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How Saudi Arabia's 2026 Companies Law & Commercial Register Reforms Affect M&A, Company Formation and Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The companies law Saudi Arabia framework has undergone its most significant transformation in decades, with a wave of interconnected reforms reshaping how businesses are formed, governed and acquired in the Kingdom. Throughout 2025 and into 2026, the Saudi government enacted a modernised Companies Law, introduced a unified Commercial Register Law with strict new trade-name controls, and published consequential Capital Market Authority (CMA) amendments that overhaul M&A approval and notification mechanics for both domestic and foreign investors. For in-house counsel, general counsel, CFOs and inbound investors, these changes demand immediate attention: deal timelines, shareholder approval thresholds, related-party transaction rules and post-closing filing obligations have all shifted.

This guide translates the new statutory requirements into practical checklists, comparison tables and step-by-step workflows designed for transaction teams operating in the Kingdom during 2026.

Executive Summary, What In-House Teams Need to Know Now

Before diving into the detail, deal teams and compliance officers should internalise four headline changes and the immediate actions they trigger:

  • Companies Law amendments are now fully operative. Enhanced director duties, stricter related-party transaction rules and revised shareholder approval thresholds apply to every LLC, joint-stock company and branch in Saudi Arabia. Existing constitutional documents, articles of association and shareholder agreements, must be reviewed against the new provisions.
  • A single, unified Commercial Register replaces the previous fragmented system. The new Commercial Register Law establishes one national register, prohibits confusingly similar trade names and imposes tighter filing deadlines for corporate changes. Penalties for non-compliance have increased.
  • CMA M&A amendments reshape deal approval mechanics. The removal of certain Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) restrictions, recalibrated notification thresholds and streamlined approval timelines mean that cross-border acquirers face a different regulatory pathway than even twelve months ago.
  • Foreign property ownership rules have expanded. Updated regulations that took effect in early 2026 broaden the categories of real estate that foreign investors and their Saudi-incorporated vehicles may acquire, directly impacting asset-deal structuring.

90-day action items: (1) Audit all existing corporate constitutional documents against the revised Companies Law provisions. (2) Confirm Commercial Register entries are current and trade names are compliant with the new prohibitions. (3) Re-map any pending or planned M&A transaction against the updated CMA approval and notification framework. (4) Engage local counsel to verify foreign-ownership permissions for any real-estate component of a transaction.

Need Legal Advice?

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

Background and Legal Sources, What Was Enacted and When

Understanding the companies law Saudi Arabia reform programme requires tracking several overlapping legislative instruments. The new Companies Law, published by Royal Decree, replaced the 2015 statute and introduced modernised governance standards aligned with Saudi Vision 2030’s objective of attracting foreign direct investment and improving the ease of doing business. The Ministry of Commerce issued accompanying Implementing Regulations that detail procedural requirements for filings, disclosures and corporate approvals.

Separately, the Commercial Register Law, announced via the Saudi Press Agency, established a single national commercial register and introduced new trade-name management rules. The CMA subsequently published amendments to its M&A rules, recalibrating approval and notification mechanics for listed-company transactions and removing several legacy restrictions on foreign investor participation.

Date Reform Instrument Immediate Impact
2022–2023 New Companies Law enacted by Royal Decree Replaced the 2015 Companies Law; introduced modernised governance, capital and disclosure rules
2023–2025 Ministry of Commerce Implementing Regulations Detailed procedural requirements for filings, related-party disclosures and shareholder approvals
2025–2026 Commercial Register Law (unified national register) Single register replaces fragmented subsidiary registers; trade-name restrictions take effect
2025–2026 CMA M&A rule amendments Revised approval/notification thresholds; QFI restriction modifications; streamlined timelines
Early 2026 Foreign Property Ownership Law updates Expanded categories of permissible foreign-owned real estate in Saudi Arabia

Practitioners should consult the primary statute text published by the Ministry of Investment, the Ministry of Commerce notices and the Board of Official Experts consolidated law files to confirm specific article references and operative dates applicable to their transactions.

Key Changes in the Companies Law, Implications for Corporate Governance and Transactions

The revised companies law Saudi Arabia framework introduces several governance reforms that directly affect how deals are structured, approved and closed. Three areas demand particular attention from transaction counsel: director duties and liability, related-party transaction rules and the recalibrated shareholder approval thresholds.

