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Understanding how to file an administrative appeal in Saudi Arabia is essential for anyone, individual, corporation or foreign investor, who has received an adverse government decision and needs to challenge it through the courts. The Kingdom’s administrative judiciary, centred on the Board of Grievances, operates under a strict 30‑day filing deadline, mandatory memorandum requirements set out in the Implementing Regulations of Appellate Procedures issued by the Ministry of Justice, and an increasingly digital filing infrastructure through the National Portal at my.gov.sa. This guide sets out every practical step, form and timeline you need, from confirming jurisdiction through to requesting an emergency suspension (stay) of the challenged decision.
Before diving into the details, here is a concise overview of what the appeal process involves. Each step is expanded in full below.
The sections that follow unpack each step with the exact administrative appeal forms used in Saudi Arabia, sample wording, deadline calculations and a downloadable appeal checklist.
Not every government decision can be challenged through the same court. Saudi Arabia’s administrative judiciary is organised under the Board of Grievances, which comprises Administrative Courts at first instance and Administrative Courts of Appeal at the appellate level. A Supreme Administrative Court sits above both tiers and deals primarily with matters of legal principle, conflicts between circuits and certain challenges to the validity of regulations.
The Law of the Board of Grievances, accessible on the Bureau of Experts laws portal, grants jurisdiction over disputes between individuals or entities and government bodies, including challenges to administrative decisions, claims for compensation arising from government action or inaction, and disciplinary matters involving civil servants. If the contested decision was issued by a public authority exercising administrative discretion, for example, a licensing refusal, a land‑use restriction, a tender exclusion or a regulatory penalty, the Board of Grievances appeal route is typically the correct one.
Industry observers note that the distinction between a Board of Grievances appeal and a complaint filed with the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (MHRSD) is a frequent source of confusion. Labour disputes against private‑sector employers ordinarily begin at the MHRSD, not the administrative courts. Similarly, commercial disputes between private parties fall under the Commercial Courts. Where the challenged action involves a decision by a government ministry, municipality or regulator, however, the Board of Grievances retains jurisdiction.
If you are uncertain, the National Portal complaint‑routing service at my.gov.sa can help direct you to the correct body. In all cases, confirming the jurisdictional route before preparing documents avoids wasted time and the risk of missing the filing deadline.
The memorandum of appeal is the single most important document in the process. The Implementing Regulations of Appellate Procedures, published as an official PDF by the Ministry of Justice, specify the mandatory contents that every appeal memorandum must include. Failure to meet these requirements may result in the appeal being returned or dismissed on procedural grounds.
At a minimum, the memorandum must contain:
Sample language for a ground of appeal might read: “The Appellant respectfully submits that the Decision erred in law by failing to apply Article [X] of the Implementing Regulations, which requires the competent authority to provide written notice no fewer than [Y] days before issuing a penalty.” Each ground should be self‑contained, cite the relevant statutory provision and connect to a specific exhibit in the evidence bundle.
A well‑structured memorandum of appeal increases the likelihood of the court engaging substantively with your arguments rather than dismissing the filing on technical grounds. The Implementing Regulations of Appellate Procedures should be treated as a drafting checklist in their own right.
Every document referenced in the memorandum must be included in an indexed evidence bundle. Practitioners recommend paginating the bundle sequentially (e.g., Exhibit 1, page 1 of 5) and inserting tabbed dividers for ease of court reference.
Where exhibits originate in a language other than Arabic, certified Arabic translations are required. Translations should be completed by a translator accredited by the Ministry of Justice or a recognised translation office. Foreign public documents, for instance, company registration certificates from another jurisdiction, typically need consular legalisation or an apostille, followed by attestation by the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, before they are admissible.
Notarisation of the appellant’s power of attorney (if filing through a representative) is also mandatory. The power of attorney must specifically authorise the representative to file appeals and, where applicable, to request suspension of the challenged decision. Omitting this authorisation is a common error that can delay proceedings.
Saudi Arabia’s digital‑government strategy has made National Portal appeal e‑filing the primary submission channel for most administrative proceedings. The official appeal‑request service is accessible at my.gov.sa (service ID 23294). Filers authenticate through Nafath or the national IAM (Identity and Access Management) platform, complete the required data fields, upload attachments in PDF format and receive an electronic confirmation with a reference number.
Physical filing at the court registry remains available in limited circumstances, for example, where the system is undergoing maintenance or where a party does not hold a Saudi national ID or Iqama. In such cases, the memorandum and evidence bundle are submitted in hard copy at the competent Administrative Court of Appeal registry, and the court clerk stamps and returns a receipt copy.
Court fees, where applicable, are payable at the time of filing. Fee schedules vary by claim value and case type; the National Portal will display any applicable fee during the submission process.
The National Portal appeal e‑filing workflow follows a structured sequence designed to capture all information required by the Implementing Regulations. Here is a step‑by‑step guide to completing the submission:
After submission, track the status of your appeal through the “My Requests” dashboard on the National Portal. Notifications of hearing dates and any court directions will be sent to the registered mobile number and email address.
