Contract Drafting · Review · Negotiation · Saudi Arabia

Contract Lawyer in Saudi Arabia: Draft & Review Commercial Contracts Under Saudi Law

Every commercial relationship in Saudi Arabia rests on a contract. A contract drafted without knowledge of Saudi law, Arabic language requirements, and local court practice creates risk that does not become visible until a dispute arises — and by then it is too late to fix. Saad A. Alabbasi Law Firm drafts, reviews, and negotiates commercial contracts for foreign investors across Al Khobar, Riyadh, and Jeddah.

What we do

  • Draft commercial contracts from scratch in Arabic, English, or bilingual format — built for Saudi law from the first line.
  • Review existing contracts for Saudi law enforceability — clause-by-clause redline delivered in 3–5 business days.
  • Negotiate on your behalf — advising on counterparty redlines and proposed responses.
  • Contract types: EPC & construction, supply & distribution, JV, commercial lease, technology licensing, service agreements.

Based in Al Khobar. Serving clients across Saudi Arabia and internationally. Book a free 30-minute consultation to discuss your contract needs.

Saudi Bar licensed — 15+ years
Clients across 10+ countries
First draft in 5–7 business days
Free 30-min consultation
Contract Types

Commercial Contracts We Draft for Foreign Investors in Saudi Arabia

Every contract type has specific requirements under Saudi law that differ from standard international practice. Our firm drafts and reviews the following contract types with full knowledge of their Saudi-specific requirements and enforcement characteristics.

EPC & Construction Contracts

Engineering, Procurement and Construction contracts are the backbone of Saudi Arabia's giga-project and energy sector supply chains. Our firm drafts EPC contracts that reflect Saudi procurement law, FIDIC adaptations for the Saudi market, performance bond requirements, and dispute resolution clauses that are enforceable before Saudi courts and SCCA arbitration.

FIDIC-adapted Performance bonds Delay damages Variations

Supply & Distribution Agreements

Foreign companies supplying goods or services to Saudi customers — or distributing through Saudi intermediaries — need contracts that define territory, exclusivity, pricing, minimum order requirements, and termination rights in compliance with Saudi commercial agency law. Agency and distribution agreements have specific Saudi law protections that cannot be contracted out of.

Exclusivity Territory definition Agency law compliance Termination rights

Joint Venture Agreements

Structuring a joint venture in Saudi Arabia requires a contract that clearly defines each party's contribution, governance rights, profit distribution, exit mechanisms, and what happens when partners disagree. JV agreements that do not address these issues in Saudi law terms become the primary source of litigation when the relationship breaks down. See our dedicated joint venture lawyer page for full detail.

Governance Profit distribution Deadlock provisions Exit rights

Commercial Lease Agreements

Leasing office or commercial space in Saudi Arabia involves the Ejar platform registration requirement, municipal approvals, and specific tenant and landlord rights under Saudi law that cannot be waived by contract. Foreign companies that use generic lease templates — or do not register leases on the Ejar platform — face eviction risks and disputes that Saudi courts will resolve against the foreign tenant.

Ejar compliance Rent escalation Early termination Fit-out rights

Technology & Software Licensing

Technology licensing agreements in Saudi Arabia must navigate CITC data localisation requirements, intellectual property protections under Saudi IP law, and specific limitations on source code escrow and liability caps that differ from standard international SaaS or licensing terms. Foreign technology companies frequently discover their standard licence agreements are partially unenforceable in Saudi Arabia.

IP protection Data localisation SaaS terms Liability caps

Service Agreements & Consultancy Contracts

Professional service agreements for consultants, advisors, and service providers operating in Saudi Arabia must address Saudization obligations, ZATCA withholding tax on payments to non-residents, payment milestones, and intellectual property ownership of deliverables — all of which have Saudi-specific requirements that differ from standard international service agreement templates.

Deliverables Withholding tax IP ownership Payment milestones

Need a contract drafted or reviewed for your Saudi operations?

Free 30-minute consultation to assess your contract needs and confirm the Saudi law requirements that apply to your specific situation.

