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how to structure private credit Saudi Arabia

How to Structure and Close a Private Credit Facility in Saudi Arabia (2026), Step‑by‑step for Lenders & Funds

By Global Law Experts
– posted 55 minutes ago

Understanding how to structure private credit in Saudi Arabia is now a core competency for any lender, fund manager or in‑house counsel looking to deploy capital in the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia’s private credit market has expanded rapidly through 2025–26, driven by new fund launches, landmark institutional partnerships and updated supervisory expectations from the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) and the Capital Market Authority (CMA). This guide walks through every procedural stage, from pre‑deal preparation to post‑closing reporting, so that participants can close facilities on time, on budget and in full regulatory compliance. It covers bilateral private loans, club deals, syndicated facilities, asset‑based lending and Shariah‑compliant structures alike.

Overview of the Private Credit Process and Who It Applies To

Private credit in Saudi Arabia encompasses several distinct strategies, each with its own documentation, security package and regulatory pathway. The most common structures include:

  • Senior secured bilateral loans, a single lender advances funds against a defined collateral package.
  • Club deals and syndicated facilities, two or more lenders share an exposure, governed by a common Facility Agreement and Intercreditor Agreement.
  • Mezzanine and subordinated credit, higher‑risk, higher‑return tranches sitting below senior debt in the capital structure.
  • Asset‑based lending (ABL), facilities secured primarily against receivables, inventory or equipment.
  • Shariah‑compliant structures, Murabaha, Ijara, Wakalah or commodity‑based facilities that mirror conventional credit economics within an Islamic finance framework.

This guide is written for lenders, private credit funds, fund counsel, CFOs and compliance teams who are preparing to originate or subscribe to a facility in the Kingdom. It reflects the regulatory environment as at mid‑2026, including updated SAMA reporting expectations and CMA fund‑governance requirements. Readers seeking a detailed breakdown of 2026 changes should refer to the dedicated section below.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Private Credit in Saudi Arabia

Before committing capital, lenders and funds must confirm they satisfy Saudi legal and regulatory requirements. Eligibility turns on the lender’s domicile, entity type and the nature of the credit exposure.

Foreign Lender Entry Routes

Foreign funds and lenders may participate in Saudi private credit through several routes, each carrying different regulatory and tax implications:

  • Direct onshore lending, requires a Saudi‑incorporated entity or branch. A foreign investment licence from the Ministry of Investment (MISA) is typically needed under the Foreign Investment Law.
  • Saudi special purpose vehicle (SPV), a locally incorporated SPV can act as the lending vehicle, ring‑fencing the Saudi exposure. This route involves company registration at the Ministry of Commerce and a MISA licence.
  • Offshore fund with an onshore agent, the foreign lender lends from outside Saudi Arabia through a local agent bank or representative. This avoids a permanent establishment but requires careful structuring of the security package and withholding‑tax position with ZATCA.

When SAMA or CMA Engagement Is Required

SAMA‑regulated entities, Saudi‑licensed banks, finance companies and insurance firms, must comply with SAMA’s prudential and reporting frameworks whenever they originate or subscribe to credit exposures. Where a private credit facility is offered through a CMA‑regulated fund vehicle, the fund manager must hold the appropriate CMA authorisation and comply with the CMA’s fund rules, including investor‑suitability and disclosure obligations.

Shariah Compliance Triggers and Parallel Documentation

If either party requires the facility to be Shariah‑compliant, the transaction must be structured around a recognised Islamic finance contract, most commonly a commodity Murabaha, Ijara or Wakalah. A Shariah board must review and issue a formal opinion on the documentation before signing. This adds a parallel documentation workstream and an additional review window that must be built into the project timeline.

