The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has increased its 2025 growth forecast for Saudi Arabia to 4%, its second upward revision in three months, citing notable improvements in the non‑oil manufacturing sector and the Kingdom’s continued participation in gradual OPEC+ production cuts.
In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF lifted its forecast for Saudi Arabia's GDP growth in 2025 to 4%, from 3% it projected in April. Growth in 2026 was revised slightly higher to 4% as well.
IMF mission chief for Saudi Arabia Amine Mati had previously said the Kingdom’s economic outlook has improved thanks to resilience in facing global challenges and improved oil revenues and non-oil activities.
The Saudi Finance Ministry last month forecasted real GDP growth of 4.4% in 2025, driven by the growth of non-oil activities, and 4.6% in 2026, also supported by the same factor.
In September, the IMF’s 2025 Article IV Consultation said the Saudi economy has demonstrated strong resilience to shocks, with non-oil economic activities expanding, inflation contained, and unemployment reaching record-low levels.
Saudi Arabia's gross domestic product (GDP) grew 3.9% in the second quarter of 2025 driven by the non-oil sectors, according to government data estimates.
Non-oil activity grew by 4.6% compared to the same quarter last year, according to the Saudi General Authority for Statistics. Sectors like electricity, gas and water showed the highest growth followed by finance, insurance and business activities.
The economy grew across all sectors with oil up 3.8% and government activities growing 0.6%, the Authority said.
Middle East and North Africa
Also on Tuesday, the IMF said in its Outlook report that growth in the Middle East and Central Asia is expected to accelerate as the effects of oil production and shipping disruptions fade and the impact of ongoing conflicts diminishes.
The new growth forecast for the economies of the Middle East and North Africa in 2025 increased by 0.1 percentage points to 3.3% compared to the July version of the report, which was at 3.2%.
For 2026, the fund believes that the region's growth will accelerate to 3.7%, while its July forecast was only 3.4%.
Regarding Egypt, the report described its performance as “better than expected during the first half of the year,” which led the fund to adjust its growth expectations for the Egyptian economy in the current fiscal year 2025 – 2026 upwards by 0.4 percentage points to 4.5%.