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Saudi Contract Law

Why Saudi Contract Law Is Different — and Why It Matters

Foreign investors who use international contract templates for Saudi business relationships typically discover the differences only when a dispute arises — at which point the contract's weaknesses become the other side's advantage.

Saudi contract law draws from Islamic (Sharia) principles, the Saudi Civil Transactions Law, the Companies Law, and sector-specific regulations — a framework that differs significantly from English common law and civil law traditions that most international contracts are built on. The differences are not academic — they determine whether your contract is enforceable, what remedies you can claim, and how a Saudi court or arbitrator will interpret ambiguous terms.

Interest and financial charges work differently

Simple interest (riba) is prohibited under Sharia principles. Late payment charges must be structured as liquidated damages rather than interest — and must represent a genuine pre-estimate of loss, not a penalty. Interest clauses from international templates are routinely struck out by Saudi courts, leaving creditors without a remedy for late payment.

Penalty clauses are subject to judicial adjustment

Saudi courts have the power to reduce contractual penalty clauses they consider excessive — regardless of what the parties agreed. A penalty clause that exceeds the actual damage suffered will be reduced to what the court considers fair. International contracts that rely on high penalty clauses as leverage often find them ineffective in Saudi proceedings.

Arabic governs when there is a conflict

In bilingual contracts, the Arabic version takes precedence over English in Saudi court proceedings. A poor-quality translation or mistranslated term in the Arabic version of a bilingual contract can fundamentally alter the contract's meaning in a Saudi dispute — without the foreign party realising it until it is too late.

Agency and commercial representation has mandatory protections

Saudi commercial agency law provides mandatory protections for Saudi agents and distributors that cannot be contracted out of — including compensation rights on termination, renewal rights, and exclusivity protections. Foreign companies that terminate Saudi agency relationships without these protections in mind face significant liability regardless of what their contracts say.

International template vs Saudi-compliant contract

Clause
International
Saudi-compliant
Late payment
Interest at X% per annum
Liquidated damages — genuine loss estimate
Governing law
English / New York law
Saudi law — enforceable in Saudi courts
Disputes
English courts / ICC London
SCCA Riyadh — enforceable in Saudi Arabia
Language
English only
Bilingual — Arabic version controls
Liability cap
Standard 12-month fees
Saudi court-calibrated with loss estimate
Termination
Immediate on notice
Agency law protections factored in

Is your current contract Saudi-compliant?

Many foreign investors only discover their contracts have Saudi law problems when a dispute arises. A contract review now is far less expensive than litigation later.

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Our Services

Contract Drafting vs Contract Review What Each Service Involves

Whether you need a contract built from scratch or an existing contract assessed for Saudi law compliance and commercial risk — our firm provides both services with direct partner involvement at every stage.

Contract Drafting

Built for Saudi law — from a blank page

We draft commercial contracts from scratch based on the agreed commercial terms — in Arabic, English, or bilingual format. Every contract is built to the requirements of Saudi law, the specific sector involved, and the likely forum for any dispute (Saudi courts or SCCA arbitration). Our drafts protect the foreign investor's position without creating unnecessarily adversarial terms that damage the commercial relationship.

  • Commercial terms briefing — we extract what the contract needs to say from our discussion of the deal
  • Saudi law–compliant structure — payment terms, dispute resolution, governing law, language
  • Arabic translation and Arabic-version review before execution
  • Negotiation support — advising on counterparty redlines and suggested responses
  • First draft delivered within 5 to 7 business days for standard contracts
Start Contract Drafting

Contract Review

Saudi law risk assessment on existing contracts

You provide your existing contract — drafted by your counterparty or by your international legal team — and we assess it for Saudi law compliance, enforceability risk, and commercial risk that the foreign investor may not have identified. Our review identifies problematic clauses, missing Saudi law requirements, and opportunities to negotiate better terms before the contract is signed.

