Saudi Arabia Company Formation Costs 2026 MISA Registration, CR Fees, Saudization & Annual Maintenance Explained

One of the first questions every entrepreneur asks before expanding to Saudi Arabia is simple: how much is this actually going to cost? The answer, unfortunately, is rarely simple because Saudi Arabia’s company formation and maintenance costs span multiple government authorities, ongoing Saudization obligations, employee costs, and office requirements.

This guide gives you a complete, transparent breakdown of every cost you’ll face when setting up and running a company in Saudi Arabia in 2026 from first-year setup to annual running costs plus a comparison with the UAE to help you benchmark.

Initial Setup Costs What You Pay to Get Incorporated

Setting up a foreign-owned company in Saudi Arabia involves the following one-time or first-year government fees, professional fees, and operational setup costs:

Cost ItemApproximate Cost (SAR)Approximate Cost (INR / USD)Notes
MISA Investment LicenceFree (suspended)NilFees waived under Vision 2030 — verify on invest.gov.sa
Commercial Registration (CR)SAR 1,200–2,000~INR 27,000–45,000 / $320–$533Varies by company type and capital
Notarisation & Legalisation of AoASAR 500–2,000~INR 11,000–45,000Notary fees in Saudi Arabia
Chamber of Commerce membershipSAR 2,000–5,000~INR 45,000–112,000Required for some activities
Municipality licenceSAR 500–3,000~INR 11,000–67,000Required for physical business premises
Company seal & stationerySAR 200–500~INR 4,500–11,000Minor cost
First-year Government Fees (Total)SAR 4,400–12,500~INR 99,000–281,000Depends on activity and structure

MISA Registration Fees Currently Suspended

The MISA Investment Licence fee previously SAR 2,000–10,000 depending on the investment type has been suspended (waived to zero) as part of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 drive to attract foreign direct investment.

Key Points

  • Standard MISA licence: currently free
  • Entrepreneur Licence (for smaller businesses): SAR 2,000 this is a separate, streamlined licence category
  • Regional Headquarters (RHQ) Licence: separate fees and requirements apply
  • Fee suspension has been periodically extended always verify current status at invest.gov.sa

Important: While the MISA licence itself may be free, the broader costs of setup (CR, notarisation, office rental, professional fees) remain significant. Don’t mistake free government fees for a “low cost” setup.

Commercial Registration (CR) Fees

The Commercial Registration is issued by the Ministry of Commerce and is your company’s primary operating licence in Saudi Arabia. CR fees are payable at setup and annually on renewal.

Company TypeInitial CR FeeAnnual Renewal Fee
LLC / WLL (Limited Liability Company)SAR 1,200SAR 1,200
Joint Stock Company (JSC)SAR 2,000SAR 2,000
Branch of Foreign CompanySAR 1,200SAR 1,200
Professional CompanySAR 1,200SAR 1,200

Additional activities on the CR may incur supplementary fees of SAR 100–200 per activity.

Professional & Service Provider Fees

These are the costs charged by consultants, PROs, lawyers, accountants, and company formation services. They vary significantly based on the provider and complexity:

ServiceTypical Cost RangeNotes
Company formation agent / consultantSAR 5,000–25,000 (one-time)End-to-end MISA + CR setup service
Legal fees (AoA drafting, contracts)SAR 5,000–20,000 (one-time)Higher for complex structures or JV arrangements
Annual audit (SOCPA-licensed auditor)SAR 8,000–30,000/yearMandatory for CIT/Zakat return filing
Tax return preparation (CIT/Zakat)SAR 5,000–15,000/yearOften bundled with audit
VAT compliance (quarterly returns)SAR 3,000–8,000/yearDepends on volume of transactions
PRO / Government Relations servicesSAR 15,000–30,000/yearVisa processing, Iqama renewals, government liaison
Translation & notarisation servicesSAR 2,000–8,000One-time at setup; also needed for each Iqama cycle

Office Rental Costs Riyadh vs Jeddah vs Dammam

Saudi Arabia requires a physical office address for your CR and MISA licence. The office rental market varies significantly by city and grade

