Cloud SEZ in Saudi Arabia changes how taxes work for digital assets and cloud services. The government approved this special zone to attract tech firms and cut costs for data centers. It starts in April 2026 and focuses on Riyadh.​
Quick Approval Process
Saudi cabinet gave the green light for the Cloud Computing Special Economic Zone. Officials published the rules on January 16 in the official gazette. Companies get 90 days from that date to prepare, with full rules kicking in by early April.
The Economic Cities and Special Zones Authority runs the show. Licensed firms inside the zone follow a simple setup period. This helps businesses adjust without big shocks.​
New Tax Rules Apply
The zone uses only corporate income tax. It skips the usual zakat law that applies elsewhere in Saudi Arabia. This setup matches global standards better than the flat 5% tax in other zones.​
Other special zones like King Abdullah Economic City offer 5% income tax instead of 20% and zero VAT on some items. Cloud SEZ goes further for digital needs. Cloud providers deal with high energy bills and long build times, so these rules ease that load.​
Growth Around Riyadh
Riyadh becomes the heart of this cloud push. Saudi Arabia wants to lead in data centers, cloud computing, and AI tools. Investors who feared huge upfront costs now see a clear path.
Yusef Alyusef from Alvarez & Marsal Saudi Arabia says it changes the game. He notes Saudi Arabia pushes hard for fast cloud growth. Local companies can build data centers and team up with global players more easily.​
What Experts Say
Alyusef adds that tax breaks help, but firms still check licenses, rules, and administrative work. Companies must get approvals, prove real operations, and handle tax, customs, and VAT steps. More details on who qualifies come later.​
Breaches of rules mean losing these perks. No exact timeline yet for full guidelines. Firms watch closely as the zone shapes up.
Boost for MENA Tech
This zone lowers barriers for cloud giants in the Middle East. Fintech and AI startups gain local storage that scales fast. Costs fall, speed improves, and they avoid hosting data abroad.​
Saudi Arabia strengthens its spot in the digital world. It fits larger plans to grow the economy beyond oil. Cloud SEZ draws jobs, tech, and cash to the region.​ The move shows Saudi leaders act fast on tech needs. Businesses plan ahead to grab these benefits.