  • Saudi law enforceability assessment — clause by clause identification of risk
  • Arabic version review — ensuring the Arabic contract matches the English version
  • Redline with recommended changes — specific proposed amendments with reasons
  • Risk summary — a clear explanation of the risks if the contract is signed as drafted
  • Review turnaround typically 3 to 5 business days
Submit Contract for Review

Both services are available for clients across Al Khobar, Riyadh, and Jeddah — remotely via email and video call, or in person at our Al Khobar office. International clients who have never visited Saudi Arabia regularly work with us on Saudi contracts entirely remotely. The governing law and enforceability requirements are the same regardless of where the client is based.

Common Mistakes

5 Contract Mistakes Foreign Investors Regularly Make in Saudi Arabia

These errors appear in real contracts we review. Each one creates legal exposure that becomes the other side's advantage in a dispute. All are preventable with proper Saudi law review before signing.

01

Using an international contract template without Saudi law review

Standard international templates contain clauses that are unenforceable in Saudi Arabia — including interest charges, unlimited liability waivers, foreign court jurisdiction, and automatic renewal provisions that Saudi courts do not recognise. The contract looks complete but has holes that appear in a dispute.

Fix: Every international template must be reviewed and adapted for Saudi law before use in a Saudi commercial relationship — regardless of how reputable its source.

02

No arbitration clause — or a clause pointing to the wrong forum

Contracts without an arbitration clause default to Saudi court jurisdiction. Contracts that specify foreign arbitration (London, Paris, Singapore) for disputes with Saudi state entities are often unenforceable — Saudi government contracts frequently cannot be subject to foreign arbitration by law.

Fix: Include a SCCA arbitration clause for domestic commercial contracts. For cross-border contracts, confirm whether your Saudi counterparty's status permits foreign arbitration before agreeing to it.

03

Vague scope of work or deliverables

Saudi courts interpret contracts based on their literal Arabic text. Vague scope descriptions — "as agreed from time to time" or "reasonable professional services" — create disputes about what was actually agreed. Saudi courts give effect to what the contract says, not what the parties intended.

Fix: Define scope, deliverables, acceptance criteria, and payment conditions with specificity. Ambiguity in a Saudi commercial contract benefits the party that did not draft it.

04

Ignoring ZATCA withholding tax obligations

Payments from Saudi companies to non-resident foreign entities are subject to ZATCA withholding tax — typically 5% to 15% depending on the payment type. Contracts that do not address withholding tax create disputes about who bears the tax cost and leave the Saudi payer at risk of ZATCA penalties for non-withholding.

Fix: Specify whether contract prices are inclusive or exclusive of Saudi withholding tax, and which party bears the withholding tax cost — before the contract is signed.

05

Terminating a commercial agency without following Saudi law

Saudi commercial agency law provides mandatory compensation rights to Saudi agents on termination — regardless of what the contract says about termination without cause. Foreign companies that terminate Saudi agents without following the statutory process face compensation claims that can significantly exceed the commercial value of the agency relationship.

Fix: Before terminating any commercial agency or distribution relationship in Saudi Arabia, obtain Saudi legal advice on the statutory obligations that apply — even if the contract permits termination on notice.

06

Signing a bilingual contract without reviewing the Arabic version

Many foreign investors sign bilingual contracts after reading only the English version. The Arabic version is the legally controlling version in Saudi court proceedings. Mistranslations, omissions, or additions in the Arabic version — whether accidental or deliberate — will be the version that a Saudi court enforces.

Fix: Have a qualified Saudi lawyer review the Arabic version of every bilingual contract before execution — confirming it matches the English version and accurately reflects the agreed commercial terms.

Have a contract that needs Saudi law review before you sign?

Our firm reviews contracts and delivers a risk summary and redline within 3 to 5 business days. Free 30-minute consultation to discuss what you need.

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Dispute Prevention

How a Well-Drafted Contract Prevents Disputes Before They Start

The purpose of a commercial contract is not just to record what was agreed — it is to prevent disagreements from becoming disputes, and to ensure that if they do, your position is as strong as possible.

Clear scope eliminates the most common dispute trigger

The majority of commercial disputes in Saudi Arabia arise from disagreements about what was actually agreed — particularly in service, consulting, and construction contracts. A contract that precisely defines what must be delivered, to what standard, by when, and what acceptance looks like eliminates the ambiguity that both parties exploit when the relationship deteriorates.