Riyadh (Capital Most Expensive)

  • Grade A offices (King Abdullah Financial District / KAFD): SAR 1,200–2,000+ per sqm per year
  • Grade B offices (Olaya, Al Malqa): SAR 600–1,200 per sqm per year
  • Serviced offices / Business centres: SAR 3,000–8,000 per month for a single private office
  • Co-working desks: SAR 800–2,000 per month per desk

Jeddah (Commercial Hub Slightly More Affordable)

  • Grade A offices: SAR 800–1,500 per sqm per year
  • Grade B offices: SAR 400–900 per sqm per year
  • Serviced offices: SAR 2,500–6,000 per month

Dammam / Eastern Province (Industrial & Energy Hub)

  • Grade A offices: SAR 700–1,200 per sqm per year
  • Grade B offices: SAR 350–700 per sqm per year
  • Warehousing / Industrial: SAR 100–300 per sqm per year

Minimum Practical Office Setup Cost (Annual)

  • A minimal private office (30–50 sqm) in a serviced business centre in Riyadh: SAR 40,000–80,000/year
  • This is the most common starting point for foreign companies entering Saudi Arabia

Note: With Saudi Arabia’s new Regional Headquarters (RHQ) programme, multinationals establishing a genuine Saudi HQ in Riyadh are eligible for certain government incentives, which can partially offset real estate costs.

Saudization Compliance Costs

Saudization (Nitaqat) is often the most significant hidden cost for foreign companies in Saudi Arabia. It requires employing Saudi nationals at a quota percentage, which tends to be more expensive than employing equivalent expatriates for the same roles.

Why Saudi Employees Cost More

  • GOSI contributions: 12% employer contribution on top of salary for Saudi employees (vs 2% for expatriates)
  • End-of-Service Benefits (EOSB): Saudi employees are entitled to 1 month’s salary per year of service as EOSB a significant accruing liability
  • Salary expectations: Saudi nationals in professional roles typically command market salaries comparable to or above expatriate rates in many sectors
  • Labour productivity in early stages: Building a productive Saudi workforce takes time and investment in training

Annual Saudization Cost Estimates

For a company with 10 employees total meeting a 30% Saudization quota (3 Saudi employees):

  • 3 Saudi employees at SAR 10,000/month salary = SAR 360,000/year total salaries
  • GOSI employer contribution (12%) = SAR 43,200/year
  • EOSB accrual (1 month/year) = SAR 30,000/year
  • Total additional cost vs equivalent expatriates: approximately SAR 50,000–80,000/year

Saudization Levy (Expat Fee)

Companies with more expatriate employees than Saudi employees pay a monthly levy per expatriate worker above a certain ratio. This is called the Nitaqat Levy or Expat Fee:

  • SAR 400/month per expatriate if Saudi employees < expatriate employees
  • SAR 300/month per expatriate if at the Saudization benchmark
  • Companies in the Green/Platinum band pay reduced or no levy

For a company with 7 expatriates and 3 Saudis (ratio < 1:1): 7 × SAR 400 × 12 = SAR 33,600/year in Nitaqat levies.

GOSI & Payroll Costs

Cost ItemSaudi EmployeesExpatriate Employees
GOSI employer contribution12% of salary2% of salary
Iqama (residency permit) — first yearN/ASAR 650/year (professional); higher for others
Work permit feeN/ASAR 200–800 depending on category and Nitaqat band
Medical insurance (mandatory)SAR 3,000–8,000/year per employeeSAR 2,500–6,000/year per employee
Annual air ticket allowance (common in packages)N/ASAR 2,000–5,000/year

Annual Maintenance Costs Summary

Here is a realistic annual operating cost estimate for a small foreign-owned Saudi company in Riyadh with 5–10 employees:

