Member
Last updated: 2 May 2026
The Saudi accounting services rules 2026 represent the most significant regulatory overhaul the Kingdom’s accounting profession has faced in over a decade. Decision 46268, formally amending the rules governing accounting services, reshapes licensing categories, tightens partner and responsible-officer liability, and redefines the scope of regulated services that firms may provide. Running in parallel, the updated Saudi Accounting Standards 2026 introduce recognition, measurement and disclosure changes that ripple through financial-statement preparation, zakat calculations and ZATCA reporting obligations. For CFOs, finance directors, accounting firm partners and in-house auditors, the compliance window is narrow and the consequences of inaction are material, spanning licence suspension, personal financial penalties and professional sanctions.
In short: Decision 46268 restructures how accounting firms are licensed and supervised in Saudi Arabia, while the Saudi Accounting Standards 2026 change how entities prepare, disclose and audit financial statements. Together, the 2026 changes create immediate obligations for both service providers and the companies they serve.
The SOCPA accounting services amendments broaden the definition of regulated accounting services, introduce stricter governance requirements for firm structures, and establish a graduated sanctions framework that holds individual partners personally accountable. Meanwhile, the updated standards align Saudi reporting more closely with international practice while retaining Kingdom-specific adjustments for zakat and certain industry sectors. Industry observers expect that firms which delay compliance will face enforcement action within the first cycle, given SOCPA’s publicly stated commitment to active supervision.
Saudi Arabia’s accounting profession operates under a multi-regulator framework. The Saudi Organization for Chartered and Professional Accountants (SOCPA) serves as the primary professional regulator, issuing licences, setting ethical and technical standards, and conducting disciplinary proceedings. SOCPA operates under the authority of the Ministry of Commerce and derives its mandate from the Certified Public Accountants Law (Royal Decree M/12) and subsequent Cabinet resolutions.
Two other regulators intersect materially with accounting compliance. The Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority (ZATCA) oversees zakat and tax filing, meaning that any change to recognition or measurement standards immediately affects how entities compute their zakat base and corporate income tax. The Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) imposes additional prudential reporting requirements on banks, insurance companies and other licensed financial institutions, including specific chart-of-accounts mandates and regulatory return templates that must reconcile with general-purpose financial statements.
The eParticipation platform on My.gov.sa hosted the public consultation phase for the amendments that became Decision 46268, allowing practitioners and stakeholders to submit comments before the final text was adopted by Cabinet resolution and issued through SOCPA’s regulatory channels.
| Stage | Instrument | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Primary legislation | Certified Public Accountants Law (Royal Decree M/12) | Royal Court |
| Public consultation | eParticipation consultation on proposed amendments | My.gov.sa / eParticipation |
| Cabinet approval | Cabinet Resolution approving amendments to the rules governing accounting services | Council of Ministers |
| Implementing decision | Decision 46268, SOCPA accounting services amendments | SOCPA |
Decision 46268 makes five structural changes to the Saudi accounting services rules 2026: it widens the definition of regulated services, creates new licence categories, introduces mandatory firm-governance requirements, tightens partner and responsible-officer accountability, and establishes a graduated enforcement and sanctions framework. Each change carries distinct compliance obligations for firms and the companies that engage them.
The amended rules restructure accounting licensing Saudi Arabia by differentiating licence types according to the scope of services a firm may provide. Under the prior regime, a single professional licence broadly covered audit, accounting, consulting and zakat-related services. The 2026 changes introduce category-specific licences, distinguishing, for example, between audit-only authorisation and broader accounting-services authorisation, with each category carrying its own capital, staffing and insurance requirements. The likely practical effect will be that many firms currently operating under a general licence will need to evaluate which categories they qualify for and submit the corresponding re-registration documentation to SOCPA.
Decision 46268 expands the statutory definition of “accounting services” to capture activities that were previously unregulated or fell into grey areas. Bookkeeping, financial-statement preparation for third-party reliance, zakat and tax return preparation, and advisory services tied to financial reporting are now explicitly within scope. Firms providing these services without the appropriate licence category face administrative sanctions. Conversely, pure management consulting or IT advisory services that do not involve the preparation or review of financial information remain outside the regulated perimeter.