To ensure no mandatory element is overlooked, an appeal checklist Saudi practitioners can use is invaluable. The checklist should mirror the requirements of the Implementing Regulations and include:
A sample memorandum template, formatted to match the headings and mandatory fields described above, can be adapted to most administrative appeal scenarios. Tailoring the template to the specific facts and legal grounds of each case remains essential, generic, unmodified filings are far less effective.
Timing is everything. Missing the appeal deadline 30 days Saudi law prescribes will, in the vast majority of cases, render the appeal inadmissible. The 30‑day period begins to run from the date of notification (service) of the judgment or administrative decision on the affected party, not from the date the decision was issued internally by the government body.
Where the appellant was not formally notified, for example, because the decision was published in the Official Gazette or posted on a government portal, the start date may be the date on which the appellant became or should reasonably have become aware of the decision. Practitioner commentary from firms such as Al Tamimi & Company and Al Madani & Co. underscores the importance of documenting the exact notification date and retaining all delivery receipts, courier slips or electronic notification records.
For urgent or summary administrative matters, the deadline can be as short as 10 days. These expedited timelines typically apply to interim injunctions, provisional measures and certain employment‑related administrative penalties where delay would cause serious prejudice.
Days are counted as calendar days, including weekends and public holidays, unless the final day falls on an official holiday, in which case the deadline extends to the next working day. Industry observers expect that the digitisation of court filing systems will gradually tighten adherence to these deadlines, since the National Portal timestamps every submission to the second.
| Action | Standard Deadline | Notes / Source |
|---|---|---|
| File appeal (general administrative) | 30 days from judgment or service/notification | MOJ Implementing Regulations of Appellate Procedures; Al Madani & Co. commentary |
| File appeal (urgent matters) | 10 days from notification | Practitioner guidance (Al Madani & Co.); MOJ implementing regulations where applicable |
| Request suspension (stay) | File concurrently with appeal or as soon as possible after filing | MOJ + Board of Grievances practice; scholarly discussion (PMC/NCBI) |
| Transmittal of record & hearing scheduling | Variable, court sets timetable after filing | MOJ regulations (procedural stages) |
If you discover the deadline has already passed, seek legal advice immediately. While extensions are not routinely granted, limited exceptions may apply, for instance, where the appellant can demonstrate that notification was defective or that force majeure prevented timely filing. The burden of proof lies squarely on the appellant.
Filing an appeal does not automatically stop the challenged decision from being implemented. If the administrative decision, such as a licence revocation, a demolition order or a financial penalty, is already in force, the appellant must apply separately for suspension of the administrative decision pending the outcome of the appeal.
The legal test applied by Saudi administrative courts broadly mirrors the framework recognised in comparative administrative law scholarship. The court will assess three criteria: (1) whether the appellant has demonstrated a prima facie case on the merits, that is, the grounds of appeal raise a serious question to be tried; (2) whether implementation of the decision would cause irreparable harm that cannot be adequately remedied by damages if the appeal ultimately succeeds; and (3) whether the balance of convenience favours maintaining the status quo pending final determination. Academic analysis published in peer‑reviewed literature confirms that these elements form the analytical backbone of suspension motions across civil‑law administrative jurisdictions, including Saudi Arabia.
A suspension motion should be filed concurrently with the memorandum of appeal or, at the latest, at the first available opportunity after filing. Delay weakens the urgency argument. The motion should contain:
Failing to request suspension can have severe consequences: by the time the appeal is decided, the contested action may already be fully executed, a building demolished, a licence permanently cancelled, or funds irrecoverably seized. Early legal advice on whether a stay application is warranted should be a top priority in every administrative appeal.
A persuasive memorandum of appeal follows a logical structure that guides the appellate court through the case efficiently. The recommended format is:
Drafting tips from experienced practitioners include keeping grounds concise, avoiding emotional language and focusing on legal standards rather than factual narrative. The appellate court’s role is to review whether the lower decision applied the law correctly, not to retry the facts from scratch.
The evidence bundle should begin with a table of contents listing each exhibit by number, short description and page range. Exhibits should be arranged in the order they are referenced in the memorandum. Each exhibit tab should be clearly labelled (e.g., “Exhibit 3, Notification Letter dated [date]”). Where translations are required, the Arabic translation should immediately follow the foreign‑language original. Certified copies should bear the translator’s stamp, name and accreditation number. Courts expect legible, orderly bundles, poorly organised evidence undermines credibility.
Use this ten‑point appeal checklist as a final pre‑submission audit for any administrative appeal filing in Saudi Arabia:
Common pitfalls include filing at the wrong court, omitting the copy of the contested decision, submitting untranslated foreign documents, and failing to request suspension until it is too late to prevent implementation of the decision. Where the stakes are high or the legal issues complex, engaging an experienced Saudi administrative law practitioner at the earliest opportunity is strongly advisable.
Knowing how to file an administrative appeal in Saudi Arabia, from verifying jurisdiction through to assembling the evidence bundle and meeting the strict 30‑day deadline, can mean the difference between a successful challenge and an irrevocable loss of rights. Use the step‑by‑step process and checklist outlined above to ensure your filing is complete, timely and positioned for substantive review by the appellate court. Where a suspension of the contested decision is warranted, act immediately: delay is the single most common reason stay applications fail. For complex or high‑value matters, specialist legal counsel should be engaged without delay.
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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