The Real Cost of Setting Up a Company in Saudi Arabia: A 2026 Breakdown
"How much does it actually cost to set up in Saudi Arabia?"
It's one of the first questions every founder asks. The honest answer: the government fees alone are modest. The real costs are in compliance, staffing, and the obligations that kick in once you're operational.
This article gives you the complete picture — from first government fee to realistic Year 1 operating cost — sourced from official Saudi regulations, not consultant estimates.
Category 1: Government Registration Fees
These are the direct fees paid to Saudi government authorities to establish your legal presence.
| Fee | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MISA Investment License | SAR 2,000/year | Annual renewal required |
| Investor Registry Subscription (Year 1) | SAR 10,000 | One-time first-year amount |
| Investor Registry Subscription (Year 2+) | SAR 60,000/year | Annual — significant ongoing cost |
| Commercial Register (MOCI) | Varies by activity | Typically SAR 1,200–2,500 |
| Municipal business license | Varies by municipality | Typically SAR 500–2,000 |
| VAT registration with ZATCA | Free | No fee, but requires documentation |
First-year government registration costs: approximately SAR 13,000–15,000
The Investor Registry Subscription jump to SAR 60,000/year from Year 2 onward is a meaningful ongoing cost that many founders miss when building their financial model.
The Investor Registry Subscription jumps to SAR 60,000/year from Year 2. This is a recurring annual cost — not a one-time fee — and it must be in your financial model from day one.
Category 2: Corporate Formation Costs (Professional Fees)
Forming an LLC requires legal work: Articles of Incorporation, board resolutions, power of attorney documents, translations, notarization, and apostille certification for foreign documents.
| Item | Estimated cost |
|---|---|
| Saudi law firm (company formation) | SAR 5,000–20,000 |
| Document notarization (home country) | USD 200–500 |
| Apostille/legalization at Saudi embassy | USD 150–300 |
| Certified Arabic translation of company documents | SAR 500–2,000 |
| Local PRO (Public Relations Officer) services | SAR 500–2,000/month |
One-time formation professional fees: approximately SAR 7,000–25,000
Note: Using a formation company (e.g., Expandway, Motaded) bundles several of these services and can reduce total formation costs, though it adds a service fee layer.
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The Companies Law does not specify a statutory minimum capital for LLCs. Partners set the capital in the Articles of Incorporation.
However, in practice:
- MISA and some sector regulators expect capital commensurate with the activity
- Banking relationships may require a minimum deposit (SAR 100,000+ in some cases)
- Some sector-specific licenses (fintech, healthcare, etc.) impose their own minimum capital requirements
For a standard technology or consulting company, founders commonly set initial capital at SAR 100,000–500,000 — not because the law requires it, but because it signals seriousness to regulators and local partners.
Capital must be acknowledged as fully paid in the Articles of Incorporation. Ensure the capital is actually transferred to the Saudi entity's bank account when the account is opened.
Category 4: Office and Physical Presence
A registered address in Saudi Arabia is required to obtain your Commercial Register. Your options:
| Option | Approximate cost |
|---|---|
| Virtual office / registered address service | SAR 500–2,000/month |
| Co-working membership (Riyadh/Jeddah) | SAR 1,500–4,000/month |
| Serviced office | SAR 4,000–15,000/month |
| Dedicated leased office space | SAR 15,000–80,000/month (varies widely by area) |
Most early-stage foreign companies start with a virtual office or co-working space and upgrade as headcount grows.
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This is where the real budget lives. Saudi Arabia's labor compliance obligations mean that hiring costs significantly more than the face salary.
For a Saudi national employee (example: SAR 15,000/month salary)
| Cost item | Monthly amount |
|---|---|
| Base salary | SAR 15,000 |
| GOSI employer contribution (occupational hazards: 2%) | SAR 300 |
| GOSI employer contribution (annuities: ~9% in year 1) | SAR 1,350 |
| GOSI employer contribution (unemployment: ~0.75%) | SAR 112.50 |
| EOSB accrual (~1/12 of monthly salary per month) | SAR 1,250 |
| Total employer cost per month | ~SAR 18,012 |
A SAR 15,000 base salary costs you approximately SAR 18,000/month in total employer cost — before any benefits, housing allowances, or transportation allowances.
A SAR 15,000 base salary costs approximately SAR 18,000/month in total employer cost — before benefits, housing, or transport allowances. Budget this from day one.
