Our Expert in Saudi Arabia
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Understanding the foreign lender license Saudi Arabia requirements is the single most important compliance step for any international credit fund, bank or non‑bank lender planning to deploy capital into the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia’s regulatory landscape splits oversight between the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA), which supervises banking and finance‑company activities, and the Capital Market Authority (CMA), which governs securities‑related business including offshore offerings directed at Saudi investors. With private credit volumes into the Kingdom continuing to grow under Vision 2030, the 2026 regulatory environment demands that foreign lenders map their proposed activities against the correct licensing pathway, or risk enforcement action.
This guide provides the practical decision tree, application checklists and structuring considerations that deal teams need before a single riyal is advanced.
Whether a foreign lender needs a licence depends on where the lending activity takes place and how it is structured. The short answer is: if a lender conducts finance activities onshore, accepting deposits, extending consumer or commercial credit from a Saudi presence, or publicly soliciting borrowers, it must hold a SAMA licence. If the transaction is structured as a securities offering directed at Saudi investors, CMA authorisation is triggered instead. Purely offshore, bilateral lending from a foreign jurisdiction to a Saudi corporate borrower may, in certain circumstances, fall outside both licensing regimes.
| Licence typically required | Licence may not be required |
|---|---|
| Lender establishes a local branch or subsidiary and extends credit onshore | Foreign SPV lends bilaterally from an offshore jurisdiction with no Saudi presence |
| Lender publicly solicits borrowers within Saudi Arabia | Loan is negotiated and documented entirely offshore; no onshore marketing |
| Lending activity is structured as a securities offering to Saudi investors | Lender participates in a syndicate led by a SAMA‑licensed Saudi bank without providing local services |
| Lender takes Saudi‑domiciled deposits or operates a financing platform locally | Upstream advisory or credit assessment carried out entirely outside the Kingdom |
A foreign institution that merely participates as a lender of record in an offshore syndicate, without marketing, soliciting or servicing borrowers inside Saudi Arabia, does not, as a matter of current practice, trigger SAMA or CMA licensing. However, industry observers caution that the boundaries are fact‑sensitive. Any element of onshore borrower contact, payment servicing or security enforcement can shift the analysis.
Saudi Arabia’s lending regulation sits within a dual‑regulator architecture. Foreign lenders need to understand three pillars: SAMA’s prudential mandate over banks and finance companies, the CMA’s authority over securities and capital‑market activities, and the corporate formation requirements administered by the Ministry of Commerce.
SAMA is the primary licensing authority for any entity wishing to conduct finance activities in the Kingdom. Its mandate covers commercial banks, finance companies (non‑bank lenders) and payment‑service providers. The SAMA Rulebook sets out the licensing guidelines and minimum criteria that every applicant must satisfy, including prudential capital thresholds, governance standards and fit‑and‑proper requirements for senior management. For foreign bank branches specifically, SAMA requires evidence of home‑supervisor consent before it will process an application. The Finance Companies Control Law (and its implementing regulations) establishes the statutory basis for non‑bank lending licences, making it an offence to practise finance activities without SAMA approval.
Where a cross‑border lending arrangement is structured as, or has the economic characteristics of, a securities offering directed at Saudi investors, the CMA’s framework applies. The CMA’s regulatory architecture includes the Offshore Securities Business License Regulations, referenced in its draft instructions on simplified investment funds and in its glossary amendments. Any person carrying out securities business (dealing, advising, managing or arranging) in connection with Saudi‑targeted offerings must be registered as an authorised person or hold an offshore licence. Private credit funds that issue participation notes or fund units to Saudi‑based investors should treat the CMA pathway as a mandatory compliance checkpoint.
Before applying for any SAMA or CMA licence, a foreign lender must typically establish a legal presence in Saudi Arabia, either a branch or a locally incorporated subsidiary. The Ministry of Commerce administers company formation under an investment licence, coordinated with the Ministry of Investment. This step precedes the regulatory licensing application and involves obtaining a commercial registration (CR) number.
Foreign lenders entering the Saudi market generally choose among four entity or structuring routes. Each carries different licensing triggers, capital commitments and operational constraints. The comparison table below maps the principal options side by side.