The new Companies Law codifies a more explicit duty-of-care and duty-of-loyalty framework for directors and officers, mirroring trends in other Gulf Cooperation Council jurisdictions. Directors who approve transactions involving undisclosed conflicts of interest now face personal liability, and the law introduces a statutory right for minority shareholders to bring derivative actions in defined circumstances. For M&A practitioners, this means that pre-deal director consents and board minutes require more granular disclosure of any personal interests and must be documented to the new standard.

Capital requirements have also been modernised. The law removes the previous fixed minimum-capital requirements for LLCs and streamlines the capital-increase and capital-reduction processes for joint-stock companies. Industry observers expect this to accelerate the pace of restructuring transactions, as companies can now adjust their capital bases more rapidly to reflect post-deal commercial realities.

Related-Party Transactions

The Companies Law introduces a formal related-party transaction regime requiring board-level disclosure and, in certain cases, shareholder approval before a transaction involving a director, officer or significant shareholder can proceed. The Implementing Regulations issued by the Ministry of Commerce set out the specific disclosure content, timing requirements and valuation standards that must be met. For M&A transactions, this means that any deal with a related-party element, such as a management buyout or a sale to an entity controlled by a board member, must be mapped against these provisions at the earliest stage of deal planning.

Failure to comply with the related-party rules can result in the transaction being voidable at the election of the company or its shareholders, creating significant execution risk for acquirers who do not conduct thorough pre-deal governance due diligence.

Board Approvals vs Shareholder Approvals

The revised Companies Law recalibrates the division between matters that can be approved at board level and those requiring a shareholder vote. Material asset disposals, related-party transactions above certain value thresholds and amendments to constitutional documents now require a shareholder resolution, in many cases at a supermajority (two-thirds or three-quarters) threshold rather than a simple majority. For joint-stock companies with dispersed shareholder bases, this may add weeks to a transaction timeline and necessitates early shareholder engagement.

Entity / Transaction Type Filing / Approval Requirement (Companies Law & CR) Typical Timeline
LLC, domestic sale of shares Board notice to Commercial Register + shareholder approval if above specified threshold; related-party rules apply; file amended CR entry 5–15 business days for CR update; 30–60 days for complex shareholder approvals
Joint-Stock Company (public/private), material asset sale Board resolution + shareholder approval (supermajority if material); CMA notification if listed or threshold met; CR filing 30–90 days depending on CMA review and disclosure requirements
Branch of a foreign company, change of activities or manager Updated CR filing with supporting documentation from parent entity; Ministry of Investment notification if scope changes 10–30 business days for routine changes
Foreign investor acquiring real property Obtain permit per Foreign Property Ownership Law (if required); register with CR; ensure property-title transfer processes completed 30–90 days depending on property type and ministry approvals

Commercial Register Reforms, Single National Register, Trade-Name Restrictions and Filing Process

The new commercial register law replaces the previous system of fragmented regional and subsidiary registers with a single, unified national Commercial Register. This change, announced by the Saudi Press Agency and detailed in implementing guidance from the Ministry of Commerce, is designed to simplify corporate filings, improve transparency and create a single authoritative record of every commercial entity operating in Saudi Arabia.

For existing companies, the practical effect is that all historical registrations must now be consolidated into the unified register. Companies that previously maintained separate registrations for branches or subsidiaries in different regions must verify that their data has been migrated correctly and that all entries reflect current corporate information. The likely practical effect will be a wave of remedial filings as companies discover discrepancies between their legacy registrations and the unified register’s requirements.

The commercial register law also introduces strict new trade-name rules. The registration of trade names that are identical or confusingly similar to existing registrations is now expressly prohibited. Companies applying for new registrations or seeking to change existing trade names must clear their proposed names against the unified register before filing. Penalties for non-compliance, including the use of unregistered or infringing trade names, have been significantly increased.

Trade-Name Management Checklist

  • Audit existing trade names. Confirm that all registered trade names remain compliant under the new prohibitions and that no similar names have been registered by third parties.
  • Clear proposed names before filing. Any new registration or name change must be searched against the unified register to identify potential conflicts.
  • Update brand-protection strategies. Trade-name registrations under the Commercial Register are distinct from trademark registrations under Saudi IP law. Ensure both are aligned and that any gaps are addressed.
  • File amendments promptly. The new law imposes tighter deadlines for updating the Commercial Register following any corporate change (e.g., change of partners, managers, capital, address or activities).

Practical Steps for Branches and Foreign Investors

Foreign companies operating through branches in Saudi Arabia face a particular compliance burden under the commercial register reforms. Branch registrations must now reflect the parent company’s current details accurately, and any change at the parent level, including changes to directors, registered office or corporate name, triggers a corresponding filing obligation in the Saudi Commercial Register. Early indications suggest that the Ministry of Commerce is enforcing these requirements actively, and late filings risk penalties or, in extreme cases, suspension of the branch’s commercial register entry.

