Several leading British financial institutions are relocating or expanding their regional headquarters to Riyadh as part of a strategic push to deepen cross-regional collaboration and investment in the Gulf. Barclays, which left Saudi Arabia in 2014, is re-entering with a new investment banking license and plans to open a large office in Riyadh’s King Abdullah Financial District by early 2026.
Barclays CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnan noted that trusted, long-term partnerships are crucial for the bank’s renewed commitment to the region. The move is part of Barclays’ broader Middle East growth strategy to connect global capital flows and support Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 economic transformation.
HSBC and UK Government Support Financial Hub Growth
HSBC is also relocating its Saudi headquarters to Riyadh’s financial district, reinforcing the city’s role as a financial hub. The UK government has secured a £6.4 billion trade and investment package with Saudi Arabia, involving major UK firms such as Aberdeen Investcorp and fintech leader Quantexa. This package supports job creation and strengthens economic ties, with Riyadh emerging as a gateway for British businesses to access Gulf markets.
Riyadh’s Rising Status as a Financial Center
These relocations reflect increasing international confidence in Saudi Arabia’s regulatory reforms, financial market maturity, and ambitions to diversify from oil dependency. Riyadh’s strategic geographic position and economic vision are attracting multinational financial giants to establish a permanent presence, facilitating innovation and investment flows across three continents.