Cost CategoryAnnual Cost (SAR)Annual Cost (Approx. INR)
CR renewal1,200–2,00027,000–45,000
MISA annual update0 (currently free)Nil
Office rent (serviced, 30–50 sqm, Riyadh)40,000–80,0009–18 lakh
Audit & tax compliance15,000–40,0003.4–9 lakh
VAT compliance3,000–8,00067,000–1.8 lakh
PRO / Government relations15,000–30,0003.4–6.7 lakh
GOSI (for 3 Saudi + 7 expat employees)45,000–80,00010–18 lakh
Nitaqat levy (expat fee, if applicable)20,000–40,0004.5–9 lakh
Iqama renewals (for expat staff)5,000–12,0001.1–2.7 lakh
Medical insurance25,000–60,0005.6–13.5 lakh
Total Annual Maintenance (10-person company)SAR 170,000–352,000INR 38–79 lakh

This estimate excludes employee salaries (which are the largest cost), CIT liability (20% of profit), and capital expenditure.

Saudi Arabia vs UAE Cost Comparison

The most common comparison Indian entrepreneurs make is between Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Here is an honest cost comparison:

Cost FactorSaudi ArabiaUAE (Dubai/Abu Dhabi Mainland)UAE (Free Zone)
Government licence feesSAR 1,200–2,000 (CR); MISA freeAED 10,000–25,000+AED 15,000–30,000+
Corporate tax20% CIT9% UAE CT0% (in free zone, qualifying income)
Localisation requirementSaudization (Nitaqat) significant costEmiratisation (similar, lower % for most sectors)None in free zones
Office rental (prime)SAR 800–2,000/sqm/yearAED 1,200–3,000/sqm/yearAED 800–2,000/sqm/year
Visa costsSAR 650+/expat/year (Iqama)AED 2,000–5,000/expat/yearAED 2,500–4,000/expat/year
VAT rate15%5%5% (outside free zone supplies)
Market size (GDP)$1.1 trillion (much larger)$500 billionAccess via UAE mainland only

The Bottom Line on Saudi vs UAE Costs

  • Saudi Arabia has lower government licence fees than the UAE, especially compared to free zones
  • Saudi Arabia has a higher corporate tax rate (20% vs UAE’s 9%) though this is offset by the DTAA advantage for Indian entrepreneurs
  • Saudi Arabia’s Saudization costs are more onerous than UAE’s Emiratisation for most sectors
  • Saudi Arabia’s market size is more than double the UAE’s if your business requires access to the Saudi market directly, the additional compliance costs are justified
  • VAT at 15% (Saudi) vs 5% (UAE) affects B2C businesses more than B2B (VAT is recoverable by registered businesses)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum capital required to set up a Saudi company?

For a foreign-owned LLC, there is technically no statutory minimum capital requirement since 2021. However, banks and practical business needs typically suggest SAR 500,000+ as a meaningful starting capital. Joint stock companies require SAR 500,000 minimum.

Are there any free zones in Saudi Arabia with lower costs?

Saudi Arabia has Special Economic Zones (SEZs) including NEOM, King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC), Ras Al-Khair, and others offering incentives such as reduced customs duties, streamlined regulations, and in some cases corporate tax exemptions for qualifying activities. SEZ costs and benefits vary consult each zone’s authority directly.

How do the costs compare between setting up a branch vs a subsidiary in Saudi Arabia?

A branch of a foreign company generally has similar government fees to an LLC but avoids the need to establish a separate corporate entity. However, branches carry unlimited liability to the parent, whereas an LLC provides liability protection. For most Indian businesses, an LLC/WLL is preferable.

Can I reduce costs by using a shared office or business centre address?

Yes — serviced offices and business centres are widely accepted for CR and MISA licence purposes for most business activities. This significantly reduces the office rental commitment, especially in the early stages. Certain regulated activities (banking, insurance, healthcare) may require dedicated premises.

Conclusion

Setting up in Saudi Arabia is not cheap but for businesses targeting the Saudi market directly, the costs are entirely justifiable. The key is understanding the full cost picture before you commit, so you can budget accurately and price your Saudi operations correctly.

The biggest cost surprises for new entrants are typically Saudization (Nitaqat) compliance, the 20% CIT on profits, and the ongoing PRO/government relations requirements. Factor all of these into your Saudi business model from day one.

Want a personalised cost estimate for your specific Saudi company? Use our Saudi Total Cost Estimator or speak to our team for a tailored projection.

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