| Entity / Route | Licensing Required | Typical Timeline and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign bank branch | Yes, SAMA foreign bank branch licence | 6–12+ months; home‑supervisor written consent required; must demonstrate commitment to Saudi market presence |
| Finance company (non‑bank lender) | Yes, SAMA finance company licence | 4–9 months; feasibility study, business plan, local capitalisation and governance requirements |
| CMA offshore securities licence | Yes, CMA offshore securities business authorisation | Timeline varies; required when lending is structured as a securities offering or capital‑markets product directed at Saudi investors |
| Offshore direct lending (foreign SPV to Saudi borrower) | Not necessarily, may avoid SAMA/CMA if no local regulated activity | Key risks: onshore solicitation, security‑taking complications, enforcement limitations; specialist local counsel essential |
A foreign bank seeking a branch licence must satisfy SAMA’s licensing guidelines and minimum criteria. The practical prerequisites include:
For non‑bank lenders, including private credit platforms, specialist leasing firms and fintech credit providers, the finance company route under the Finance Companies Control Law is typically the correct path. SAMA’s guidelines for applying for a licence to practise finance activities require the applicant to submit:
Private credit transactions do not always look like traditional loans. Where a fund issues notes, certificates or participation interests to Saudi investors, or where the deal structure involves arranging or managing what qualifies as a “security” under Saudi capital‑market law, the CMA’s Offshore Securities Business License Regulations apply. An entity carrying out such activities must register as a CMA authorised person or hold the applicable offshore licence. The CMA’s draft instructions on simplified investment funds and related glossary amendments reinforce this scope. Practically, this means that a foreign credit fund marketing co‑investment units to Saudi institutional investors should budget for a CMA application alongside (or instead of) SAMA licensing.
Cross‑border lending to Saudi Arabia without establishing a local licensed entity is possible, but only within narrow parameters. Private credit funds routinely use offshore SPV structures to advance bilateral term loans to Saudi corporate borrowers. The key question is whether any element of the transaction constitutes a regulated finance or securities activity inside the Kingdom.
An offshore direct lending arrangement is less likely to trigger SAMA licensing where the following conditions are met:
The analysis shifts if any of the following circumstances arise:
Industry observers expect SAMA to continue scrutinising cross‑border arrangements closely, particularly as private credit volumes grow and more foreign funds target Saudi corporates. The likely practical effect is that purely offshore bilateral lending to sophisticated Saudi corporates will remain permissible, but any structure involving local touchpoints will face increasing regulatory challenge.
Obtaining the right licence, or confirming that no licence is needed, is only part of the compliance picture. Foreign lenders must also understand how to take, perfect and enforce security over Saudi‑located assets. The practical constraints here are often the decisive factor in structuring a cross‑border private credit deal.
The typical security package in a Saudi private credit transaction may include:
| Security Type | Registration Needed? | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Share pledge (unlisted company) | Yes, register in company’s shareholder register | Ensure constitutional documents permit pledge; obtain board/shareholder approvals |
| Share pledge (listed company) | Yes, register with Edaa | Subject to CMA disclosure rules; coordinate timing with settlement cycle |
| Real‑estate mortgage | Yes, notarial registration | Must be registered to rank as a secured claim; unregistered mortgages unenforceable against third parties |
| Assignment of receivables | Notification to obligors recommended | Written assignment; practical enforceability depends on notification and obligor acknowledgment |
| Commercial pledge over movables | Registration under commercial‑pledge rules | Verify applicable registration regime; consider possessory vs non‑possessory pledge mechanics |
Enforcement of security in Saudi Arabia is conducted through the courts (execution judges) or, where the parties have agreed, through arbitration seated in the Kingdom under the Saudi Arbitration Law. Foreign lenders should note several practical realities:
For foreign lenders who determine that onshore licensing is required, the SAMA application process follows a structured sequence. Understanding each stage helps manage timelines and avoid common delays.
Post‑licence, SAMA‑licensed entities face continuous supervisory obligations including periodic financial reporting, capital‑adequacy maintenance, AML/CTF compliance reviews and on‑site inspections. Common reasons for application delays include incomplete feasibility studies, insufficient local staffing plans, unclear governance structures and failure to secure home‑supervisor consent (for foreign bank branches) early enough in the process. Industry observers note that applicants who engage SAMA informally before filing, and who present a realistic, Saudi‑market‑focused business plan rather than a generic template, tend to move through the process materially faster.
When a foreign lender’s Saudi activities cross into securities territory, the CMA’s authorisation framework takes precedence. This occurs most commonly when a private credit fund structures its investment as a note issuance, a sukuk or a participation certificate offered to Saudi institutional or retail investors. The CMA’s Offshore Securities Business License Regulations require any person conducting securities business directed at Saudi investors, from an offshore location, to hold the appropriate CMA licence.
Becoming a CMA authorised person involves demonstrating that the applicant meets CMA fitness standards, maintains adequate systems and controls, and complies with Saudi anti‑money‑laundering requirements. The CMA’s evolving consultation documents, including the draft instructions on simplified investment funds, signal a continuing expansion of the authorised‑persons framework to capture a broader range of offshore financial products.
Some private credit structures may engage both regulators simultaneously. A foreign lender establishing a finance company to originate loans and a fund vehicle to securitise them, for example, would need SAMA approval for the lending entity and CMA authorisation for the fund management and securities issuance. Early identification of dual‑regulator touchpoints, and coordinated application timelines, is essential to avoid delays or conflicting supervisory requirements.
Use this six‑step decision tree to determine your licensing pathway:
A detailed compliance checklist covering both the SAMA and CMA application routes, including required documents, indicative timelines and post‑licence obligations, is available by contacting the Global Law Experts private credit team.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Karim Wali at Khoshaim & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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