| Topic | Prior Rule | New Rule (Decision 46268) |
|---|---|---|
| Licence structure | Single general professional licence | Category-specific licences (audit, accounting services, combined) |
| Scope of regulated services | Primarily audit; other services loosely defined | Explicit inclusion of bookkeeping, financial-statement preparation, zakat/tax return preparation |
| Firm governance | General ethical obligations for partners | Mandatory compliance officer, documented internal policies, annual self-assessment filing |
| Partner liability | Collective firm liability; limited personal exposure | Graduated personal liability for responsible officers; named-partner sanctions |
| Insurance (PII) | Recommended but not uniformly enforced | Mandatory minimum PII coverage tied to licence category and firm revenue |
| Enforcement | Ad-hoc disciplinary proceedings | Graduated sanctions matrix: warnings, fines, suspension, licence revocation |
Existing accounting firms will, in most cases, need to re-register under the new licence categories introduced by Decision 46268. The SOCPA accounting services amendments do not automatically convert prior-regime licences into new-category authorisations. Firms must assess which licence category or categories match their current and intended service offerings, then submit the required re-registration documentation through SOCPA’s online portal within the transitional period specified in the decision.
Yes, industry observers expect that the vast majority of firms will need to act. If a firm currently provides both audit and non-audit accounting services, it will likely need to apply for the combined licence category, supplying updated evidence of capital adequacy, staffing qualifications, PII coverage and internal governance documentation. Firms providing only audit services may qualify for the audit-only category but must still confirm their eligibility and submit a re-registration filing. The critical point is that no firm should assume its existing licence automatically carries forward; a formal assessment and filing are required.
Foreign accounting firms operating in Saudi Arabia through a branch or joint venture must satisfy both SOCPA’s re-registration requirements and any applicable Ministry of Investment (MISA) foreign-licence conditions. The 2026 changes do not eliminate the MISA licensing layer; rather, they add SOCPA category-specific requirements on top. Early indications suggest that foreign firms should begin the SOCPA re-registration process in parallel with any MISA renewal to avoid timing conflicts.
| Licence Category | Key Requirements | Typical Processing Time |
|---|---|---|
| Audit-only licence | Qualified CPA partners; minimum PII cover; audit methodology documentation; annual self-assessment | Industry observers expect 30–60 business days |
| Accounting services licence | Qualified staff; governance manual; compliance officer; PII cover scaled to revenue | Industry observers expect 30–60 business days |
| Combined licence (audit + accounting services) | All audit-only and accounting-services requirements; additional independence safeguards for dual-service provision | Industry observers expect 45–90 business days |
| Foreign firm / branch licence | MISA foreign-investment licence; SOCPA category requirements; local partner or responsible officer resident in the Kingdom | Dependent on MISA and SOCPA coordination; may exceed 90 business days |
Decision 46268 introduces graduated personal liability for firm partners and named responsible officers, replacing the prior regime’s primarily firm-level accountability. Under the new accounting firm liability Saudi Arabia framework, individuals who hold statutory responsibility, managing partners, engagement partners, compliance officers and signatories of regulated reports, can face personal fines, professional suspension and, in cases involving fraud or wilful misconduct, criminal referral.
The sanctions matrix is explicitly graduated: minor procedural breaches attract written warnings or modest fines, while serious infractions, issuing a materially misleading audit opinion, operating without a valid licence, or failing to report a known irregularity, can result in licence revocation and a multi-year ban from the profession. The shift toward personal accountability is designed to ensure that compliance is treated as a partner-level priority, not merely a back-office function.
| Breach Type | Possible Sanctions | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Minor procedural non-compliance (late filings, incomplete records) | Written warning; modest financial penalty | Prompt self-correction; documented remediation plan filed with SOCPA |
| Operating outside licence scope | Financial penalty; licence condition imposed; potential suspension | Immediate cessation of out-of-scope services; voluntary disclosure to SOCPA |
| Failure to maintain PII or governance requirements | Licence suspension until rectified; personal fine on responsible officer | Continuous insurance monitoring; annual governance audit |
| Issuance of materially misleading report | Licence revocation; personal fine; professional ban; possible criminal referral | Robust quality-control framework; independent engagement quality review |
| Failure to report known irregularity | Personal fine on responsible officer; suspension; criminal referral if wilful | Whistleblowing policy; legal counsel on reporting obligations |
The Saudi Accounting Standards 2026 introduce targeted recognition, measurement and disclosure changes that affect financial-statement preparation across all entity types, with direct consequences for zakat computation and ZATCA compliance 2026. While Saudi Arabia has progressively aligned its reporting framework with IFRS, the 2026 update retains Kingdom-specific adjustments, particularly for zakat base calculations, certain industry carve-outs and prudential reporting for SAMA-supervised entities.
