procedural grounds and is not a routine remedy.

Required Documents and Information for the Appeal

Assembling a complete document bundle is one of the most important steps in the appeal process. Missing or improperly certified documents are a leading cause of delays and dismissed appeals. The table below sets out every document typically needed, along with practical notes on format and issuer.

Document Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity)
Certified copy of the first‑instance judgment Issued by Labour Court registry; request immediately after judgment
Written notice of judgment / notification receipt Court‑stamped notice or Najiz system notification record; used to compute the appeal deadline
Power of attorney (if counsel files) Notarised per Saudi practice; Arabic translation required if original is in another language
Appeal petition / grounds of appeal Signed and dated pleading setting out legal and factual grounds; attach indexed evidence list
Employment contract(s) and amendments Original or certified copy; Arabic translation if in another language
Payslips, termination letters, end‑of‑service calculations Employer‑issued payslips; bank statements showing payment history; statutory calculations annexed
Correspondence and settlement records (Qiwa / HRSD) Emails, Qiwa case numbers, settlement offers and session minutes
Witness statements / affidavits Signed statements; may require Arabic translation and notarisation
Company HR records Attendance records, written warnings, performance reports, exported with employer stamp
ID documents (Iqama / passport copies) Scanned certified copies; ensure validity dates are visible
Certified Arabic translations All non‑Arabic documents must be accompanied by certified Arabic translations; the court may refuse untranslated material

When claiming compensation for unlawful termination, include detailed calculations for each head of claim: unpaid wages, notice‑period pay, end‑of‑service gratuity (calculated under the Labour Law), repatriation costs (for non‑Saudi workers), and any contractual damages. Attach supporting bank statements and payroll records for each figure.

Appeal Timeline and Key Deadlines

Missing the appeal deadline is the most common, and most fatal, procedural error. The table below consolidates every critical deadline. All periods are calendar days unless stated otherwise.

Action Deadline
File appeal (standard) Within 30 calendar days of judgment notification (e.g., notified June 1 → deadline June 30)
File appeal (urgent / expedited summons) Within 10 calendar days of judgment notification
Request certified judgment copy As soon as possible, typically within 1–3 business days of judgment
Apply for enforcement (if no appeal filed) After judgment becomes final, i.e., 30 days have elapsed with no appeal, or appeal dismissed
Apply for stay of enforcement pending appeal File concurrent motion at time of appeal; attach security deposit if required by court

Practical example: If you receive judgment notification on June 1, 2026, your standard appeal deadline is June 30, 2026. If the matter was heard under urgent procedure, the deadline falls on June 11, 2026. Mark these dates immediately upon notification and set reminders at least seven days before expiry. The appeal timeline does not pause for weekends or public holidays in the standard computation unless the final day falls on an official holiday, in which case the deadline extends to the next working day.

Appeal Costs, Fees and Financial Considerations

Budgeting for appeal costs in advance helps avoid surprises. The table below provides estimated ranges; confirm exact figures with the court registry or your legal counsel before filing.

Item Typical Amount (SAR) / Range Notes
Court filing fee for appeal Varies, often nominal Check the Najiz fee schedule; sometimes waived for employee‑initiated claims
Lawyer professional fees SAR 5,000 – 60,000+ (estimate) Simple appeal: SAR 5,000–15,000; complex case: SAR 15,000–60,000+
Certified translations SAR 200 – 2,000 Depends on page count; urgent rates higher
Document certification / notarisation SAR 50 – 500 Per document or per certification session
Enforcement (execution) fees SAR 500 – 5,000 Applicable post‑judgment; depends on garnishment type
Expert reports (medical / forensic / financial) SAR 2,000 – 20,000 If expert evidence is required by the court
Miscellaneous (travel, hearing attendance) Varies Budget separately if parties are outside Riyadh or Jeddah

All monetary figures above are estimates based on practitioner experience and published rate ranges. Exact court fees should be verified through the Najiz portal or the relevant court registry before filing.

What Changed in 2026: The 2023–2026 Labour Law Reform Context

The Saudi labour dispute landscape has undergone significant reform between 2023 and 2026. Key changes that affect how to appeal an employment court decision in Saudi Arabia include:

  • Strengthened administrative dispute resolution. The Qiwa platform and HRSD labour offices now play a more prominent role in pre‑litigation settlement. Ministerial decisions issued under the Labour Law (promulgated by Royal Decree No. M/51 and amended through subsequent decrees including Royal Decree No. M/24) have formalised the expectation that parties attempt amicable resolution before judicial proceedings.
  • Digital filing via Najiz. The Najiz portal now handles the majority of appeal filings electronically, reducing the need for in‑person registry visits and providing automatic notification and deadline tracking.
  • Procedural clarifications. Implementing ministerial decisions, including those published by the Ministry of Investment (MISA) in coordination with HRSD, have clarified document requirements and the interplay between Qiwa case records and court filings.