How to Structure Private Credit in Saudi Arabia, Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following eight steps represent the standard closing sequence for a private credit facility in the Kingdom. Timelines assume a mid‑complexity bilateral or club deal; syndicated and multi‑tranche facilities typically sit at the longer end of each range.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Pre‑deal internal approval & term sheet issue Lender credit committee / fund investment committee; lead counsel prepares term sheet 1–2 weeks
2. Confidentiality & initial DD (financial, legal, Shariah if required) Borrower & lender counsel; advisors (accountants, Shariah board) 1–3 weeks
3. Agree Heads of Terms / Indicative terms Lead lender / borrower / arranger 1–2 weeks
4. Legal due diligence & security design Lender counsel / local counsel; borrower counsel 2–4 weeks
5. Drafting & negotiation of documentation Lead counsel (lender and borrower), arranger counsel 2–4 weeks
6. Regulatory filings & approvals Lender / borrower (with counsel), SAMA / CMA / MISA as required 2–6 weeks (parallel)
7. Signing & closing; funds flow Arranger, escrow agent, bank operations Day of signing / immediate funds flow
8. Post‑closing filings & reporting Lender ops / compliance; local counsel for security registration 1–4 weeks post‑close

Step 1, Pre‑Deal Preparation and Credit Committee Approval

Secure internal credit or investment‑committee approval and issue a term sheet to the borrower. The term sheet should set out the facility amount, tenor, pricing, amortisation profile, key covenants and the proposed security package. Lead counsel prepares a pre‑due‑diligence checklist at this stage, identifying the documents and information the borrower must provide. Allow one to two weeks for internal approvals and term‑sheet drafting.

Step 2, Confidentiality, Marketing and Initial Borrower Due Diligence

Execute a confidentiality agreement (NDA) with the borrower and begin financial, legal and, if required, Shariah due diligence. In a syndicated deal, the arranger may market the facility to potential lenders during this phase. Key deliverables include the borrower’s audited financial statements, corporate structure chart, material contracts and title evidence for proposed security assets. This phase typically takes one to three weeks, with Shariah board engagement running in parallel where an Islamic structure is envisaged.

Step 3, Heads of Terms and Indicative Term Sheet

Negotiate and agree binding or partially binding Heads of Terms that crystallise the commercial deal: pricing, margin ratchet, commitment fees, financial covenants, events of default, conditions precedent and the broad security framework. The Heads of Terms serve as the instruction document for counsel to begin drafting definitive documentation. This step usually runs in parallel with the later stages of due diligence and takes one to two weeks.

Step 4, Legal Due Diligence and Security Package Design

Lender counsel, working with local Saudi counsel, conducts a full legal due diligence review of the borrower group. The security package is designed at this stage, mapping each asset class to the correct perfection mechanism under Saudi law: real‑estate mortgages, share pledges, assignment of receivables, assignment of insurance, and charges over movable assets. Where the facility involves asset‑based lending, receivables schedules and valuation reports are reviewed in detail. In a multi‑lender deal, the intercreditor structure (priority, step‑in rights, enforcement waterfall) is outlined. Allow two to four weeks.

Step 5, Definitive Documentation Drafting and Negotiation

Lead counsel circulates the first draft of the Facility Agreement (or the relevant Islamic Master Agreement for Shariah‑compliant deals), together with the Security Documents, Intercreditor Agreement (if applicable), hedging documents (ISDA/collateral schedules, where relevant) and ancillary agreements. Key negotiation points typically include financial‑covenant definitions and testing mechanics, material‑adverse‑change provisions, permitted‑indebtedness baskets, and the conditions‑precedent schedule. Two to four weeks is standard for negotiation, although complex syndicated facilities can take longer.

Step 6, Regulatory Filings, Approvals and Consents

File all required regulatory notifications concurrently with documentation negotiation. Depending on the parties’ status, this may include SAMA notifications (for regulated lenders or where exposure thresholds apply), CMA filings (for fund‑related structures), MISA approvals (for foreign lenders establishing or utilising a Saudi entity) and corporate authorisations from the borrower’s board and shareholders. Governmental or third‑party consents, for example under change‑of‑control clauses in material contracts, are also sought at this stage. Running this workstream in parallel with Step 5 is critical to avoiding timeline slippage; allow two to six weeks depending on the complexity of the approvals required.

