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Company formation in Saudi Arabia
from license to go‑live.
We simplify your KSA setup. 100% foreign ownership available (sector‑dependent).
Clear steps, firm milestones, and ongoing compliance support.
Who this page is for
- • Foreign founders and SMEs entering KSA for the first time
- • GCC‑owned businesses expanding to the Kingdom
- • Multinationals setting up subsidiaries, branches or RHQs
Quick answer: If you can clearly define your activity, provide attested corporate documents, appoint a GM, and lease an eligible office, we can typically take you from MISA license → CR → tax C labor onboarding in a predictable, milestone‑based plan.
Why RegisterInKSA
RegisterInKSA specializes in Saudi market entry, it’s not one of our services, it’s our core expertise. We manage the entire process from MISA licensing and CR issuance to tax, banking, and HR portals with full compliance and transparency. Every setup is milestone-driven, audit-ready, and supported by local experts in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam, ensuring your company goes live smoothly and on schedule.
What you get
(outcome, not paperwork)
Licensing s Registration
- • MISA investment license aligned to your activity
- • Name reservation • AoA drafting C notarization
- • Commercial Registration (CR) issuance • Chamber of Commerce
Tax and Finance Readiness
- • ZATCA enrollment • VAT (where applicable)
- • E‑invoicing readiness •Bank letters C KYC pack
Labor, Immigration and Portals
- • GM appointment • Visa/Iqama support.
- • Qiwa, GOSI, Absher, Mudad, Muqeem setup.
Operational Enablement
- • Office lease compliance • WPS readiness.
- • Document templates onboarding checklist
- Outcome not forms: You leave with licenses in hand, portals live, and a checklist for day‑1 operations.
Formation paths we support
• Licensing s Registration
- Separate legal entity; flexible ownership; standard choice for most sectors.
• Branch of a Foreign Company
- Operates under parent liability; suitable for controlled operations
• Regional Headquarters (RHQ)
- Command center for Middle East ops; meets RHQ program requirements.
• Special Economic Zone (SEZ) entity
- For qualifying activities; zone‑specific incentives/ regulations.
• GCC‑owned entity
- Streamlined path; no foreign‑investment license required for wholly GCC ownership.
• Entrepreneur / Early‑stage setup
- Founder‑led structures; tailored guidance on eligibility and evidence
Not sure which fits?
We’ll map structure → tax → Saudization impact → operational cost before you commit.
The end‑to‑end process
Confirm permitted activity, foreign ownership, and special approvals.
Parent CR/AoA/Board Resolution/Financials → attested; submit MISA license under the correct activity.
Name reservation • AoA drafting C notarization • CR issuance • Chamber of Commerce.
Qiwa • GOSI • Absher • Mudad • Muqeem • GM appointment and immigration.
Bank account support • WPS • VAT/ZATCA compliance • E‑invoicing setup.
Timeline drivers
- • Attestation turnaround and sector approvals
- • Office lease compliance and address verification
- • Bank KYC and signatory readiness
We share a milestone tracker, so you always know what’s next
What we need from you
- • Attested parent company documents (CR/Articles/Board Resolution)
- • Audited financials (recent year; attested)
- • Shareholder/director passport copies
- • Proposed Arabic C English names
- • KSA GM details (appointment resolution)
- • Office lease (eligible for municipality/MLSD registrations)
We’ll supply drafts, coordinate attestation, and flag sector‑specific add‑ons up front.
Business expansion in Saudi Arabia for
GCC companies
Businesses owned by GCC nationals enjoy specific pathways when entering Saudi Arabia. We highlight them
separately, as the rules differ from foreign‑owned entities:
GCC branch or subsidiary: Easier registration, streamlined document requirements, and no need for a foreign investment license.
New GCC‑owned business: Same rights as Saudi citizens in many cases, including full ownership of most activities.
Compliance still applies: Saudization, ZATCA tax registration, and HRSD labor laws remain
mandatory.