Payment structures that are actually enforceable

A payment clause that cannot be enforced before a Saudi court is not a payment clause — it is a hope. Our contracts structure payment obligations with milestones tied to specific deliverables, liquidated damages for late payment calibrated to Saudi court practice, and payment enforcement mechanisms that work in Saudi commercial proceedings.

The right dispute resolution clause changes the outcome

The difference between a SCCA arbitration clause and a Saudi court jurisdiction clause determines the timeline, the language, the confidentiality, the appeal rights, and the practical enforceability of the outcome. For most foreign investor contracts in Saudi Arabia, SCCA arbitration provides a faster, more neutral, and more internationally enforceable result than Saudi court proceedings.

Exit provisions that work without litigation

Termination clauses that do not account for Saudi law's approach to commercial relationships create situations where the foreign investor cannot exit the relationship without triggering compensation claims that far exceed the cost of staying in it. We build exit provisions that are clean, fair, and commercially realistic under Saudi law.

The cost of a Saudi commercial dispute vs the cost of a Saudi-compliant contract

Saudi commercial litigation typically takes 12 to 24 months for a first instance decision. SCCA arbitration typically resolves in 6 to 18 months. Both involve legal fees, management time, and frozen business relationships.

10–50× The typical ratio of dispute costs to contract drafting costs in commercial litigation

A contract that costs SAR 5,000 to draft correctly prevents disputes that cost SAR 50,000 to SAR 500,000 to resolve. The investment in a Saudi-compliant contract is the lowest-cost form of commercial dispute insurance available.

Get Your Contract Right — Free Consultation
Enforceability

Enforcing Contracts in Saudi Arabia — Courts, Arbitration & What Actually Works

A contract that cannot be enforced is not a contract — it is a statement of intent. Understanding how Saudi courts and arbitral tribunals approach commercial contracts is essential when drafting them.

Saudi Commercial Courts

The Riyadh, Dammam, and Jeddah Commercial Courts handle the majority of commercial disputes between private parties. Proceedings are in Arabic, judges apply Saudi law, and decisions can be appealed. Well-drafted Arabic-language contracts with clear evidence of the agreed terms significantly improve the foreign investor's position before the Commercial Court.

SCCA Arbitration

The Saudi Center for Commercial Arbitration is the preferred dispute resolution mechanism for international commercial contracts in Saudi Arabia. SCCA arbitration is faster than court proceedings, confidential, and produces awards that are enforceable internationally under the New York Convention. Our firm's founding partner is an accredited SCCA arbitrator — giving clients direct insight into SCCA practice.

Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards

Saudi Arabia is a signatory to the New York Convention — foreign arbitral awards can be enforced before Saudi Enforcement Courts. However, the Saudi court will review the award for compliance with Saudi public policy before enforcing it. Awards that contain interest charges, violate Sharia principles, or conflict with Saudi regulatory requirements may face enforcement challenges.

Documentary Evidence Requirements

Saudi courts place significant weight on written documentary evidence — signed contracts, written correspondence, delivery records, and payment confirmations. Oral agreements and informal arrangements are difficult to prove before Saudi courts. Our contracts are drafted to maximise the documentary evidence trail that supports enforcement of the foreign investor's rights.

Enforcement Courts — Saudi Arabia

Once a judgment or award is obtained, enforcement is handled by the Saudi Enforcement Courts — a specialist court system established in 2013 with fast-track procedures for enforcing commercial judgments. An enforceable judgment or award with clearly identified debtor assets is typically enforced more efficiently than in many comparable jurisdictions.

Interim Measures & Precautionary Attachments

Where a party is at risk of dissipating assets before a judgment is obtained, Saudi courts can grant precautionary attachments (conservatory measures) to freeze bank accounts or assets pending the outcome of proceedings. Our contracts include provisions that facilitate the grant of such measures — and we advise on the conditions under which they are available in Saudi Arabia.

Need a contract that holds up in Saudi courts or arbitration?

Our firm drafts for enforceability — not just elegance. Every contract we produce is designed to work if a dispute arises, not just while the relationship is functioning.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions Contract Lawyer Saudi Arabia

The most common questions from foreign investors about commercial contracts in Saudi Arabia — answered directly.