Step 7, Closing Mechanics and Funds Flow

On the agreed closing date, verify that all conditions precedent have been satisfied or waived. Execute the Facility Agreement and Security Documents simultaneously. Funds flow instructions are issued to the account bank or escrow agent, and the facility is drawn. Ensure that funds‑flow instructions match the paying bank’s cut‑off times to avoid settlement delays. Tax‑withholding confirmations from ZATCA should be obtained before disbursal where withholding tax applies to interest or fee payments. Closing typically occurs on the day of signing, with funds transferred immediately or on the next business day.

Step 8, Post‑Closing Obligations

Complete all post‑closing actions within the contractually agreed timeframes. Key obligations include registering security interests with the relevant Saudi registries (Ministry of Commerce commercial register, real‑estate registries), filing SAMA reports for regulated lenders, delivering executed originals to the document custodian, and commencing covenant monitoring. The first compliance certificate and financial reporting cycle typically falls within 30 to 90 days of closing. Local counsel should confirm that all security registrations have been perfected and provide registration receipts.

Required Documents and Information for Closing a Private Credit Facility in Saudi Arabia

The table below lists the core documents needed to close a standard private credit transaction in the Kingdom. Parties should treat it as a working checklist and supplement it with deal‑specific items identified during due diligence.

Document Notes
Signed Term Sheet / Letter of Intent Issued by lead lender or arranger. Sets commercial terms. Non‑binding or partially binding as agreed.
Confidentiality Agreement (NDA) Mutual or unilateral. Executed at the start of engagement. Issued by lender or arranger.
Facility Agreement (conventional) or Islamic Master Agreement Drafted by lender and borrower counsel. Includes pricing, covenants, events of default. Governed by Saudi law or other agreed governing law.
Security Documents (mortgage, charge, pledge, assignment) Perfection steps are asset‑specific. Local counsel registers charges at the relevant Saudi registry.
Intercreditor Agreement Required for multi‑lender facilities. Sets priority, enforcement waterfall and step‑in rights.
Corporate Authorisations & Board Resolutions Issued by borrower. Must be dated, certified and, if foreign, apostilled or attested. Typical validity: 30–90 days.
Power of Attorney (if signing by agents) Issued by borrower. Must be notarised and attested per Saudi requirements.
Legal Due Diligence Pack Title searches, incorporation documents, audited financials, material contracts. Produced by borrower for lender’s counsel.
Tax Clearance & ZATCA Documentation Issued by ZATCA or tax adviser. Confirms withholding‑tax position before disbursal.
Shariah Opinion (if Shariah‑compliant) Issued by a recognised Shariah board. Confirms the transaction structure’s compliance with Islamic principles.
Security Registration Receipts Issued by the relevant Saudi registry (Ministry of Commerce, real‑estate registry) confirming perfection.
AML/KYC Documents Issued by lenders and beneficial owners. Required by borrower or agent in line with Saudi AML rules.
Consent Letters (material contracts) From counterparties whose contracts include change‑of‑control or assignment restrictions.
Account Bank Confirmation & Escrow Instructions Issued by paying bank or escrow agent. Details funds‑release mechanics.

Security perfection, key points for Saudi Arabia:

  • Real‑estate mortgages must be registered with the relevant Saudi real‑estate registration authority. Local counsel should confirm the specific registry and procedural requirements.
  • Charges over movables and receivables require formal assignment and, where the receivables are owed by a government entity, additional consent may be needed.
  • Share pledges typically require filings with the company’s commercial register and corresponding board resolutions from the pledged entity.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Closing Private Credit in Saudi Arabia

The milestone table below translates the eight procedural steps into a high‑level timeline. Industry observers expect simple bilateral facilities to close within 6–12 weeks, while syndicated and multi‑security transactions typically require 8–16 weeks or longer.