For foreign investors considering entry into the Saudi market, the unified register simplifies the initial registration process but demands greater accuracy in the documentation submitted. Engagement with local counsel to prepare commercial register applications in parallel with Ministry of Investment licensing is now a critical-path activity for foreign investment in Saudi Arabia.

CMA M&A Amendments, Approval, Notification and QFI/Foreign Investor Rules

The Capital Market Authority’s 2026 M&A rule amendments represent a significant shift in how acquisitions of listed companies and material asset transactions are regulated. These CMA M&A amendments, analysed in detail by Chambers and other leading practice guides, introduce a revised framework for pre-deal notifications, approval mechanics and the treatment of foreign investors, particularly the modification of legacy Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) restrictions.

Under the previous regime, foreign investors seeking to acquire material stakes in listed Saudi companies faced a layered approval process that required QFI qualification, CMA pre-approval and compliance with sector-specific ownership caps. The 2026 amendments streamline this process. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be faster deal execution for cross-border transactions, as certain legacy QFI requirements have been removed or significantly relaxed. Foreign acquirers may now participate in listed-company transactions on terms closer to those available to domestic investors, subject to remaining sector-specific restrictions (e.g., banking, insurance and certain strategic sectors).

The notification and approval mechanics have also been recalibrated. The CMA now operates a dual-track system: transactions below a specified materiality threshold require notification only (with a defined post-notification waiting period), while transactions above that threshold, or those involving strategic sectors, require full CMA pre-approval. The approval timeline has been tightened, with the CMA committed to issuing decisions within defined review periods, though complex transactions involving multiple regulators may still experience extended timelines.

M&A Approval Checklist, Step-by-Step

Transaction counsel should follow this sequence when planning an M&A transaction subject to CMA jurisdiction:

  1. Determine materiality threshold. Assess whether the transaction’s value, the target’s market capitalisation or the stake being acquired triggers the CMA’s full-approval requirement or falls within the notification-only track.
  2. Identify sector-specific restrictions. Confirm whether the target operates in a sector with foreign-ownership caps or additional regulatory approvals (e.g., SAMA for financial institutions, Communications and Information Technology Commission for telecoms).
  3. Prepare and submit CMA notification or application. Assemble the required documentation, including transaction summaries, ownership structure charts, source-of-funds declarations and any required valuations.
  4. Observe the waiting period. For notification-track transactions, do not close before the prescribed waiting period expires. For approval-track transactions, await formal CMA clearance.
  5. Complete post-closing filings. File updated ownership information with the CMA, update the Commercial Register entry and comply with any disclosure obligations (e.g., Tadawul announcements for listed companies).
  6. Monitor ongoing compliance. Post-closing, the acquirer must comply with continuing disclosure obligations, including major-shareholder notifications and periodic reporting to the CMA.
Deal Type CMA Requirement Estimated Review Period
Acquisition below materiality threshold (non-strategic sector) Notification only; post-notification waiting period 15–30 business days
Acquisition above materiality threshold (non-strategic sector) Full CMA pre-approval required 30–60 business days
Acquisition in strategic sector (banking, insurance, defence, telecoms) CMA pre-approval + sector regulator approval (e.g., SAMA, CITC) 60–120 business days (multi-regulator coordination)
Foreign investor acquiring listed-company stake (post-QFI reform) CMA notification or approval (depending on threshold); QFI qualification no longer required for most categories 15–60 business days depending on track

Company Formation and Foreign Investment Steps Under New Rules

The combined effect of the companies law amendments, the unified Commercial Register and the updated foreign investment framework has fundamentally changed the company formation process for inbound investors. Foreign investment Saudi Arabia procedures are now more streamlined in some respects, particularly the removal of certain minimum-capital requirements for LLCs and the simplification of Commercial Register filings, but also more demanding in terms of documentation accuracy and regulatory coordination.

Foreign investors must begin with entity selection: the LLC remains the most common vehicle for wholly foreign-owned operations, while joint ventures with Saudi partners may use either LLC or closed joint-stock company structures depending on governance preferences and capital requirements. Branches of foreign companies remain available for specific project-based activities but are subject to the enhanced Commercial Register compliance requirements discussed above.