A contract lawyer in Saudi Arabia drafts, reviews, and negotiates commercial contracts to ensure they are enforceable under Saudi law. This includes building contracts from scratch based on agreed commercial terms, assessing existing contracts for Saudi law compliance and commercial risk, advising on Arabic-language requirements, and structuring dispute resolution clauses that work before Saudi courts or SCCA arbitration. The goal is not just to record what was agreed, but to ensure the contract holds up if the relationship breaks down.
Saudi law does not require all commercial contracts to be in Arabic — bilingual contracts are common. However, if a dispute goes before a Saudi court or arbitral tribunal, Arabic will be the language of proceedings, and the Arabic version takes precedence over English in cases of inconsistency. Contracts drafted only in English without an Arabic version create significant evidentiary and interpretation difficulties. Our firm drafts in Arabic or bilingual format depending on the parties and the likely dispute forum.
Saudi courts apply Saudi law as a matter of public policy and will not enforce a foreign governing law clause if the subject matter involves Saudi domestic law — which includes employment, real estate, and commercial agency arrangements. For purely commercial contracts between sophisticated parties, Saudi courts may give some effect to a foreign governing law clause, but this is not guaranteed. The most reliable approach is Saudi law as the governing law with SCCA arbitration as the dispute mechanism. Our firm advises on this for each contract before it is finalised.
For a contract to be enforceable before Saudi courts it must satisfy the requirements of offer, acceptance, and consideration under Saudi law; not violate Saudi public order or Sharia principles; be entered into by parties with legal capacity; and have clearly written, unambiguous terms. Contracts with interest provisions, excessive penalty clauses, vague scope descriptions, or unsigned Arabic versions face enforceability challenges. A Saudi-qualified lawyer should review all material contracts before they are signed by the Saudi party. See our commercial litigation page for what happens when a dispute reaches a Saudi court.
Using an international template without Saudi law review is one of the most common mistakes foreign investors make. International templates typically contain clauses that are unenforceable in Saudi Arabia — including simple interest charges, automatic termination provisions, unlimited liability waivers, and foreign court jurisdiction clauses. They also omit Saudi-specific requirements — including correct payment term structures, Saudization compliance provisions, and ZATCA withholding tax allocation. Our firm reviews and adapts international templates for Saudi use as a standard service.
Contract legal fees in Saudi Arabia vary by contract complexity, value, and turnaround time required. A standard commercial contract drafted from scratch typically ranges from SAR 5,000 to SAR 25,000 depending on complexity. Contract review services — clause-by-clause redline with risk summary — typically range from SAR 3,000 to SAR 10,000. High-value EPC, M&A, or cross-border contracts are quoted on a case-by-case basis. Our firm provides a fixed-fee quote after a free 30-minute initial consultation where we scope the work required.
For a standard commercial contract — supply agreement, service agreement, or distribution contract — our firm delivers a first draft within 5 to 7 business days. Complex contracts such as EPC agreements, joint venture agreements, or shareholder agreements may require 2 to 4 weeks. Contract review turnaround is typically 3 to 5 business days for existing contracts. Urgent timelines can be accommodated — contact our office to discuss your situation.

Need a contract drafted or reviewed?

Free 30-minute consultation to assess your contract requirements and confirm the Saudi law issues that apply to your specific situation.

Book Free Consultation

Get Your Saudi Contract Drafted or Reviewed — Free Consultation

Whether you need a contract built from scratch or an existing contract assessed for Saudi law risk — our Al Khobar office is available for in-person meetings or remote consultations. First consultation free, no obligation. First draft in 5 to 7 business days.

Office Address
Al-Ruzayza Tower, King Fahd Road
Al-Bandariyah, Khobar 34424, Saudi Arabia
Office Hours
Sunday – Thursday: 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM AST
Consultation
Free 30-minute initial consultation — Zoom, Teams, or in person
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All information treated with strict confidentiality

Saad A. Alabbasi Law Firm — Al Khobar Eastern Province
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