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If you own, lease, or develop real estate in Saudi Arabia, understanding what is the expropriation law in Saudi Arabia is now more important than ever. The Law of Expropriation of Real Estate for Public Benefit and Temporary Taking, approved by royal decree in 2025, entered into force on 17 January 2026, replacing the earlier framework and introducing a mandatory 20% uplift on fair market value compensation. The new statute also standardises temporary possession procedures, sets explicit payment timelines, and creates a structured objection and appeal pathway for affected owners.
This guide explains every material provision of the 2026 expropriation law, walks through compensation calculations with a worked example, and provides a step-by-step roadmap for owners who wish to challenge a valuation or resist a taking.
The formal title of the statute is the Law of Expropriation of Real Estate for Public Benefit and Temporary Taking. It was published on the Ministry of Municipal and Housing (MOMAH) regulatory portal and entered into force on 17 January 2026. The law applies across all regions of the Kingdom and governs every compulsory acquisition of private real estate carried out by a government entity for a declared public-benefit purpose.
Under the previous 2003 framework, compensation calculations, temporary possession rules, and payment timelines varied considerably between municipalities. The 2026 expropriation law in Saudi Arabia remedies that inconsistency by introducing four core changes:
Expropriation may only be initiated by a competent government authority, typically a ministry, municipality, or state-affiliated development entity, and only where the acquisition serves a declared public-benefit purpose such as infrastructure, transport, utilities, or urban-planning projects.
Compensation is the single most important issue for any owner facing real estate expropriation in Saudi Arabia. The 2026 law establishes a clear formula: the owner is entitled to the fair market value of the property at the date of the expropriation decision, plus an automatic 20% uplift applied on top of that fair market value.
Fair market value (FMV) is the price a willing buyer would pay a willing seller in an arm’s-length transaction, assuming both parties have reasonable knowledge of the property’s characteristics and current market conditions. Under the 2026 law, valuations must be carried out by accredited valuers using one or more of the following recognised methods:
In practice, the acquiring authority will commission a valuation report. The owner has the right to obtain an independent expert valuation and to submit it as evidence during the objection process. Industry observers expect that disputes will frequently arise where government-appointed valuers rely on older comparable data that does not reflect rapid market appreciation in cities such as Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam.
The table below illustrates how the compensation formula works for three hypothetical property types.
| Property type | FMV method used | FMV (SAR) | 20% uplift (SAR) | Total payable (SAR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban residential plot (600 m²) | Comparative | 1,500,000 | 300,000 | 1,800,000 |
| Commercial building (retail + offices) | Income capitalisation | 8,000,000 | 1,600,000 | 9,600,000 |
| Agricultural land (10,000 m²) | Comparative + replacement cost | 3,200,000 | 640,000 | 3,840,000 |
Compensation also extends to permanent improvements, fixtures, trees and crops, and, where applicable, consequential losses such as business disruption or forced relocation costs. Where an owner uses the compensation to purchase replacement real estate, the 2026 law provides fiscal relief in the form of exemptions from real-estate transaction tax and related registration fees on the replacement purchase, easing the financial burden of displacement.
Owners should note that if only part of a larger parcel is expropriated, the valuation must also account for any diminution in the value of the retained portion caused by severance or the proximity of the public-benefit project.
One of the most significant innovations of the 2026 expropriation law is the formal codification of temporary possession (temporary taking) rules. Previously, authorities sometimes occupied private land on an ad hoc basis for project staging, materials storage, or access routes, with limited legal clarity on the owner’s rights.
Under the new framework, an authority may temporarily take possession of private real estate only where all of the following conditions are met:
Compensation for temporary possession is separate from full expropriation compensation. Owners are entitled to payment for the rental value of the property during the occupation period, any physical damage caused, and losses arising from the inability to use the land (for example, crop loss or disrupted commercial operations). If the authority fails to vacate at the end of the agreed period, the owner may seek urgent injunctive relief from the administrative courts.
A persistent complaint under the earlier framework was the absence of enforceable payment timelines. The 2026 expropriation law addresses this directly by imposing structured deadlines on each stage of the process, from initial notice through to final disbursement of compensation.
