Saudi Arabia activates its non‑Saudi property regime with a decisive regulatory milestone: the Council of Ministers approved the Implementing Regulations in early July 2026, supplying the operational rules that the Law of Real Estate Ownership and Investment by Non‑Saudis, in force since 22 January 2026, had been waiting for. Weeks earlier, on 23 June 2026, the Council endorsed a set of designated geographic zones that define precisely where foreign buyers may acquire land and buildings.
Together, these instruments introduce three structural changes that every foreign investor and legal adviser must now account for: a rules‑based designated‑zone model that replaces case‑by‑case ministerial discretion, a single electronic platform operated by the General Authority for Real Estate (REGA) and integrated with the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) for payment and anti‑money‑laundering checks, and a 2% disposal fee triggered on transfers of real estate in major cities.
The Law of Real Estate Ownership and Investment by Non‑Saudis, published by the Ministry of Justice, replaced a patchwork of older rules that effectively limited non‑Saudi property ownership to narrow diplomatic and commercial exceptions. By stating, for the first time, a positive right of eligible non‑Saudi natural persons and legal entities to own and invest in Saudi real estate, the Law marked a fundamental policy shift aligned with Vision 2030’s objective of attracting foreign capital into the Kingdom’s real‑estate sector.
The Law itself, however, was deliberately framework‑level. It set out principles, delegated the creation of designated zones to the Council of Ministers, and empowered REGA to issue the procedural regulations that would govern how transactions actually work. Until those regulations landed, market participants operated in a period of legal certainty about whether they could buy, but practical uncertainty about how.
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: The Law established the legal foundation, but without the Implementing Regulations and zone designations, transactional work could not proceed on a standardised basis. That gap closed in June–July 2026.
The Implementing Regulations approved in early July 2026 convert the Law’s framework into an actionable compliance and transactional system. They address every stage of a non‑Saudi property acquisition, from eligibility verification and pre‑approval through to title registration and post‑transfer reporting, and impose clear obligations on buyers, sellers, brokers and notaries.
Under the new framework, REGA is the primary gatekeeper. A non‑Saudi buyer submits an application on the REGA platform, including proof of eligibility (residency status, corporate registration, fund authorisation), details of the target property and its designated‑zone classification, and evidence of the funding source. REGA reviews the application against the zone rules and, if satisfied, issues a pre‑approval that allows the parties to proceed to contract. SAMA then conducts its automated checks before registration can be finalised. For transactions involving properties outside the standard zone parameters, or in sensitive areas, the Regulations reserve a referral route to the Council of Ministers for exceptional approval.
Industry observers expect several immediate consequences for deal workflows. First, the requirement to transact exclusively through the REGA platform means that all parties, including local law firms acting for foreign buyers, must register on the platform and familiarise themselves with its interface and document‑upload requirements. Second, the SAMA integration adds a compliance checkpoint that did not previously exist for domestic property transfers, meaning longer lead times for closing unless buyers prepare source‑of‑funds documentation well in advance. Third, the 2% disposal fee changes deal economics in major cities and must be factored into pricing models, joint‑venture agreements and fund return calculations.
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: The Implementing Regulations operationalise non‑Saudi property ownership through REGA. Firms advising on Saudi real‑estate transactions should update their due‑diligence checklists, build REGA/SAMA processing times into deal timelines, and model the 2% disposal fee into financial projections.
The Council of Ministers endorsed the designated geographic zones on 23 June 2026, several weeks before the Implementing Regulations received final approval. The zone system replaces the old model of ad‑hoc approvals with a transparent, published framework. Each zone is classified by permitted use, and the classification determines which categories of non‑Saudi buyer may acquire property within it, under what conditions, and subject to what restrictions.
The practical significance of the zone model is substantial. Investors and their counsel must verify the zone classification of any target property before committing to a transaction, because the classification governs not only eligibility but also the applicable fee regime (the 2% disposal fee applies only in major‑city zones) and any transfer restrictions. REGA publishes the zone classifications on its platform, meaning that verification can be conducted digitally as part of pre‑deal due diligence.
| Zone type | Allowed non‑Saudi buyers | Typical restrictions / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Investment zones (commercial / residential mixed) | Individuals, companies, funds (subject to approvals) | May require Council of Ministers approval for large‑scale projects; 2% disposal fee applies in major cities |
| Residential designated zones | Iqama holders and eligible foreign individuals | Generally limited to private‑residence use; transfer or subletting limitations may apply |
| Restricted religious / cultural zones (Mecca, Medina) | Generally prohibited or heavily restricted | Ownership by non‑Saudis requires exceptional or local‑authority approval; most categories excluded |
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: Always verify the zone classification on the REGA platform before any commitment. The classification determines eligibility, fee exposure and transfer conditions.
The REGA platform is now the single operational gateway for all non‑Saudi property ownership transactions. The platform handles applications, document management, status tracking, and, critically, integrates directly with SAMA to process payment verification and anti‑money‑laundering checks. Understanding this workflow is essential for any foreign investor or advisory team operating in the Saudi real‑estate market in 2026 and beyond.