Why it matters: GCC founders can leverage faster entry while still needing expert support for regulatory onboarding.
Setting up a foreign company in Saudi
Arabia: four proven approaches
(Tabbed interface: Startup · Established · Advanced · Multinational)
Below are the most common pathways we implement for foreign founders and companies. We’ve tailored the language, steps, and emphasis to reflect how RegisterInKSA delivers the work clearly, compliantly, and with milestone accountability.
Approach 1 Startups (Entrepreneurship pathway)
When to choose: Early‑stage companies with incubator/VC endorsement seeking speed and flexibility.
- • Collect s attest core docs: Trade/Business License, Articles/MoA, and required corporate resolutions → legalized via MOFA and the Saudi Embassy.
- • Incubator/VC endorsement: Obtain a support letter from an approved incubator, accelerator, or venture capital firm to qualify for the MISA Entrepreneurship License.
- • Name reservation: Reserve Arabic C English names to protect brand identity and enable license/CR filing.
- • MISA license (Entrepreneurship): Official approval to operate commercially in KSA under the startup route.
- • Articles of Association (AoA): Draft, notarize, and (where relevant) attest clarifies ownership, governance, and management authority.
- • Commercial Registration (CR): Legal registration enabling contracts, banking, and compliant operations.
- • Chamber of Commerce: Activate for authenticity in dealings and access to government services.
- Typical outcome: License → CR → portals readiness. Timelines depend on attestation and endorsement speed
Approach 2: Established foreign businesses (Subsidiary or Branch)
When to choose: Operating companies with 1–2+ years of trading history and audited financials.
- • Document pack s attestation: Trade License, CR, MoA/AoA → attested by MOFA and Saudi Embassy.
- • Operating history: Most sectors require ≥1 year (sometimes 2 years) of operations; we confirm at scoping.
- • Name reservation: Secure exclusive use in KSA.
- • MISA license issuance: Mandatory for all foreign‑owned entities.
- • AoA drafting s attestation: Governance, shareholding, and operational guidelines formalized.
- • Commercial Registration (CR): Official registration with the Ministry of Commerce.
- • Chamber of Commerce: Activation for regulatory services and tender readiness.
- • Audited financials s bank statements: Provide last fiscal year(s) to evidence stability.
- • Minimum capital (if applicable): Sector/entity‑specific; we advise and coordinate deposit.
- Typical outcome: Predictable incorporation with parent alignment; banking and portals follow CR.
Approach 3: All company types Advanced setup
When to choose: Subsidiaries, JVs, branch offices needing a complete go‑live program.
- Indicative timeline: 35–50 working days (document‑ready, non‑regulated cases).
- • Document verification s attestation: Trade License, CR, MoA, AoA → MOFA/Embassy verified.
- • Capital deposit: Meet sector/entity minimums; we coordinate banking letters and proof.
- • Company seal: Create official seal for contracts and formal correspondence.
- • Name reservation s MISA license: Reserve names; secure the investment license aligned to activity.
- • AoA drafting s attestation: Governance, rights, and protocols finalized.
- • CR issuance (Ministry of Commerce): Legal registration enabling operations.
- • Labor s social registrations: HRSD/Ministry of Labor, GOSI for employee coverage and WPS.
- • National Address registration: Register physical office with Saudi Post for official correspondence.
- • GM health insurance s visa: Healthcare coverage; process GM Visa to enable signatory duties.
- • Tax registrations: ZATCA for corporate tax/Zakat and VAT where applicable.
- • Physical office setup: Lease that meets regulatory and banking requirements.
- • GM visit s biometrics: Post‑CR visit for visa stamping, medicals, biometrics, Iqama initiation.
- • Handover: Formal transition with document pack, portal credentials, and compliance checklist.
- Typical outcome: Fully operational entity with banking, portals, HR, and tax active.