Auditors should expect SOCPA quality-review teams to focus on how firms document their assessment of the new standards’ impact on each engagement. Working papers must demonstrate that the audit team identified every applicable change, assessed its materiality, and verified that the entity’s accounting policies were updated before the reporting date. Early indications suggest that SOCPA will treat the first cycle under the new standards as a priority inspection area.
| Entity Type | Key 2026 Reporting Change | Immediate Action (CFO / Auditor) |
|---|---|---|
| Listed companies | Enhanced disclosure requirements and selected recognition changes aligning with IFRS updates; expanded related-party reporting | Update accounting policies; restate comparatives where required; notify external auditors of policy changes before interim reporting |
| SMEs | Simplified standard adjustments but new zakat-base disclosure requirements; clarified revenue guidance | Revise financial-statement templates; train internal accounting teams; update accounting manual |
| Banks and insurance companies | Industry-specific modifications including ECL recalibration, prudential carve-outs and SAMA-aligned disclosures | Coordinate with SAMA for pre-submission review; ensure audit committee briefing; adjust internal models |
| Government-related entities | Enhanced related-party and government-transaction disclosures; alignment with public-sector reporting framework | Map new disclosure requirements to existing reporting packs; brief sponsoring ministry |
Accounting Saudization 2026 requirements add a workforce-composition layer to the compliance obligations already created by Decision 46268. The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (HRSD) mandates minimum Saudi-national employment ratios for professional services firms, and the accounting sector faces sector-specific quotas that are being progressively tightened under Vision 2030 workforce localisation targets.
Accounting firms must track their Saudization ratio continuously, not just at the annual reporting date, because HRSD’s Nitaqat system classifies firms in real time and non-compliant entities face restrictions on visa issuance, government-contract eligibility and, in severe cases, operational penalties. The interaction between HRSD requirements and the new SOCPA licensing rules means that a firm seeking a new or renewed licence may need to demonstrate Saudization compliance as a precondition.
The Saudi accounting services rules 2026 do not operate in a regulatory vacuum. Changes to recognition and disclosure standards directly affect the inputs to zakat-base computations and corporate income tax returns filed with ZATCA. Firms and their clients must ensure that accounting-policy updates are reflected in tax and zakat workpapers before the next filing cycle.
For SAMA-supervised entities, banks, insurance companies, finance companies and payment service providers, the prudential reporting layer adds further complexity. SAMA’s Rulebook prescribes specific chart-of-accounts structures and regulatory return formats that must reconcile with general-purpose financial statements. Where the Saudi Accounting Standards 2026 change how a line item is measured or disclosed, the corresponding SAMA return may need to be adjusted, and pre-submission consultation with SAMA’s supervision directorate is advisable.
Compliance with Decision 46268 and the Saudi Accounting Standards 2026 is not a single event, it is a sequenced programme of actions that span from immediate triage through to full operational integration. The following roadmap assigns clear ownership and timeframes to each workstream.
| Timeframe | Action | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| By Day 30 | Appoint compliance lead; complete licence gap analysis; brief partners on liability changes; review PII coverage | Managing partner / Compliance officer |
| By Day 60 | Prepare re-registration documentation package; update engagement letter templates; initiate Saudization headcount review | Compliance officer / HR director |
| By Day 90 | Submit re-registration application to SOCPA; file updated PII certificate; complete first-pass accounting-policy impact assessment | Compliance officer / Technical partner |
| By Day 120 | Update financial-statement templates for Saudi Accounting Standards 2026; brief audit teams on working-paper changes | Technical partner / Audit managers |
| By Day 150 | Conduct internal training on new standards and Decision 46268 obligations; test revised zakat/tax workpapers | Training coordinator / Tax team |
| By Day 180 | Complete annual self-assessment filing; confirm Saudization compliance; archive documentation for SOCPA inspection readiness | Managing partner / Compliance officer |
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abdulrahman Alshubayshiri at Abdulrhman Alshubayshiri for professional consulting Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Effective compliance depends on documented processes, not just awareness. Firms should develop or adapt the following templates to meet Decision 46268’s governance and documentation requirements:
The Saudi accounting services rules 2026, anchored by Decision 46268 and the updated Saudi Accounting Standards, demand a structured, time-bound compliance response from every accounting firm and corporate finance team operating in the Kingdom. The stakes are clear: personal liability for partners, licence-level consequences for firms, and reporting accuracy for the companies they serve. Practitioners who act within the first 30 days, follow the sequenced roadmap and invest in proper documentation will be best positioned to navigate this regulatory transition without disruption. Those who delay risk enforcement action in the very first supervision cycle.
posted 11 minutes ago
posted 34 minutes ago
posted 55 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message