The SAMA integration represents a significant enhancement to Saudi Arabia’s real‑estate compliance infrastructure. Early indications suggest that buyers who prepare comprehensive source‑of‑funds documentation before submitting their REGA application experience materially shorter processing times at the SAMA stage. Counsel advising foreign buyers should build this documentary preparation into the pre‑deal phase rather than treating it as a post‑application task.
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: Register on the REGA platform early, prepare SAMA‑grade source‑of‑funds documentation in advance, and factor REGA/SAMA processing windows into deal timelines.
The Implementing Regulations formalise the cost structure for non‑Saudi property ownership. The headline item is the 2% disposal fee, which applies to transfers of real estate located in designated major cities. This fee is levied on the declared transaction value and is payable at the point of title registration through the REGA platform.
Consider a foreign investor acquiring a commercial property in Riyadh for SAR 10,000,000. The 2% disposal fee amounts to SAR 200,000, payable on registration. In addition, the buyer should budget for REGA registration fees, notarisation costs, and any municipal levies that apply at the local level. While the disposal fee is the most significant new cost, the aggregate transaction‑cost burden, including legal advisory fees, broker commissions and due‑diligence expenses, can approach 4–5% of the property value, a figure that must be reflected in investment models and fund return projections.
The likely practical effect of the disposal fee will be to encourage buyers and sellers to negotiate carefully over who bears the cost. In jurisdictions with comparable transfer taxes, such as the conveyancing fee regime in South Africa, market practice has evolved to split or allocate the fee contractually. Counsel advising on Saudi transactions should ensure that the disposal‑fee obligation is addressed explicitly in the sale‑and‑purchase agreement.
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: Model the 2% disposal fee into financial projections from the outset. Specify the fee allocation in the sale‑and‑purchase agreement to avoid disputes at closing.
The Implementing Regulations define four principal categories of non‑Saudi buyer, each with distinct eligibility requirements and approval pathways. The table below summarises the framework. Iqama holders, non‑Saudi residents with valid residency permits, occupy a favoured position, with streamlined access to residential designated zones. Foreign companies and institutional funds face additional requirements, including corporate registration and, in some cases, regulatory authorisations from SAMA or the Capital Market Authority.
| Buyer type | Can buy? | Notes / Approvals required |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑Saudi with Iqama (resident) | Yes (subject to conditions) | May buy residential units in designated zones; ID and residency verification through REGA |
| Non‑resident foreign individual | Conditional | Typically requires a local authorised agent; restricted zones excluded; REGA and SAMA clearance mandatory |
| Foreign company (branch / subsidiary) | Conditional | Must hold valid Saudi commercial registration; approvals for investment zones; local presence required |
| Foreign funds / institutional investors | Conditional (often allowed) | May need CMA or SAMA regulatory registration; REGA platform procedural checks apply |
Key takeaway for counsel and investors: Confirm your buyer category and assemble the corresponding eligibility documentation before initiating any REGA application. Iqama holders benefit from the most streamlined process; institutional investors face the most layered approvals.
The following checklist distils the Implementing Regulations into an actionable sequence for legal teams and investors preparing a non‑Saudi property acquisition in 2026. Similar digitalisation‑led registration reforms have emerged in other jurisdictions, the Zimbabwe title deed digitisation programme offers a useful comparative reference point for how digital platforms reshape title‑transfer workflows.
The Implementing Regulations include enforcement provisions for non‑compliance. Transactions conducted outside the REGA platform, or involving properties in non‑designated zones without exceptional Council approval, may be rendered void. Penalties for providing false eligibility or source‑of‑funds documentation include fines, transaction reversal and potential criminal referral under Saudi anti‑money‑laundering law.
Industry observers expect the zone framework to evolve. The Council of Ministers has the authority to expand, amend or restrict designated zones, and early indications suggest that additional zones, potentially including parts of NEOM and the Red Sea development corridor, may be designated in future rounds. Counsel should establish a monitoring cadence (quarterly review of REGA publications and Council of Ministers announcements) to stay ahead of zone changes that could create new investment opportunities or introduce new restrictions.
Now that Saudi Arabia activates its non‑Saudi property regime through the Implementing Regulations, the market moves from policy intention to transactional reality. The designated‑zone model, the REGA/SAMA integrated platform and the 2% disposal fee reshape how foreign investors access and transact in Saudi real estate. Counsel should act immediately: register on the REGA platform, update due‑diligence checklists to include zone verification and SAMA documentation requirements, and revise deal models to account for the disposal fee.
For investors, the window of opportunity is significant. The new regime provides legal certainty that did not exist under previous rules, and the likely practical effect will be to accelerate foreign capital flows into Saudi Arabia’s residential and commercial property sectors. However, the compliance requirements are real, and transactions structured without proper REGA/SAMA engagement risk invalidity.
To navigate the new framework effectively, connect with experienced real‑estate and foreign‑investment counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory. For more information about how the network supports cross‑border legal needs, visit the About Global Law Experts page.
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