Saudi Rental Rules Enhance Fairness, Secure Riyadh Investment Market

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
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Saudi Rental Rules Enhance Fairness, Secure Riyadh Investment Market

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (SPA)

Saudi Arabia has moved to cap residential and commercial rents in Riyadh for five years, a decision real estate experts say marks a turning point for the Kingdom’s housing market by enhancing transparency, easing financial strain on tenants, and reshaping investment patterns.

The cabinet approved the regulations on Thursday under a royal decree after the Royal Commission for Riyadh City drafted the measures. The rules, ordered by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, bar landlords from raising rents in the capital until 2030, require all contracts to be documented on the government’s “Ejar” digital platform, and impose fines for non-compliance.

Officials said the step aims to rebalance a market strained by soaring demand and rapid development. Riyadh, home to mega-projects and one of the world’s fastest-growing populations, has seen rental and sales prices climb sharply in recent years. Apartments in the capital have jumped 82% in price since 2019 and villas 50%, according to consultancy Knight Frank. Some families now spend half their income on rent, far above the global average of 30%.

“This is a historic step that restores balance to the rental market,” said property analyst Saqr al-Zahrani. “It protects both tenants and landlords, gives families financial clarity, and shields small businesses from being forced out by inflated leases.”

Al-Zahrani said the freeze would help reduce inflationary pressures and encourage developers to focus on meeting real demand instead of relying on speculative price increases. It could also boost off-plan property sales by providing households with predictable financial commitments over the medium term.

For Khaled Al-Mobid, chief executive of Menassat real estate company, the new rules show regulators recognize the mounting pressures on the rental market.

“Riyadh is experiencing heavy demand from population growth and major development projects,” he said. “A framework that organizes the relationship between landlords and tenants and sets fair limits on rent increases sends a clear message of stability and transparency.”

He added the system protects tenants from “unjustified increases” while ensuring landlords secure fair returns, easing what he described as mounting “pressure on purchasing power” in recent years. The rules also safeguard small and medium businesses from being forced out of prime commercial districts, while giving mall owners and corporate tenants clearer long-term visibility.

The freeze is expected to reshape investment flows. Experts say the measures will limit speculation, push developers to improve quality, and encourage longer-term investment strategies. “This creates a safer environment for both local and international investors,” Al-Mobid said.

Abdullah al-Mousa, another real estate marketer, said the policy goes beyond tenant protection. “It is a qualitative shift that redraws the contours of the real estate market and ushers in a new era of fairness and transparency,” he said.

Families struggling with successive rent hikes are the immediate winners, while businesses will benefit from lower cost pressures that allow them to expand.

Mousa argued the changes could raise the maturity of the market by curbing arbitrary practices. “The decision pushes landlords and developers to compete on quality and services rather than on yearly price increases. That will enrich supply, raise standards, and support more sustainable growth.”

Central to the reforms is the “Ejar” system, which will become the cornerstone of contract documentation and renewals. Experts say the digital platform will serve as a strategic database, helping policymakers read market trends and balance supply and demand more precisely, while reinforcing investor confidence in the Kingdom.

Analysts expect the stability created by the five-year freeze to ripple through the broader financial system. “With more predictable cash flows from rent, banks can redesign financing products better suited to a clearer market,” Mousa said. “This opens new horizons for growth in the sector.”

For many Saudis, the immediate benefit will be relief from spiraling housing costs. “Before the decision, some residents in Riyadh were spending up to 50% of their income on rent,” said al-Zahrani. “Halting annual increases will give households space to save and invest, while giving companies and commercial tenants a more stable environment to make long-term decisions.”

Officials and analysts alike framed the move as part of the Vision 2030 reform agenda, aimed at raising quality of life and ensuring sustainable urban growth.

Mousa said the decision will push landlords and developers to improve offerings and focus on long-term stability rather than short-term profits. “It establishes a fairer market where both investors and tenants can plan ahead,” he added.

The success of the reforms is closely linked to the “Ejar” platform. Digital contract registration and automated renewals are more than procedural details; they form the foundation for regulating landlord-tenant relationships. The system could also become a strategic database for policymakers, improving market transparency and building confidence for domestic and international investors.

Over the medium term, analysts expect the benefits to extend beyond rent stability, influencing financing and investment patterns. More predictable rental income will allow banks to tailor financial products to a clearer market, opening new growth opportunities.

“The freeze is not just regulatory – it’s a declaration of a new phase built on stability, transparency, and balance,” Mousa said. “It positions Riyadh as a more competitive, attractive, and livable city, economically and socially, in line with Vision 2030 objectives.”