For a non-Saudi employee (example: SAR 20,000/month salary)
| Cost item | Monthly amount |
|---|---|
| Base salary | SAR 20,000 |
| GOSI employer contribution (occupational hazards only: 2%) | SAR 400 |
| EOSB accrual | SAR 1,667 |
| Iqama (work permit) cost — amortized monthly | SAR 200–500 |
| Total employer cost per month | ~SAR 22,267 |
The Iqama (work permit) cost for expat employees is borne by the employer. Exact fees vary by job category and are set by MHRSD, but plan for SAR 2,400–6,000 per expatriate employee per year.
Category 6: Tax Obligations
VAT
If your revenue exceeds SAR 375,000 annually, you collect and remit VAT at 15%. This is pass-through for most businesses, but non-compliance with FATOORA e-invoicing carries penalties.
Corporate Income Tax (CIT)
For a 100% foreign-owned LLC: 20% of net taxable income. This is a Year 1+ cost — you only pay once profitable.
GOSI contributions
As modeled above — a significant cost from day one of hiring.
Withholding Tax (WHT) on payments to non-residents
If your Saudi entity makes payments to non-resident entities (including your parent company), WHT may apply. Management fees, royalties, and technical services are common triggers.
Daleel · Saudi Market Entry AI
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Most founders budget for government fees and salary. These are the items that aren't in those estimates:
1. SAR 60,000/year Investor Registry Subscription from Year 2 This is a real and recurring annual cost. Not a one-time fee.
2. EOSB liability accumulates every month For a 10-person team, you accrue roughly SAR 10,000–20,000/month in EOSB liability. It's not paid monthly, but it's owed when employment ends.
3. Nitaqat compliance costs If your sector requires 20% Saudi nationals and you have 10 employees, you need 2 Saudi employees. Saudi nationals typically command a premium. This is a structural labor cost.
4. GOSI at full rate (Year 4+) Once the GOSI annuities phase-in reaches 11% employer contribution, your Saudi employee GOSI cost increases meaningfully.
5. VAT cash flow impact You collect VAT from clients and pay it to suppliers. The net is manageable — but you need working capital to bridge the gap between collecting and remitting.
Year 1 Cost Model: Illustrative Scenario
Scenario: Foreign tech company, 100% foreign-owned LLC, 5 employees (2 Saudi, 3 non-Saudi), Riyadh, technology sector
| Item | Year 1 cost (SAR) |
|---|---|
| Government registration fees | 15,000 |
| Company formation (legal/professional) | 15,000 |
| Virtual office / co-working | 30,000 |
| Saudi employees (2 × SAR 12,000 base × 12 months + GOSI) | 310,000 |
| Non-Saudi employees (3 × SAR 18,000 base × 12 months + GOSI + Iqama) | 675,000 |
| EOSB accrual (5 employees) | 50,000 |
| Accounting/audit (first year) | 20,000 |
| Total Year 1 operating cost (ex-CIT, ex-capital) | ~SAR 1,115,000 |
This is a simplified model. Your actual costs depend on your sector, headcount mix, salary levels, and office requirements. But the order of magnitude is right: a lean 5-person team in Saudi Arabia costs approximately SAR 1-1.5 million in Year 1 before revenue.
A lean 5-person team in Saudi Arabia costs approximately SAR 1–1.5 million in Year 1 before revenue. This is not the exception — it is the rule. Build it into your funding model.
Daleel · Saudi Market Entry AI
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- FATOORA compliance setup (e-invoicing system integration): SAR 5,000–30,000 depending on complexity
- Sector-specific licenses (SAMA, SFDA, GAMR, etc.): Highly variable
- Banking costs: Opening a Saudi corporate bank account takes 4–12 weeks. Minimum deposit requirements vary by bank (typically SAR 50,000–200,000)
- Customs duties: Relevant for import/export businesses
- Real Estate Transaction Tax: 5% of property value if you buy commercial space
Get a Personalized Cost Estimate
The numbers above are illustrative. Your actual Year 1 costs depend on your sector, activity, headcount mix, and company structure.
Daleel generates a structured Year 1 cost estimate — government fees, GOSI obligations, Nitaqat requirements, and tax obligations — based on your specific inputs. Free tier. 10 minutes.
Sources: MISA Investor Guide (July 2025); MISA Investment Law Implementing Regulations (2025); GOSI Social Insurance Law (Royal Decree M/273, 2024); Saudi Labor Law; ZATCA official mandate.
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