Practical note: Always include your Qiwa case reference number and session records in the appeal bundle. Early indications suggest that appellate courts routinely verify that administrative settlement was attempted, and incomplete records on this point can result in procedural queries that delay the hearing.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Missing the 30‑day deadline. Set calendar reminders on the day of notification. The deadline runs from notification, not from the hearing date.
  • Failing to certify Arabic translations. All non‑Arabic documents must be accompanied by certified Arabic translations. Untranslated evidence may be excluded.
  • Mis‑computing the notification date. Verify whether notification was served in person, via Najiz, or by post, each triggers the deadline differently. Obtain the court registry’s stamped receipt.
  • Incomplete evidence bundle. Omitting payslips, Qiwa records or the employment contract leads to adjournments and weakens the appeal.
  • Confusing Qiwa settlement with judicial finality. An HRSD‑mediated settlement attempt is an administrative step; unless ratified by both parties, it does not extinguish your right to appeal a court judgment.
  • Filing in the wrong court. The appeal must be filed with the Labour Appeals Court, not the original first‑instance Labour Court. Confirm the correct filing venue on Najiz.
  • Weak grounds for appeal. General dissatisfaction with the judgment is insufficient. Identify specific errors of law, fact or procedure in the petition.
  • Failing to apply for a stay of enforcement. If you appeal but do not request a stay, the opposing party may enforce the first‑instance judgment while the appeal is pending. File a concurrent stay application and offer security if required.

Conclusion

Knowing how to appeal an employment court decision in Saudi Arabia, and acting within the strict procedural deadlines, can mean the difference between preserving your rights and losing them entirely. The 30‑calendar‑day appeal window is non‑negotiable in standard cases, and the reforms of 2023–2026 have added digital filing requirements and administrative pre‑conditions that make early preparation essential. Assemble your document bundle immediately upon notification, engage qualified counsel within 48 hours, and file through the Najiz portal well before the deadline expires. For complex disputes or cases involving foreign nationals, specialist employment litigation advice is strongly recommended.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Faisal A. Siddiqui at Faisal A. Siddiqui Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Human Resources & Social Development (HRSD), Labour Law PDF
  2. Royal Decree No. 53/2023, Labour Law (decree.om)
  3. MISA, Ministerial Decision (implementing regulations, English)
  4. Qiwa, Official Labour Dispute Resolution Platform
  5. Clyde & Co, Part I: The Labour Dispute Process in KSA
  6. Ius Laboris, All You Need to Know About the New Labour Courts in Saudi Arabia
  7. Hourani & Partners, Employment Litigation in Saudi Arabia
  8. Sarah Law Firm, Appeal of a Labor Lawsuit Judgment

FAQs

How do I file a case against my employer in KSA?
Begin by raising a complaint through the Qiwa platform or your local HRSD labour office. HRSD will attempt an amicable settlement. If settlement fails, the case is referred to the Labour Court for a first‑instance hearing. After the court issues its judgment, either party may appeal. For a detailed first‑instance filing guide, explore the resources available through our Saudi Arabia lawyer directory.
Typical heads of compensation include: unpaid wages and allowances, notice‑period pay (if the employer failed to give proper notice), end‑of‑service gratuity calculated under the Labour Law, repatriation costs for non‑Saudi workers, and damages for arbitrary or unlawful dismissal. The Labour Law sets formulae for end‑of‑service gratuity based on length of service, half a month’s wage for each of the first five years and one month’s wage for each subsequent year. Exact amounts depend on the employee’s last wage, length of service and the circumstances of termination.
There is no single fixed amount. Courts assess compensation based on the Labour Law provisions, the employment contract terms, the employee’s length of service and whether the dismissal was lawful. In cases of arbitrary dismissal, courts may award additional damages. The end‑of‑service gratuity is calculated on the basis of the worker’s last wage and years of service. An experienced employment litigation lawyer can provide a case‑specific estimate.
Where either party terminates a fixed‑term contract without a lawful reason, the other party may claim compensation. The Labour Law provides that the aggrieved party is entitled to the wages remaining for the unexpired term of the contract, unless the contract specifies a different compensation formula. Employees who resign without proper notice during an indefinite‑term contract may forfeit notice‑period pay. Employers who dismiss without lawful cause face liability for end‑of‑service benefits, unpaid wages and potential damages.
Yes. Foreign workers holding a valid Iqama have the same right to appeal as Saudi nationals. Practical considerations include ensuring that Iqama validity is maintained during proceedings, appointing a duly authorised legal representative if the worker has left the country, and providing certified Arabic translations for all foreign‑language documents. Interpreters can be requested through the court for hearings.
If the 30‑day (or 10‑day urgent) appeal deadline passes without a filing, the first‑instance judgment becomes final and enforceable. Reinstatement of the appeal right is available only in very narrow circumstances, for example, where the appellant can demonstrate force majeure prevented timely filing. In practice, such exceptions are rarely granted. Seek legal counsel immediately upon receiving judgment notification to avoid this outcome.
Engage a lawyer immediately upon receiving the first‑instance judgment notification, ideally within the first 48 hours. Early instruction gives counsel sufficient time to obtain documents, assess the grounds for appeal, attempt settlement and prepare the petition within the 30‑day window. To find employment litigation lawyers in Saudi Arabia, consult a specialist directory.
Yes. You may file a motion for a stay of enforcement concurrently with the appeal petition. The court will assess whether a stay is appropriate, often requiring the appellant to provide security (such as a bank guarantee) to protect the respondent’s interests. If no stay is granted, the respondent may proceed with enforcement of the labour judgment while the appeal is heard.
Qiwa is an administrative settlement platform operated by HRSD. Attempting settlement through Qiwa is expected (and in many case types required) before a first‑instance Labour Court hearing. However, a failed Qiwa settlement does not extinguish your right to litigate or to appeal a subsequent court judgment. Always document your Qiwa case number and settlement session records, as the appeals court may review these records when assessing the procedural history of the dispute.
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How to Appeal an Employment (labour) Court Decision in Saudi Arabia, Step‑by‑step Guide

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