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Saudi Arabia’s foreign ownership landscape has shifted more in the first months of 2026 than in the previous decade combined. The new Companies Law implementing regulations, the Capital Market Authority’s (CMA) Amended Rules for Foreign Investment in Securities, effective 1 February 2026, and the Real Estate General Authority’s (REGA) updated property-ownership framework have collectively re-drawn the map for inbound investment. For general counsels, CFOs and corporate development teams at multinationals weighing foreign ownership Saudi Arabia options, the central question is no longer whether to enter the Kingdom, but how: joint venture with a local partner, outright 100% acquisition, or corporate restructuring of an existing footprint.
This guide delivers a practitioner-led decision framework and step-by-step regulatory checklist designed to answer that question under the 2026 rules.
Before diving into the detail, use this executive checklist to orient your team’s initial assessment:
The regulatory environment for companies law Saudi Arabia foreign investors has evolved across three parallel tracks. Understanding which reforms apply to your transaction is the first step in any foreign investor checklist Saudi teams will use.
| Date | Reform | Key impact for foreign investors |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 (Royal Decree M/132) | New Companies Law enacted | Modernised corporate forms, governance standards, minority protections and simplified procedures for LLCs and JSCs. |
| January 2026 | REGA Non-Saudi Ownership Law takes effect | Foreign individuals, companies and entities may own residential and commercial property across Saudi Arabia, with restricted conditions in Makkah and Madinah. Properties must be registered in the Real Estate Registry, and violations carry fines up to SAR 10 million. |
| 1 February 2026 | CMA Amended Rules for Foreign Investment in Securities | Expanded foreign ownership of shares listed on the Main Market of the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul), opening the capital market to all categories of foreign investors. Total foreign ownership in a listed issuer remains capped at 49% in aggregate, excluding foreign strategic investors (FSIs). |
| Ongoing (2025–2026) | MISA licensing streamlining | MISA permits 100% foreign ownership across most sectors, subject to obtaining an investment license. Certain sectors retain specific ownership restrictions. |
The answer depends on the vehicle. For private companies, MISA now permits 100% foreign ownership in most sectors, provided the investor obtains the requisite investment license. For listed companies on Tadawul, total foreign ownership remains capped at 49% in aggregate, excluding FSIs, and is further subject to company-specific constitutional restrictions and sector-specific ownership limits. For real estate, the updated REGA framework permits non-Saudi ownership of residential and commercial property across the Kingdom, though special conditions apply in Makkah and Madinah, and ownership for speculative purposes is prohibited.
Transactions involving real estate assets now carry an additional layer of compliance. Under the Law of Real Estate Ownership by Non-Saudis, a foreign firm licensed under the Foreign Investment Law may acquire real estate necessary for operating its licensed activity or for housing staff. Property must be registered in the Real Estate Registry overseen by REGA. Violations relating to misleading information may incur fines of up to SAR 10 million. Where a target company holds significant real estate, acquirers should factor REGA registration requirements and any property-specific restrictions into the deal timeline and due diligence scope.
This is particularly relevant for investors considering setting up a gold trading business in Saudi Arabia or a travel and tourism company, where commercial premises form part of the operational footprint.
The choice between a joint venture vs acquisition Saudi Arabia transaction, or a corporate restructuring, is driven by five interlocking factors: market access needs, control requirements, Saudisation exposure, exit strategy and capital-market constraints. The comparison table below maps these factors across all three routes.
