Saudi Arabia unveils updated investment law to facilitate foreign investors

The updated law promises enhanced protections for investors, including adherence to the rule of law, fair treatment, and property rights, while ensuring robust safeguards for intellectual property and facilitating smooth fund transfers. File
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Updated 12 August 2024
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Saudi Arabia unveils updated investment law to facilitate foreign investors

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has announced a significant overhaul of its investment law as part of its Vision 2030 reform strategy, aiming to strengthen its appeal to international investors. 

The revised legislation integrates existing investor rights and freedoms into a unified framework designed to improve transparency and ease of business operations. 

The updated law promises enhanced protections for investors, including adherence to the rule of law, fair treatment, and property rights, while ensuring robust safeguards for intellectual property and facilitating smooth fund transfers.  

It streamlines the registration process, replacing complex licensing requirements with a simpler system, and introduces new service centers to expedite government transactions and investment procedures. 

The update follows a series of pro-investment measures, including the introduction of the Civil Transactions Law, Private Sector Participation Law, Companies Law, Bankruptcy Law, and the creation of Special Economic Zones. 

Saudi Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih said: “The law reaffirms Saudi Arabia’s commitment to creating a welcoming and secure environment for investors, driving economic growth, and enhancing the Kingdom’s position as a premier global investment destination.” 

He added: “The policy direction outlined in Vision 2030 allows investors to invest with certainty and to grow with confidence at a time when many other markets are experiencing considerable volatility.” 

The law also aims to foster a competitive market environment by promoting fair competition and ensuring equal treatment for both domestic and international investors. 

It provides access to advanced dispute resolution mechanisms through the Saudi Arbitration Center and other affiliated entities.

Saudi Arabia’s investment-friendly policies have already shown significant results, with gross fixed capital formation surging 74 percent to nearly $300 billion in 2023, and FDI inflows increasing by 158 percent from $7.46 billion in 2017 to $19.3 billion in 2023. 

“The updated investment law builds on an extensive diversification agenda from an enhanced quality of life offering to investment specific measures such as the establishment of special economic zones,” said Al-Falih. 

The updated regulations, developed by the Ministry of Investment, will take effect in 2025 and are designed to align with Gulf Cooperation Council and World Trade Organization standards, as well as other international investment agreements. 

Commenting on the development, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan wrote on X that the revised law is a significant “update to the investment regulatory framework that contributes to private sector investment growth opportunities and a more competitive economy under the Saudi Vision 2030.”

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19k ‘Made in Saudi Arabia’ products now reaching 180 markets: industry minister

Updated 35 min 46 sec ago
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19k ‘Made in Saudi Arabia’ products now reaching 180 markets: industry minister

RIYADH: Products carrying the “Made in Saudi” logo have reached 19,000 and are shipped to 180 countries, according to the minister of industry and mineral resources.

In his opening speech at the third edition of the “Made in Saudi” exhibition, Bandar Alkhorayef indicated that the program now includes 3,700 registered national companies.

He noted that the first half of 2025 recorded the highest semi-annual figure for non-oil exports, valued at SR307 billion ($81.8 billion), after total exports in 2024 reached approximately SR515 billion.

The “Made in Saudi” program was launched in 2021 with the aim of strengthening the presence of local products in domestic and international markets and contributing to the growth of the national economy in line with Vision 2030 targets.

The minister highlighted the efforts of the Saudi Exports Development Authority in facilitating the access of national products to global markets.

This has been achieved through the signing of 108 export agreements, the registration of 433 importers on the Saudi Exports platform, and the licensing of nine export houses whose outbound trade has reached 21 countries with a value of SR390 million.

The “Made in Saudi” program is an initiative of the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program. It is managed by the Saudi Export Development Authority, also known as Saudi Exports, a governmental body tasked with increasing the Kingdom’s non-oil exports. 

Saudi Exports developed and is managing the program with the strategic intent of supporting the nation in achieving the objectives of its transformative Vision 2030.

The Authority, through the “Made in Saudi” program, has recently participated as a strategic partner in The Big 5 2025, a leading global exhibition for the construction industry held in Dubai in November. 

Saudi Exports led a delegation of more than 50 construction companies from the Kingdom to the event, which drew over 2,000 exhibitors from more than 165 countries. 

The program also participated as a strategic public sector partner in the National Development Fund’s Momentum 2025 development finance conference in Riyadh in December, reflecting its integral role in Saudi Arabia’s national economic transformation under Vision 2030.

The conference featured over 100 speakers focused on fostering partnerships to expand financing channels, reflecting the NDF’s central role as an enabler and a strategic driver of the national development finance system.