Milestone Trigger Typical Deadline
Term sheet to binding documentation Agreement on Heads of Terms 2–4 weeks
Completion of legal & financial DD After Heads of Terms and access to data room 2–4 weeks
Execution of facility & security documents After documentation negotiation Day of signing (simultaneous)
Security registration / perfection Post‑signing (jurisdictional registers) 1–30 days (asset‑specific)
SAMA / regulatory notification (if required) Regulated lender or exposure threshold met Per applicable SAMA circular
Tax‑withholding confirmation Before funds disbursal where WHT applies Before closing date
Post‑closing covenant & reporting obligations Immediately post‑closing First cycle: monthly or quarterly

Two variables drive most timeline extensions: cross‑border attestation chains for foreign corporate documents, and multi‑registry security perfection for complex collateral pools. Building a buffer of one to two weeks for each is standard practice.

Regarding SAMA reporting, regulated lenders should confirm the applicable notification and reporting windows under current SAMA circulars. Early indications suggest that digital reporting timelines have tightened in 2025–26, making prompt post‑closing compliance essential.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations for Private Credit Facilities in Saudi Arabia

The table below provides indicative cost ranges for planning purposes. Actual costs vary significantly by facility size, security complexity and the number of parties involved. All figures should be verified with local counsel and advisers before budgeting.

Item Indicative Amount Notes
Lender legal fees (drafting & negotiation) USD 25,000–150,000+ Depends on bilateral vs syndicated, number of lenders and security complexity.
Borrower legal fees USD 20,000–120,000+ Local and international counsel combined.
Security registration / public registry fees SAR 500–50,000 Asset‑dependent; real‑estate mortgages at the higher end.
Notary / attestation / apostille SAR 200–3,000 per document Foreign documents require attestation or apostille.
Tax advice / ZATCA clearances USD 2,000–10,000 Withholding‑tax analysis and structuring.
Agency / arranger fees (if applicable) 0.1%–1.0% of facility amount Market‑dependent commercial fee.
Facility Agent / Security Agent setup USD 5,000–25,000 One‑off administration fee.
SAMA / regulatory filing fees Variable (typically nominal) Confirm with SAMA or CMA.

Tax considerations lenders must address:

  • Withholding tax on interest or fees. Payments to non‑resident lenders may attract withholding tax under Saudi tax rules administered by ZATCA. Structure payment mechanics and obtain clearances before disbursal.
  • VAT on advisory and arrangement fees. Saudi VAT applies to many professional services. Confirm the VAT treatment of each fee component with tax counsel.
  • Transfer pricing and thin capitalisation. Related‑party lending structures must comply with Saudi transfer‑pricing regulations to avoid ZATCA adjustments.

What Changed in 2026, Procedural Impacts for Private Credit in Saudi Arabia

Several developments in 2025–26 have materially changed the process of structuring and closing private credit facilities in the Kingdom:

  • Tighter SAMA digital reporting. SAMA has continued to enhance its supervisory technology platform, and the likely practical effect is shorter reporting windows and more automated enforcement for regulated credit exposures. Lenders should embed digital reporting obligations directly into Facility Agreement definitions and compliance covenants.
  • Growth of institutional private credit. Landmark partnerships, including the PIF–King Street Capital Management memorandum of understanding, have accelerated the professionalisation of the market. Industry observers expect enhanced covenant packages, ESG and sustainability side‑letters, and more standardised documentation as a result.
  • Shariah‑compliant fund structures. The growing prevalence of Shariah‑compliant private credit funds means documentation workstreams increasingly include Shariah board review as a critical‑path item. Lenders should schedule Shariah board engagement no later than the Heads of Terms stage and provide draft documentation early to avoid delays.
  • Enhanced AML/KYC for foreign participants. Updated Saudi AML regulations require more granular beneficial‑ownership disclosure and source‑of‑funds verification, particularly for foreign lenders and investors.

Practical action items for 2026: engage SAMA compliance teams at the term‑sheet stage; add digital‑reporting covenants to documentation checklists; build an additional one‑to‑two‑week buffer for Shariah board review; and update conditions‑precedent schedules to reflect current AML/KYC requirements.

