International investors driving Saudi venture capital growth as activity rises 38%

Saudi Arabia closed 2025 as the Middle East and North Africa’s largest venture capital market, accounting for 45 percent of total regional VC funding. Shutterstock
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Updated 20 January 2026
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International investors driving Saudi venture capital growth as activity rises 38%

RIYADH: International investors accounted for the majority of venture capital participation in Saudi Arabia in 2025, underscoring rising global interest in the Kingdom’s startup ecosystem.

Non-Saudi investors represented 58 percent of total investor participation during the year, while overall participation reached a new high with 194 investors active in the Kingdom’s startups, up 38 percent year on year, according to data from MAGNiTT.

Saudi Arabia closed 2025 as the Middle East and North Africa’s largest venture capital market, accounting for 45 percent of total regional VC funding. 

Venture capital investment in the Kingdom reached a record $1.7 billion across 257 transactions, marking all-time highs in both capital deployed and deal volume and widening the gap with other regional markets.

The findings were published in MAGNiTT’s FY 2025 Saudi Arabia Venture Capital Report, released in partnership with SVC, which described 2025 as a milestone year for the Kingdom’s venture ecosystem. 

Saudi Arabia also became the most active VC market in the region by deal count for the first time, overtaking the UAE, as transactions rose 45 percent year over year. Since 2018, annual deal volume has expanded nearly fivefold.

“What stood out in 2025 is not just Saudi Arabia’s record capital deployment, but the breadth of growth across stages, the depth of international participation, and early signs of a more complete venture cycle taking shape,” said Philip Bahoshy, CEO of MAGNiTT.

Growth during the year was distributed across funding stages, with non-mega deals rising 101 percent year over year to $1.15 billion, highlighting the strength of the early- and mid-stage pipeline.

Mega rounds also rebounded sharply, increasing 339 percent year on year, reflecting renewed late-stage investor confidence and improved capital availability for scaling companies.

Fintech led sector activity in 2025, raising $506 million across 55 deals. Enterprise software emerged as the second-most active sector, while gaming, transport and logistics, and travel and tourism attracted relatively large deal sizes, pointing to increasing sectoral diversification.

Exit activity also continued to strengthen, with 10 mergers and acquisitions recorded during the year, the highest annual total to date in Saudi Arabia. 

Six of those transactions were led by Saudi-based buyers, signaling rising domestic liquidity and a growing corporate appetite for technology-led growth.


Reforms target sustained growth in Saudi real estate sector, says Al-Hogail

Updated 50 min 19 sec ago
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Reforms target sustained growth in Saudi real estate sector, says Al-Hogail

RIYADH: The Real Estate Future Forum opened its doors for its first day at the Four Seasons Riyadh, with prominent global and local figures coming together to engage with one of the Kingdom’s most prospering sectors.

With new regulations, laws, and investments underway, 2026 is expected to be a year of momentous progress for the real estate sector in the Kingdom.

The forum opened with a video highlighting the sector’s progress in the Kingdom, during which an emphasis was placed on the forum’s ability to create global reach, representation, as well as agreements worth a cumulative $50 billion

With the Kingdom now opening up real estate ownership to foreigners, this year’s Real Estate Future Forum is placing a great deal of importance on this new milestone and its desired outcomes and impact on the market. 

Aside from this year’s forum’s unique discussions surrounding those developments, it will also be the first of its kind to launch the Real Estate Excellence Award and announce its finalist during the three-day summit.

Minister of Municipalities and Housing and Chairman of the Real Estate General Authority Majed Al-Hogail took to stage to address the diverse audience on the real estate market’s achievements thus far and its milestones to come.

Of those important milestones, he underscored “real estate balance” as a key pillar of the sector’s decisions to implement regulatory tools “with the aim of constant growth which can maintain the vitality of this sector.” He pointed to examples of those regulatory measures, such as the White Land Tax.

On 2025’s progress, the minister highlighted the jump in Saudi family home ownership, which went from 47 percent in 2016 to 66 percent in 2025, keeping the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 goal of 70 percent by the end of the decade on track.

He said the opening of the real estate market to foreigners is an indicator of the sector’s maturity under the leadership of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. He said his ministry plans to build over 300,000 housing units in Riyadh over the next three years.

Speaking to Arab News,  Al-Hogail elaborated on these achievements, stating: “Today, demand, especially local demand, has grown significantly. The mortgage market has reached record levels, exceeding SR900 billion ($240 billion) in mortgage financing, we are now seeing SRC (Saudi Real Estate Refinance Co.) injecting both local and foreign liquidity on a large scale, reaching more than SR54 billion”

Al-Hogail described Makkah and Madinah as unique and special points in the Kingdom’s real estate market as he spoke of the sector’s attractiveness.

 “Today, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has become, in international investment indices, one that takes a good share of the Middle East, and based on this, many real estate investment portfolios have begun to come in,” he said. 

Al-Ahsa Gov. Prince Saud bin Talal bin Badr Al-Saud told Arab News the Kingdom’s ability to balance both heritage sites with real estate is one of its strengths.

He said: “Actually the real estate market supports the whole infrastructure … the whole ecosystem goes back together in the foundation of the real estate; if we have the right infrastructure we can leverage more on tourism plus we can leverage more on the quality of life … we’re looking at 2030, this is the vision … to have the right infrastructure the time for more investors to come in real estate, entertainment, plus tourism and culture.”