| Feature / Risk | Joint Venture (local partner) | 100% Foreign Ownership / Acquisition | Restructuring (corporate reorg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Shared; limited veto on reserved matters | Full control (direct) | Varies, can centralise control but needs internal approvals |
| Regulatory approvals | MISA + sector consents; less CMA friction for minority deals | MISA license; CMA filings for listed targets; possible strategic investor regimes | MOJ/MISA + possible shareholder approvals; re-org filings |
| Time to implement | Short–medium (partner negotiations) | Medium–long (deal, filings, clearance) | Medium (corporate filings) |
| Saudisation & local compliance | Partner helps meet local quotas | Must implement Saudisation strategy centrally | Opportunity to reorganise headcount but regulatory scrutiny |
| Exit flexibility | Partner buy-sell friction; exit clauses needed | Easier sale if wholly owned; IPO path clear | Tax and corporate friction depending on structure |
| Typical use-case | Market access, local relationships, risk sharing | Full strategic control, IP protection, integration | Post-acquisition tax / governance optimisation, spin-outs |
Despite the liberalisation of foreign ownership Saudi Arabia rules, a JV remains the right structure in several common scenarios. First, in sectors with residual ownership restrictions, such as certain defence-related activities, upstream hydrocarbons or segments of financial services, a local partner may be legally required or practically essential to navigate ministry consents. Second, where the foreign investor’s primary objective is access to government contracts, a Saudi partner with existing relationships and pre-qualification can shorten the sales cycle by years. Third, JVs are attractive where the investor seeks risk sharing: the local partner absorbs a share of country risk, contributes working capital and provides workforce that helps satisfy Nitaqat Saudisation quotas from day one.
Industry observers expect JVs to remain particularly common in infrastructure, construction and mega-project supply chains linked to Vision 2030, where local-content requirements and government procurement preferences favour Saudi-partnered vehicles. For investors exploring this route, the governance architecture, particularly reserved matters, deadlock resolution and exit mechanisms in the shareholders’ agreement (SHA), becomes the critical negotiation.
Full ownership is typically the better path where intellectual property protection is paramount, where the investor needs unilateral decision-making authority over pricing, hiring and strategic direction, or where the transaction is a platform acquisition intended to be scaled and potentially listed on Tadawul. As detailed in an earlier explainer on whether foreigners can own 100% of a company in Saudi, MISA’s baseline policy now permits full foreign ownership across most sectors, making this route legally accessible for the majority of inbound investors.
A 100% foreign subsidiary also simplifies cross-border M&A Saudi integration: there is no partner whose interests must be reconciled during post-closing operational changes, transfer-pricing adjustments or group restructurings. The trade-off is that the foreign investor bears full responsibility for Saudisation, local regulatory relationships and the operational learning curve, costs that a JV partner would otherwise share.
Restructuring in Saudi Arabia is most relevant for foreign investors who already have an in-Kingdom presence, typically through a JV or a partially owned subsidiary, and wish to optimise the structure in light of the 2026 reforms. Common triggers include converting a JV into a wholly owned subsidiary (partner buyout), consolidating multiple Saudi entities into a single operating company, or reorganising the corporate chain ahead of a planned IPO. Restructuring transactions require careful sequencing of MISA notifications, MOJ filings and, where shares in a listed entity are involved, CMA clearance.
No matter which route an investor selects, the regulatory approval pathway is the single biggest determinant of timeline and cost. The checklist below maps the saudi arabia m&a approvals required for each transaction type.
Every foreign investor establishing or acquiring a business in Saudi Arabia must hold a valid MISA investment license. The process involves the following core steps:
For investors forming an LLC, the most common vehicle, the detailed procedural steps are covered in the guide to establishing an LLC in Saudi Arabia for foreign investors. Investors in specific industries may also find relevant formation guidance in the walkthroughs for setting up an F&B company in Saudi Arabia.
Where the target is a company listed on the Saudi Exchange, the CMA’s cma m&a amendments introduce additional filing obligations. As of 1 February 2026, the Amended Rules for Foreign Investment in Securities allow expanded foreign ownership of shares listed on the Main Market and open the capital market to all categories of foreign investors. Key filing considerations include:
Corporate entity changes, mergers, demergers, conversions and partner buyouts, must be notarised and registered with the Ministry of Justice (MOJ). Where the transaction involves real estate assets, the acquiring entity must separately register property in the REGA Real Estate Registry. This dual-track filing is a common source of delay: industry observers expect a 2–4 week incremental addition to timelines where property registration is required.
