January 2026 marks a turning point for Saudi Arabia’s real estate sector. The Kingdom’s Real Estate General Authority confirmed on Tuesday that its Saudi Properties portal is now accepting applications from foreign nationals seeking to purchase property—a significant opening for a market that has historically restricted overseas ownership.
The digital platform went live following the Foreign Real Estate Ownership Law entering force last month.
REGA, the regulator overseeing the Kingdom’s property sector, has established a two-tier framework that reflects Saudi Arabia’s unique position. Across most of the country, non-Saudi individuals and companies can now acquire real estate through fully digital processes. But Makkah and Madinah operate under different rules—ownership in the two holy cities remains restricted to Saudi companies and Muslim individuals, regardless of whether they reside in the Kingdom or abroad.
The approach mirrors strategies deployed across the Gulf, where the United Arab Emirates has operated freehold zones for international buyers since the early 2000s. Qatar introduced similar provisions ahead of the 2022 World Cup. Saudi Arabia’s entry into this space arrives as the Kingdom pursues an ambitious economic transformation, with mega-projects like NEOM and the Red Sea development requiring substantial foreign investment.
Three distinct pathways exist for prospective buyers. Non-Saudi residents already living in the Kingdom can apply directly through the portal using their residency number, with automated eligibility checks built into the system. Those living abroad must first obtain a digital identity card from Saudi diplomatic missions before completing the online application. Companies and entities without an existing Saudi presence face an additional step—registration through the Invest Saudi platform operated by the Ministry of Investment, followed by obtaining a national unified number.
The portal handles the entire ownership journey electronically. Users can browse approved real estate opportunities, verify whether they meet eligibility requirements, submit applications, and track progress—all without physical paperwork or in-person visits. REGA has positioned the platform as the sole official channel for foreign property applications, directing interested parties to saudiproperties.rega.gov.sa.
Timing matters here. The Kingdom’s real estate market is experiencing rapid expansion driven by urban growth initiatives and the development of business, tourism, hospitality, and entertainment sectors. Vision 2030, the government’s economic diversification blueprint, has placed property development at the centre of efforts to reduce dependence on oil revenues and attract international talent.
The regulatory framework links available properties to what REGA describes as “structured pathways” and official data sources—an attempt to bring transparency to a market where information has often been fragmented. The authority argues this approach will enhance market credibility and support higher-quality urban development.
Whether the initiative achieves its goals depends partly on factors the announcement doesn’t address. Pricing dynamics, mortgage availability for foreign buyers, and the volume of approved properties remain unclear. So does the question of which nationalities will dominate applications—a metric that will reveal whether the Kingdom succeeds in diversifying its investor base beyond traditional Gulf Cooperation Council partners.
For regional competitors, Saudi Arabia’s move intensifies pressure. The UAE has built entire economic zones around foreign property ownership, with Dubai’s real estate sector becoming a primary driver of emirate GDP. Qatar has similarly leveraged property access to attract expatriate professionals. Saudi Arabia enters this competition with scale advantages—the Kingdom’s landmass dwarfs its Gulf neighbours—but faces the challenge of building credibility in a market where established alternatives already exist.
The Makkah and Madinah restrictions underscore the balancing act Saudi authorities face. Opening the property market serves economic objectives, but the Kingdom’s role as custodian of Islam’s holiest sites imposes constraints that don’t apply elsewhere in the Gulf. Muslim buyers gain access to these cities; non-Muslim foreigners do not.
REGA’s emphasis on digital processes reflects a broader Saudi push toward technological governance. The Kingdom has invested heavily in e-government infrastructure, positioning itself as a regional leader in digital public services. Whether foreign buyers—particularly those unfamiliar with Saudi bureaucratic systems—find the portal genuinely user-friendly will determine whether the initiative succeeds or becomes mired in implementation challenges.
The full impact won’t be measurable until application volumes emerge over the coming months, revealing whether international appetite for Saudi property matches the government’s expectations.