Common Pitfalls When Closing Private Credit in Saudi Arabia and How to Avoid Them

  • Late security perfection due to foreign document attestation. Foreign corporate documents must be apostilled or attested through the relevant embassy chain before they can be used in Saudi registries. Begin the attestation process as soon as the transaction mandate is confirmed, delays of two to four weeks are common.
  • Unforeseen withholding tax. Failing to obtain ZATCA clearance before disbursal can trigger unexpected tax liabilities and cash‑flow mismatches. Build escrow or gross‑up mechanics into the Facility Agreement and confirm the WHT position before closing.
  • Intercreditor ambiguity. In multi‑lender deals, vague intercreditor terms create enforcement risk. Negotiate the Intercreditor Agreement in parallel with the Facility Agreement, and include explicit step‑in rights, enforcement waterfalls and voting thresholds.
  • Insufficient local counsel involvement. Saudi registry requirements, notarisation procedures and perfection mechanics differ from those in most common‑law jurisdictions. Instruct Saudi local counsel from day one to avoid rework.
  • Failure to allow for Shariah board review windows. Shariah boards operate to their own schedules, and last‑minute submissions risk rejection or delay. Pre‑agree the review timeline and circulate draft documentation to the board at the earliest opportunity.
  • Funds‑flow misalignment with bank cut‑off times. Saudi paying banks enforce strict same‑day payment cut‑offs. Coordinate funds‑flow instructions and settlement timing with the account bank or escrow agent well before the closing date.
  • Omitting SAMA/CMA reporting obligations from documentation. If regulatory reporting requirements are not reflected in the Facility Agreement, the lender risks covenant‑level non‑compliance. Include notification clauses and compliance covenants that track current SAMA and CMA obligations.
  • Ambiguous financial‑covenant definitions. Poorly defined financial metrics, EBITDA, leverage ratio, debt‑service coverage, create disputes during testing. Use tested, market‑standard definitions and include detailed calculation mechanics and worked examples in the documentation.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Saudi Central Bank (SAMA)
  2. Capital Market Authority (CMA), Saudi Arabia
  3. Ministry of Investment, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (MISA)
  4. Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority (ZATCA)
  5. Ministry of Commerce, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

FAQs

What are the step‑by‑step stages to structure and close a private credit facility in Saudi Arabia?
The process follows eight stages: pre‑deal preparation and credit approval; confidentiality and initial due diligence; agreeing Heads of Terms; legal due diligence and security design; drafting and negotiating definitive documentation; regulatory filings and approvals; signing, closing and funds flow; and post‑closing filings, reporting and security perfection.
Core documents include the Facility Agreement (or Islamic Master Agreement), Security Documents (mortgage, charge, pledge, assignment), Intercreditor Agreement (for multi‑lender deals), corporate authorisations, Powers of Attorney, AML/KYC packs, tax clearances from ZATCA and, for Shariah‑compliant structures, a formal Shariah opinion. See the full checklist table above.
Yes. Foreign funds may lend directly through a Saudi‑incorporated entity or branch (requiring a MISA foreign investment licence), via an onshore SPV, or from offshore through a local agent bank. Each route carries different regulatory, tax and security‑perfection implications. Tax‑residence and withholding‑tax positions should be confirmed with ZATCA before committing.
Simple bilateral facilities typically close in 6–12 weeks. Syndicated, multi‑security or cross‑border transactions generally require 8–16 weeks or more. The main timeline drivers are due‑diligence scope, security perfection complexity and any required regulatory approvals.
At the term‑sheet stage, before binding commercial terms are agreed. Early engagement with Saudi local counsel ensures that security perfection, registry procedures and SAMA/CMA notification requirements are mapped from the outset. Tax advisers should confirm the withholding‑tax and VAT position before documentation drafting begins.
Missing a registration deadline risks leaving the lender with an imperfect security interest, which can result in loss of priority, enforcement complications and potential breach of conditions precedent. Immediate remedial filings should be made, and lenders should consider title insurance or intercreditor protections as interim mitigants.
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How to Structure and Close a Private Credit Facility in Saudi Arabia (2026), Step‑by‑step for Lenders & Funds

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