The table below outlines the key procedural steps and the corresponding owner actions at each stage.
| Step | Statutory requirement | Owner action |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Expropriation notice | Authority serves formal written notice to owner | Acknowledge receipt; begin assembling title documents and evidence of value |
| 2. Valuation | Accredited valuer appointed; report produced within statutory period | Obtain independent valuation; gather comparable sales data |
| 3. Compensation offer | Authority communicates offer based on FMV + 20% | Review offer against independent valuation; accept or file objection |
| 4. Objection period | Owner may file administrative objection within prescribed deadline | Submit written objection with supporting evidence |
| 5. Payment | Compensation must be paid within the statutory period after agreement or final determination | Confirm receipt; if delayed, pursue enforcement remedies |
| 6. Possession transfer | Authority takes possession only after compensation is paid or deposited | Vacate upon payment; document condition at handover |
The law provides that if the authority fails to pay within the prescribed period, the owner may apply to the administrative court for an enforcement order. Early indications suggest that authorities are treating these deadlines seriously, given that non-compliance could expose the acquiring entity to additional liability. The fiscal relief provisions, exemptions from transaction tax on replacement property purchases, are activated once compensation is received and the owner proceeds to acquire alternative real estate.
The 2026 expropriation law provides a two-tier objection process: first, an administrative objection to the acquiring authority; second, an appeal to the administrative courts. Knowing how to navigate each stage is essential for owners who believe the compensation offered is inadequate, the public-benefit justification is weak, or the procedure was defective.
The most common ground of objection is inadequate valuation. Owners who succeed in challenging valuations typically present robust, independent expert evidence showing that the government valuation relied on outdated comparables, failed to account for improvements, or used an inappropriate methodology.
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Certified title deed (Sakk) | Proves ownership and legal description of the property |
| Independent expert valuation report | Establishes the owner’s view of FMV using recognised methodology |
| Comparable sales data (last 12–24 months) | Supports the FMV figure with market evidence |
| Current lease agreements and rental income records | Demonstrates income-producing capacity for income capitalisation |
| Building permits and improvement records | Documents the value of structures and fixtures on the land |
| Municipal zoning and planning certificates | Shows permitted use and development potential |
| Photographs and condition surveys | Records the property’s condition at the date of notice |
| Business financial statements (if commercial) | Quantifies consequential losses from displacement |
The likely practical sequence, from notice to final resolution, follows this pattern:
The expropriation law applies equally to Saudi nationals and foreign owners. Any privately held real estate, regardless of the nationality of the owner, is subject to compulsory acquisition for public benefit under the same rules. Foreign owners receive the same compensation rights, including the fair market value plus 20% uplift, and have access to the same objection and appeal mechanisms.
Separately, Saudi Arabia has been progressively liberalising foreign property ownership. Non-Saudi residents and, in certain zones, foreign investors may now acquire real estate in designated areas. However, the expropriation law does not distinguish between Saudi-owned and foreign-owned property: once ownership is lawfully registered, the protections and procedures of the 2026 law apply in full.
Foreign owners should pay particular attention to notification requirements. Expropriation notices are typically served in Arabic. Owners who do not read Arabic fluently should arrange immediate certified translation and engage Arabic-speaking legal counsel without delay. Tenants, whether Saudi or foreign, are entitled to compensation for the unexpired portion of their lease and for relocation costs where the expropriation terminates their tenancy.
Owners who have received, or expect to receive, an expropriation notice should take immediate, practical steps to protect their interests under the 2026 law:
To connect with an experienced administrative lawyer in Saudi Arabia, visit the Global Law Experts Saudi Arabia lawyer directory.
The table below summarises the principal differences between the earlier expropriation framework and the 2026 law, helping owners and advisors quickly identify what has changed.
| Topic | 2003 framework | 2026 law (key change) |
|---|---|---|
| Compensation basis | Variable; limited standardised rules | Fair market value + mandatory 20% uplift |
| Temporary possession | Ad hoc; poorly regulated | Standardised rules, notice, time limits, restoration duties, separate compensation |
| Payment timelines | Not clearly standardised; frequent delays | Explicit statutory deadlines from notice to payment |
| Objection and appeal rights | Available but procedurally unclear | Structured two-tier process: administrative objection then court appeal |
| Fiscal relief | Not expressly provided | Transaction-tax and fee exemptions for replacement property purchases |
| Oversight and standardisation | Significant local variance between municipalities | Centralised procedural framework applicable nationwide |
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.
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