Step-by-Step Company Formation Checklist

  • Obtain Ministry of Investment licence. All foreign-invested entities require a licence from the Ministry of Investment (formerly SAGIA) before proceeding with Commercial Register filings. The licence application must include the proposed entity structure, business activities, capital amount and ownership details.
  • Reserve and clear the trade name. Search the unified Commercial Register for conflicts, then reserve the proposed trade name. This must be done before the Articles of Association are finalised.
  • Prepare constitutional documents. Draft Articles of Association (for LLCs) or Bylaws (for joint-stock companies) that comply with the revised Companies Law. Include compliant related-party transaction provisions and shareholder-approval mechanics.
  • File with the Commercial Register. Submit the full registration package, including constitutional documents, Ministry of Investment licence, manager/director appointments and registered-office details.
  • Complete ancillary registrations. Register with the General Organisation for Social Insurance (GOSI), open a corporate bank account with a SAMA-licensed institution and obtain any sector-specific licences (e.g., Municipal licence, SFDA registration for food or pharma activities).
  • Comply with Saudisation requirements. Ensure the Nitaqat (Saudisation) classification is assessed and that workforce planning reflects current quotas from the outset.

Real Estate Ownership for Foreigners, What Changed?

Updated foreign property ownership regulations that took effect in early 2026 expanded the categories of real estate that foreign investors and their Saudi-incorporated entities may acquire. Previously, foreign-owned companies faced significant restrictions on owning real property outside designated economic zones. The revised rules broaden permissible ownership to include certain categories of commercial and residential property, subject to obtaining the required permits and meeting specified conditions.

For M&A transactions with a real-estate component, including asset deals and corporate acquisitions where the target holds significant property, this change alters deal structuring considerations. Acquirers must verify whether the target’s property portfolio falls within the newly expanded permissible categories and whether any existing ownership structures need to be adjusted post-closing.

Compliance, Saudisation and Employment Impacts on Transactions

No discussion of the companies law Saudi Arabia reform programme is complete without addressing the employment and Saudisation dimensions that directly affect transactional due diligence. The Saudisation 2026 framework continues to evolve, with the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development periodically updating sector-specific quotas and introducing new compliance metrics.

For M&A transactions, Saudisation compliance is a critical due-diligence item. An acquirer inherits the target’s Nitaqat classification, and a poor classification can restrict the combined entity’s ability to obtain new work visas, renew existing visas or transfer employee sponsorships. Deal teams should request and verify the target’s current Nitaqat score, headcount breakdown by nationality and any outstanding Ministry of Human Resources violations as a standard part of the due-diligence process.

Employment contracts must also be reviewed against the latest labour law amendments, particularly regarding contract classification (fixed-term vs indefinite), end-of-service benefit calculations and non-compete enforceability. Any restructuring or workforce reduction contemplated post-closing must be planned within the current regulatory framework, including required notice periods and severance obligations.

  • Due-diligence query: Nitaqat classification. Request the target’s current Green/Platinum/Red status and verify through the Ministry’s Mudad platform.
  • Due-diligence query: Visa and work-permit status. Confirm all employees hold valid Iqamas and that no transfer or renewal restrictions apply.
  • Due-diligence query: Outstanding labour disputes. Search for any pending claims before the Labour Courts or the Amicable Settlement Committee.
  • Due-diligence query: Post-deal integration plan. Model the combined entity’s Saudisation metrics to ensure continued compliance after closing.

Practical M&A and Company Formation Checklists

The following condensed checklists consolidate the key regulatory steps discussed throughout this guide. Transaction teams should adapt these to the specifics of their deal and engage local counsel to confirm current procedural requirements.

M&A Approval Checklist and Timeline

  1. Assess CMA jurisdiction and determine notification vs. approval track (Day 1–5)
  2. Confirm sector-specific regulator approvals required, if any (Day 1–10)
  3. Prepare and file CMA notification or application package (Day 10–20)
  4. Obtain board and shareholder approvals per revised Companies Law thresholds (parallel track, Day 1–45)
  5. Observe CMA waiting/review period (Day 20–60, depending on track)
  6. Receive CMA clearance and execute closing (Day 60–75 for standard transactions)
  7. File post-closing Commercial Register updates within statutory deadline (Day 75–90)
  8. Submit Tadawul disclosures and shareholder notifications, if applicable (Day 75–90)
  9. Verify Saudisation classification for combined entity (Day 90–120)

Company Formation and Commercial Register Compliance Checklist for Foreign Investors