| Transaction type | Primary regulator(s) | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|
| New 100% foreign LLC formation | MISA → Ministry of Commerce → ZATCA → HRSD | 8–16 weeks |
| JV formation (with Saudi partner) | MISA → Ministry of Commerce → sector regulator (if applicable) | 8–16 weeks (plus partner negotiation) |
| Private company share acquisition | MISA (license transfer/amendment) → MOJ (notarisation) | 12–24 weeks |
| Listed company acquisition (Tadawul) | CMA (QFI/FSI registration + M&A filing) → Saudi Exchange → MISA | 16–30+ weeks |
| Corporate restructuring / merger | MISA → MOJ → creditor notification → possible CMA (if listed) | 12–20 weeks |
| Real estate acquisition (as part of deal) | REGA registration + MISA (if entity-level) | Additional 2–4 weeks |
The Companies Law, enacted by Royal Decree M/132 and now fully operational with implementing regulations, imposes updated corporate governance Saudi Arabia standards that directly affect how shareholders’ agreements and constitutional documents are drafted for both JVs and wholly owned subsidiaries. The new Companies Law provisions on minority protections, related-party transactions and director duties have raised the bar for governance documentation.
For joint ventures, the SHA is the single most important document protecting the foreign investor’s interests. The following clauses should be treated as non-negotiable:
A wholly owned foreign subsidiary has no partner to negotiate with, but the Companies Law still imposes governance requirements that boards must observe:
Whether the chosen route is a JV, a 100% acquisition or a restructuring, the cross-border m&a Saudi transaction will involve several workstreams running in parallel. The following priorities are specific to the Saudi market and frequently trip up first-time entrants.
Saudi Arabia imposes a 5% withholding tax on dividends paid to non-resident shareholders. This rate may be reduced under applicable double-taxation treaties. Profits and capital may be freely repatriated provided all tax obligations are settled and the entity holds a valid Commercial Registration. There are no exchange-control restrictions on the Saudi Riyal, which is pegged to the US dollar. Early engagement with ZATCA and the entity’s bank is advisable to ensure smooth repatriation mechanics, particularly for large one-off distributions post-restructuring.
The table below provides a sample project plan with realistic timeline ranges for the three most common transaction types. Actual timelines vary based on sector, deal complexity and regulator workload.
| Milestone | JV Formation | 100% Acquisition (private target) | Listed-Company M&A (CMA route) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Partner / target identification and LOI | Weeks 1–4 | Weeks 1–6 | Weeks 1–6 |
| Due diligence | Weeks 3–8 | Weeks 4–12 | Weeks 4–14 |
| SHA / SPA negotiation and execution | Weeks 6–12 | Weeks 8–16 | Weeks 8–18 |
| MISA license application and issuance | Weeks 8–12 | Weeks 10–16 | Weeks 10–16 (parallel) |
| CMA filings (QFI/FSI + M&A approval) | N/A (unless listed JV partner) | N/A (private target) | Weeks 12–26 |
| Commercial Registration and ancillary filings | Weeks 12–16 | Weeks 16–22 | Weeks 24–30 |
| Post-closing integration (Day 1 readiness) | Weeks 14–18 | Weeks 18–24 | Weeks 26–32 |
The following micro-templates provide starting points for two of the most commonly negotiated governance elements. They are illustrative and must be adapted to the specific transaction, Saudi law requirements and commercial context.
Reserved Matters, Sample List for JV SHA
Board Composition, Sample Provision
The 2026 reforms have removed many of the barriers that historically pushed foreign investors toward JV structures by default, but the choice between a joint venture, 100% acquisition or restructuring remains deeply fact-specific. The right answer depends on your sector, control needs, exit horizon and appetite for managing Saudisation independently.
To move from assessment to execution, take the following six steps now: (1) confirm sector eligibility and MISA licensing requirements; (2) initiate MISA or CMA pre-filing enquiries where the target is listed; (3) launch targeted due diligence with Saudi-specific scope (Nitaqat, ZATCA, REGA); (4) draft or update your SHA and constitutional documents to reflect the Companies Law’s governance standards; (5) develop a Saudisation and local-content compliance plan for the post-closing entity; and (6) engage experienced Saudi corporate counsel to coordinate the multi-regulator approval process. The foreign investor checklist Saudi market conditions now demand is longer than it was a year ago, but the commercial opportunity has grown in proportion.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Faisal A. Linjawy at Law Firm of Hassan Mahassni, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Last updated: 19 May 2026
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