Saudi Vision 2030: Strategic Planning for Relocation Leaders

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Saudi Vision 2030. Image Source: Freepik
Saudi Vision 2030. Image Source: Freepik

Saudi Vision 2030 is a national transformation strategy to diversify Saudi Arabia’s economy, grow the private sector, and modernize society by 2030 in sectors such as construction, technology, tourism, logistics, retail, and business services.

As of this writing, the Kingdom has surpassed its target of 500multinational companies establishing regional headquarters there:

  • 675 international firms established regional headquarters in Riyadh; this could surpass1,000 by 2030.

  • Companies that have established regional bases there include Northern Trust, IHG Hotels & Resorts, PwC, Deloitte, Citigroup, Braun, MicroStrategy, Lenovo, Nvidia, and more.

  • Eighty percent of companies surveyed plan to expand trade and investment there within the next five years.

  • This initiative has contributed to a drop in unemployment, falling from 12.8% in 2018 to 7.1% by mid-2024, surpassing Saudi Vision 2030’s goal of 8%.

But 2030 is a target, not an expiration date. Companies should not plan deployments there as time-bound engagements. Rather:

  • Talent strategies should assume long-term presence and ongoing localization;

  • Assignment models should favor durability, retention, and capability transfer; and

  • Housing strategies should anticipate sustained demand, not a post-2030 contraction.

Global Mobility leaders should plan strategically for relocation / immigration pathways and in-country housing / family support.

“Saudi Arabia’s evolving immigration and residency frameworks are reshaping how truly global organizations access and deploy talent,” states Mollie Ivancic, SVP International Services at NEI Global Relocation. “As Vision 2030 accelerates, companies that partner with experienced mobility experts are best positioned to flawlessly build compliant, flexible, and sustainable talent pipelines.”

“Saudization” as Opportunity

As over half the nation’s population is under age 35, the “Saudization” program — officially the Nitaqat labor nationalization framework — seeks lower dependence on foreign workers.

For Vision 2030, the country’s “localization” policy refers to rules that increase the participation of Saudi nationals in the workforce and domestic economy. Multinationals are required to hire a specific number of Saudi nationals based on size, sector, and existing workforce. The policy assigns companies to compliance bands based on the percentage of Saudi nationals employed and includes quota incentives and penalties. Quota thresholds are sector-specific and enforceable; firms that miss targets can face visa / work-permit restrictions and penalties. Localization mandates extend into skilled roles like engineering, procurement, technical services, and finance.

Instead of viewing localization as a hiring constraint, HR and Global Mobility leaders can protect visa availability and strengthen compliance by deploying expats with clear knowledge-transfer plans, formal training programs for Saudi nationals, and phased workforce sequencing using expatriate assignments to build capability before transitioning roles to localized hires.

Family Readiness is Imperative

Family and lifestyle considerations remain a decisive factor in assignment success to Saudi Arabia. Extreme heat during summer, high living costs, shortened work hours during Ramadan, cultural shock, etc. makes pre-departure cultural training and spouse/family guidance mandatory for success. Employers must also provide clear:

  • Housing strategies that prioritize locations with community infrastructure, schooling, and safety; including support with liquidity, such as initial rental payments where 12-month upfront commitments are typically required.

  • Compliant, mandatory health insurance and insurer support to navigate a competitive, but sometimes costly and complex, private healthcare system;

  • Schooling options for children that integrate into relocation planning; and

  • Flexible work schedules during the year’s hottest months (June, July, and August).

Structuring a comprehensive approach with tailored guidance for family readiness so no stone is left unturned elevates Global Mobility from operational delivery to employee experience and ROI optimization.

Expertise for Market Entry

Saudi Vision 2030’s economic diversification created demand for untraditional country talent profiles today like data scientists, digital strategists, renewable energy experts, and tourism and hospitality professionals.

For streamlined talent pipelines, a powerful planning lever may be how companies structure immigration pathways. Saudi has introduced alternative residency options that reduce dependency on traditional employer sponsorship and allow greater flexibility in assignment duration, tax planning, and family integration.

Employers must assess the assignment’s purpose to ensure compliance and alignment with start dates and consider key nuances:

  • Correct Visa & Risks: The Kingdom’s immigration system is structured with each visa type defining the holder’s legal purpose, rights, and limitations. Applying for fast track visas that do not fully align with the role’s long-term purpose may have implications on compliance and fines.

  • Immigration Timeline & Residency Status (Iqama): Saudi immigration requires advance planning and document preparation. Build buffer time into relocation plans for the pre-Iqama phase and involve local experts.

  • Highly Digitized Environment: Saudi Arabia’s digital systems (Qiwa, Absher, Muqeem) provide transparency, but demand accountability and knowledge to navigate these portals.

“As corporate governance is key, partner with expert local immigration counsel, invest in training Mobility and HR teams on nuances, and establish a clear chain of responsibility for visa lifecycle management,” states Marie O’Neill, Managing Director and Co-Owner of EER Middle East. “In the rapidly evolving Saudi market, one’s agility and compliance are direct contributors to a successful relocation.”

Unlocking Strategic Value Before 2030

Saudi Arabia has created a new landscape for global relocation management, destination services, housing, spouse/family support, and immigration compliance. Global Mobility leaders should focus on quality, consistency, and excellence in service delivery and a company’s proven experience when choosing a partner. Ensuring these factor in selection aligns partner capabilities with strategic mobility and talent pipeline outcomes.

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