  1. Engage local counsel and prepare Ministry of Investment licence application (Week 1–2)
  2. Reserve and clear trade name against unified Commercial Register (Week 2–3)
  3. Draft constitutional documents compliant with revised Companies Law (Week 2–4)
  4. Obtain Ministry of Investment licence (Week 4–8, depending on activity and complexity)
  5. File Commercial Register application with all supporting documentation (Week 8–10)
  6. Complete GOSI registration, corporate bank account opening and sector licences (Week 10–14)
  7. Verify Saudisation classification and workforce planning (Week 12–16)
  8. Confirm ongoing commercial register compliance obligations and filing calendar (Ongoing)

Conclusion, Three Immediate Actions for Companies Law Saudi Arabia Compliance

The 2026 reform wave, spanning the companies law Saudi Arabia framework, the unified Commercial Register and the CMA M&A amendments, creates both opportunity and compliance risk for businesses operating in or entering the Kingdom. In-house teams and foreign investors should take three immediate steps: first, conduct a comprehensive audit of existing corporate documents, Commercial Register entries and trade names against the new requirements; second, re-assess any pending or planned M&A transactions against the updated CMA approval and notification mechanics; and third, confirm that foreign-ownership structures, real-estate holdings and Saudisation metrics are compliant with the latest regulations. Early engagement with experienced Saudi commercial counsel will be critical to navigating this new landscape efficiently.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Investment, Companies Law (PDF)
  2. Ministry of Commerce, Notices & Implementing Regulations
  3. Board of Official Experts, Consolidated Law Text
  4. Saudi Press Agency, Commercial Register Law Announcement
  5. HFW, Saudi Arabia’s New Commercial Registration Law: Impacts and Next Steps
  6. Chambers Practice Guides, Corporate M&A 2026: Saudi Arabia Trends and Developments

FAQs

What is the new commercial registration law in Saudi Arabia?
The new Commercial Register Law establishes a single, unified national commercial register that replaces the previous fragmented system of regional and subsidiary registers. It introduces strict prohibitions on registering trade names that are identical or confusingly similar to existing registrations, imposes tighter filing deadlines for corporate changes and increases penalties for non-compliance. The law was announced via the Saudi Press Agency and is supported by implementing guidance from the Ministry of Commerce. See the Commercial Register reforms section above for full details.
The revised Companies Law introduces enhanced director duties and personal liability provisions, a formal related-party transaction regime requiring disclosure and shareholder approval, recalibrated shareholder approval thresholds for material transactions, modernised capital requirements (including the removal of fixed minimum capital for LLCs) and strengthened minority shareholder protections including derivative action rights. These changes are detailed in the Key Changes section of this guide.
The CMA’s 2026 M&A amendments introduce a dual-track notification/approval system based on materiality thresholds, streamline review timelines and relax certain legacy Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) requirements. Foreign acquirers can now participate in many listed-company transactions without prior QFI qualification, though sector-specific ownership caps remain in place for strategic industries. The M&A approval checklist in the CMA M&A amendments section provides a step-by-step guide.
Yes. The updated Companies Law and foreign investment framework allow wholly foreign-owned LLCs and joint ventures, and the Foreign Property Ownership Law updates that took effect in early 2026 expand the categories of real estate that foreign investors and their Saudi-incorporated entities may acquire. However, permits may be required depending on property type and location, and sector-specific restrictions continue to apply. See the Company Formation and Foreign Investment section for practical steps.
In-house counsel should: (1) determine whether the transaction falls within the CMA’s notification or full-approval track; (2) identify all sector-specific regulatory approvals; (3) review and update board and shareholder approval processes to comply with the revised Companies Law thresholds; (4) plan Commercial Register filings for post-closing updates within statutory deadlines; and (5) include Saudisation compliance as a standard due-diligence workstream. The Practical Checklists section above provides consolidated timelines.
Commercial Register trade-name registrations are legally distinct from trademark registrations under Saudi intellectual property law. The new trade-name prohibitions in the Commercial Register Law do not automatically affect existing trademarks, but they can create conflicts if a company’s Commercial Register trade name differs from or conflicts with a third party’s registered trademark. Companies should audit both their CR trade names and trademark portfolios to identify and resolve any misalignments.
The unified Commercial Register Law imposes a filing obligation following any corporate change, including changes of ownership resulting from M&A transactions. While the precise statutory deadline should be confirmed against the current implementing regulations, the general expectation is that CR updates must be filed within a short window following closing, typically within 15 to 30 days. Late filings risk penalties and may affect the validity of subsequent corporate actions. Transaction counsel should build CR filing into the post-closing checklist from day one.

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How Saudi Arabia's 2026 Companies Law & Commercial Register Reforms Affect M&A, Company Formation and Compliance

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