Saudi Arabia's Humain Invests $3 Bn in Musk's xAI

The logo of the Saudi company Humain. Asharq Al-Awsat
The logo of the Saudi company Humain. Asharq Al-Awsat
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Saudi Arabia's Humain Invests $3 Bn in Musk's xAI

The logo of the Saudi company Humain. Asharq Al-Awsat
The logo of the Saudi company Humain. Asharq Al-Awsat

Saudi Arabia's artificial intelligence firm Humain said Wednesday it had invested $3 billion in US billionaire Elon Musk's xAI.

The investment made Humain a "significant minority shareholder,” the company said in a statement.

It added that its xAI holdings would be "converted into SpaceX shares" after the rocket company announced it was taking over the AI start-up earlier this month as Musk pushes to unify his many business interests.

CEO Tareq Amin said the latest investment “reflects Humain’s conviction in transformational AI and our ability to deploy meaningful capital behind exceptional opportunities where long-term vision, technical excellence, and execution converge, xAI’s trajectory, further strengthened by its acquisition by SpaceX, one of the largest technology mergers on record, represents the kind of high-impact platform we seek to support with significant capital.”

Musk's xAI had previously announced in November it was teaming up with Humain to build a 500-megawatt data center in Saudi Arabia.

The Saudi firm also inked a new deal with Nvidia.


Microsoft Arabia: Saudi Arabia Accelerates AI Adoption, Turns It Into Competitive Edge

A Microsoft logo is seen a day after Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion purchase of LinkedIn Corp, in Los Angeles, California, US, June 14, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
A Microsoft logo is seen a day after Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion purchase of LinkedIn Corp, in Los Angeles, California, US, June 14, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
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Microsoft Arabia: Saudi Arabia Accelerates AI Adoption, Turns It Into Competitive Edge

A Microsoft logo is seen a day after Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion purchase of LinkedIn Corp, in Los Angeles, California, US, June 14, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
A Microsoft logo is seen a day after Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion purchase of LinkedIn Corp, in Los Angeles, California, US, June 14, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Saudi Arabia has cemented its global standing in artificial intelligence after pouring significant investments into the sector in 2025, accelerating digital transformation and expanding real-world applications across government and the wider economy.

From education and manufacturing to energy and public services, AI is being deployed to advance the diversification goals of Saudi Vision 2030.

Turki Badhris, president of Microsoft Arabia, said the kingdom is experiencing unprecedented momentum in adopting AI as a strategic lever to raise competitiveness and improve performance across vital sectors.

Artificial intelligence has become central to the national transformation journey, he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Linking transformation

Saudi Arabia’s overhaul spans digital government modernization, the construction of megacities and large-scale projects, industrial development, and the creation of new economic sectors, Badhris said.

AI, he added, is the connective tissue binding these efforts together by enabling smarter infrastructure and more efficient public services.

In 2025, Microsoft expanded cooperation with government and regulatory bodies, as well as major companies, to accelerate the adoption of AI and cloud computing across education, industry, financial services, and government operations.

Turning point year

Badhris described 2025 as a watershed for AI in the kingdom, marked by a shift to broad, sector-wide deployment.

In digital government, training programs implemented with the Digital Government Authority aim to equip more than 100,000 public sector employees with cloud and AI skills, enhancing service delivery and user experience.

In education, AI literacy initiatives have been scaled up in partnership with the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, alongside the rollout of generative AI tools and digital learning technologies in schools.

Manufacturers have adopted AI-driven predictive maintenance and real-time operational data analysis, cutting downtime and improving efficiency and reliability.

In energy and sustainability, AI solutions are being used to optimize water and energy asset management, including predictive maintenance and intelligent process control, delivering operational savings while supporting emissions reduction and sustainability targets.

Sovereign cloud push

Badhris said the launch of Microsoft’s cloud region in Saudi Arabia, planned for 2026, will mark a qualitative leap by allowing government entities and regulated sectors to run critical workloads in a secure local environment, ensuring data sovereignty and enabling low-latency innovation.

He added that regulatory frameworks developed by relevant authorities have bolstered trust in AI adoption by balancing individual protection with incentives for innovation.

From tools to partners

Looking ahead, Badhris said 2026 will see AI evolve from support tools into “work partners” capable of collaboration and initiative in complex tasks.

The shift will be felt across government services, industry, megaprojects such as Qiddiya and The Red Sea Project, and healthcare.