Approach 4: Multinational programs (RHQ, JSC, TSO s complex entities)
When to choose: Multinationals implementing RHQ/TSO, joint stock companies, or multiple coordinated entities.
- • Corporate document attestation: Trade License, CR, MoA, AoA → MOFA/Embassy attested for compliance.
- • Capitalization: Sector/type-specific minimums deposited into a Saudi bank.
- • Company seal: Official signature instrument for legal documents.
- • Name reservation s MISA investor license: Secure identity and obtain the operating license.
- • AoA drafting s attestation: Governance and ownership structure formalized for regulator review.
- • CR issuance (MC): Enables contracts, hiring, and banking.
- • Labor s social onboarding: HRSD, GOSI registrations aligned with hiring plans.
- • National Address registration: Physical address registered for all government correspondence.
- • GM health insurance, visa s Iqama: Required for residency and executive authority.
- • Tax registrations: ZATCA corporate/Zakat and VAT compliance set up.
- • Physical office setup s Chamber activation: Satisfy licensing/operational standards; activate CoC for tenders.
- • Government portals: Muqeem, Absher, Qiwa, Mudad configured for immigration, labor, and payroll compliance.
- • Corporate bank account: Open and activate for capital deposit, payroll, and tax payments.
- • Etimad (if tendering): Register to access government procurement.
- • Harmonization audit: Cross-check all registrations, licenses, and approvals to ensure end-to-end compliance.
- • Fund transfer deadline: Deposit initial capital within the statutory window (often ~60 days) to keep status active.
- • Final handover: Complete document set, credentials, and operating playbook delivered to your team.
- Program note: We coordinate RHQ/TSO requirements, multi‑entity sequencing, and regulator touchpoints to minimize rework and delays.
Saudization (Nitaqat)
Reality check
Nitaqat targets vary by activity, size, and life‑stage. Early months focus on entity activation; ramp plan agreed at kick‑off.
We set you up right
Qiwa policy settings, job titles, and GOSI classes aligned to your model. We’ll show how targets shift as you hire.
Transparent pricing
Starter (Founders / SMEs)
Get operational, fast
Nitaqat targets vary by activity, size, and life‑stage. Early months focus on entity activation; ramp plan agreed at kick‑off.
Growth (Subsidiary / Branch)
Added complexity, handled
Includes: Starter scope + multi‑shareholder/AoA drafting, sector approvals, branch particulars.
Best for: Parent‑owned entities, multi‑activity operations.
Enterprise (RHQ / SEZ / Regulated)
Program‑compliant setup
Includes: Growth scope + regulator liaison, multi‑entity coordination, HR policy pack.
Best for: Regional HQs, SEZ entities, regulated sectors. Ask for a tailored quote. Milestones priced transparently; third‑party and attestation fees itemized.
Why RegisterInKSA ?
Choosing RegisterInKSA means partnering with a specialist firm that focuses solely on Saudi market entry. We combine
compliance expertise with practical operational support so you can focus on growth.
- KSA‑first specialists: Saudi market entry is our core business, not a side service.
- Compliance‑led: We design for audits documentation, approvals, and portal hygiene.
- Operator mindset: Beyond incorporation, we own the messy middle: payroll, WPS, e‑invoicing.
- Measured by outcomes: Licenses issued, CR in hand, portals live, team onboarded.
- FAQs
Frequently asked questions
If your question is not addressed here, please feel free to reach out to us. We value your inquiry.
Can I own 100% of the company as a foreigner?
In many sectors, yes. Certain activities require extra approvals or local participation. We confirm this at scoping and propose the cleanest compliant path.
Do I need to be in KSA to finalize?
How long does it take?
Do I need an office?
What taxes apply?
Corporate income tax and/or Zakat (structure‑dependent), plus VAT where applicable. We map obligations and registration timing before go‑live.
What about visas and hiring?
We handle GM and staff onboarding, Qiwa contracts, and a Saudization ramp plan aligned to your hiring model.