Saudi startups top MENA region in raising funds in H1, collects $446m 

E-commerce emerged as the topmost sector for funding, closing 11 deals for $368 million (Shutterstock)
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Updated 18 July 2023
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Saudi startups top MENA region in raising funds in H1, collects $446m 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s focus on encouraging entrepreneurship has paid off as startups in the Kingdom raised $446 million in the first half of 2023, the highest in the Middle East and North Africa region. 

According to MAGNiTT’s “H1 2023 Saudi Arabia Venture Capital Report”, Saudi startups accounted for 42 percent of the total capital deployed in the MENA region. 

According to the Dubai-based data analytics platform, the Kingdom ranked second in deal counts, facilitating 54 transactions against the UAE’s 60. 

E-commerce was the most funded sector in the Kingdom thanks to online flower marketplace Floward and grocery shopping platform Nana raising $156 million and $133 million in their series C rounds, respectively. Both deals accounted for 65 percent of the country’s total funding. 

Moreover, Nana, Floward and Saudi e-commerce Sary also featured among the top five funding rounds in the MENA region. 

E-commerce also emerged as the topmost sector for funding, closing 11 deals for $368 million. 

The report further indicated that “pre-seed” to “pre-series A” deals captured the lion’s share with 86 percent of the Kingdom’s total amassed funds. 

The e-commerce sector witnessed a 245 percent growth year on year in terms of capital deployed while other industries struggled. 

Financial technologies, the sector of choice in Saudi Arabia in the first half of last year, experienced a massive decline of 90 percent in funding this year to $10 million. 

“Capital deployed in deals of less than $100 million posted a 65 percent year on year retreat in H1 2023 and stood at $157 million, the lowest since H2 2020,” the report stated. 

Moreover, the total funding deployed in the Kingdom decreased by 27 percent this year compared to the same period last year. 

Investors backing Saudi-based startups also declined year on year, with only 54 investors participating in deals in the first half of 2023, a drop of 41 percent. 

The study further said that the total funding in the MENA region stood at $1.9 billion, a drop of 64 percent compared to the first half of 2022. The deal count in the region fell 40 percent to 530 during the corresponding period. 

“Amid a liquidity crunch and a slowdown in economic growth globally, the pace at which venture capitalists deployed funding across the globe continued to decline,” the report stated.


Saudi Arabia opens real estate market to foreign buyers

Updated 22 January 2026
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Saudi Arabia opens real estate market to foreign buyers

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Real Estate General Authority has announced that the regulatory system governing property ownership by foreigners officially came into effect on Jan. 22, with all provisions now enforceable under the national real estate framework.

The authority said applications for property ownership by non-Saudis can be submitted through the official digital platform, Saudi Arabia Real Estate. The system applies to residents and non-residents, as well as foreign companies and entities, in accordance with established legal procedures.

According to the authority, the application process varies by ownership category. Foreign residents in Saudi Arabia may apply directly through the portal using their residence permit, with legal requirements verified automatically and the process completed electronically.

Non-residents are required to initiate their applications through Saudi embassies and consulates abroad to obtain a digital identification number, which enables them to finalize the process via the platform.

Foreign companies and entities without a presence in the Kingdom must first register with the Ministry of Investment through the “Invest Saudi” platform and obtain a unified registration number (700) before completing ownership procedures electronically.

The authority confirmed that the system allows foreign individuals, companies, and entities to own property across Saudi Arabia, with ownership permitted in major cities including Riyadh and Jeddah.

However, property ownership in Makkah and Madinah remains restricted to Saudi companies and Muslim individuals, in line with a regulatory framework based on the Geographic Zones document, which is scheduled to be announced in the first quarter of 2026.

The authority noted that the Saudi Arabia Real Estate portal serves as the official digital gateway for all ownership procedures, ensuring regulatory compliance and direct integration with the national real estate registry to enhance transparency and protect property rights.

It added that the new system is expected to improve the quality of real estate projects by attracting international developers and specialized firms, stimulating growth in the residential, commercial, industrial, and tourism sectors, and creating employment opportunities for Saudi citizens.

The initiative is also expected to strengthen the real estate sector’s sustainable contribution to the Kingdom’s non-oil gross domestic product.