Advanced AI systems, he said, will sharpen operational efficiency, lift productivity, and enhance service quality, while moving from reactive oversight to proactive governance frameworks that ensure safe and responsible use.

Saudi Arabia, Badhris said, is not simply adopting AI but helping shape its future, investing in sovereign infrastructure, building national capabilities, and embedding responsible-use principles to drive sustainable economic growth and entrench its position as a global technology power.


Lockheed Martin: Saudi Arabia Is Strategic Choice for Global Defense Hub

Lockheed Martin took part in the recent World Defense Show in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Lockheed Martin took part in the recent World Defense Show in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Lockheed Martin: Saudi Arabia Is Strategic Choice for Global Defense Hub

Lockheed Martin took part in the recent World Defense Show in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Lockheed Martin took part in the recent World Defense Show in Riyadh. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Saudi Arabia’s push to localize half of its defense spending under Vision 2030 is drawing deeper commitments from US defense giant Lockheed Martin, which says it will expand local manufacturing, transfer advanced technologies, and further integrate the Kingdom into its global aerospace and defense supply chains.

Building Saudi partnerships

Steve Sheehy, vice president for international business development at Lockheed Martin’s aeronautics division, said the company is stepping up efforts to partner with both established and emerging Saudi aerospace firms.

Lockheed Martin is looking to build partnerships across maintenance, repair and overhaul, as well as component manufacturing and repair, particularly in advanced avionics, Sheehy told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Speaking after the company’s participation in the World Defense Show in Riyadh, he said Lockheed Martin is also targeting emerging fields such as additive manufacturing, from plastics to metals, and advanced composite materials.

The goal, he said, is twofold: plug gaps in the company’s global supply chain while transferring know-how and strengthening local capabilities in a mutually beneficial model.

Sheehy described the Saudi aerospace sector as established and growing. He also noted that it has a solid base in maintenance and manufacturing, as well as a clear shift toward advanced technologies, creating room for deeper collaboration between national firms and global industry leaders.

Alignment with Vision 2030

Retired Brigadier General Joseph Rank, chief executive of Lockheed Martin in Saudi Arabia and Africa, said the company’s strategy in the Kingdom is rooted in a long-term partnership aligned with Vision 2030, especially the target of localizing 50 percent of defense spending.

Lockheed Martin, he said, is focused on transferring knowledge and advanced technologies, developing local industrial capabilities and building an integrated defense ecosystem that positions Saudi Arabia firmly within global supply chains.

Rank said the company is working closely with government entities and national companies to strengthen local manufacturing, empower Saudi talent and establish a sustainable industrial base that supports innovation and creates high-quality jobs.

Lockheed Martin is advancing manufacturing and repair work on defense equipment, including components of the THAAD air defense system, missile launch platforms, and interceptor missile canisters, in cooperation with Saudi partners, Rank said.

The company has also opened a maintenance center in Riyadh for the Sniper Advanced Targeting Pod system, the first of its kind in the Middle East, to enhance maintenance and technical support capabilities.

Beyond hardware, Lockheed Martin is investing in transferring and localizing advanced technologies in air defense, command and control, and digital manufacturing. It is also supporting science, technology, engineering and mathematics programs and hands-on training in cooperation with national universities.

Broad local network

Rank said the company relies on a wide network of partners in the Kingdom. At the forefront are the General Authority for Military Industries, the main government partner in localization agreements, and Saudi Arabian Military Industries, a key manufacturing and technology transfer partner.

Other collaborators include the Advanced Electronics Company for advanced systems maintenance, the Middle East Propulsion Company and AIC Steel for producing THAAD components and platforms, and the National Company for Mechanical Systems for advanced manufacturing technologies.

Academic partnerships extend to King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, King Saud University, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, and Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, supporting research and developing national talent.

Localizing aerospace manufacturing

Rank said localizing aerospace manufacturing is a strategic priority. Lockheed Martin has launched projects to produce interceptor missile launch platforms and canisters inside the Kingdom and awarded contracts for key components to Saudi companies, qualifying them to join its global supply network beyond the US.

The company is evaluating and qualifying hundreds of Saudi firms to produce defense equipment to international standards, focusing on technology transfer and building local expertise as a step toward manufacturing more integrated systems in the future.

Company officials said the approach goes beyond supplying systems. It centers on technology transfer, digital manufacturing, and command-and-control systems, laying the groundwork for the production of integrated systems in the Kingdom and strengthening Saudi Arabia’s position as a regional hub for aerospace and defense.