Iqama Saudi Arabia 2026: Complete Residence Permit Guide
The iqama (إقامة) is the residence permit that every non-Saudi national needs to live and work in Saudi Arabia legally. Issued by the Ministry of Interior through the General Directorate of Passports (Jawazat), it is tied to a Saudi sponsor (the employer under the kafala system, now significantly reformed under Saudi Vision 2030 labor reforms). This guide covers what an iqama is, how to get one, current fees, the 2024-2026 labor reform changes, renewal procedures, profession changes, sponsor transfers, exit/re-entry visas, and the compliance traps that catch foreign employers most often.
The iqama (إقامة, literally “residence” in Arabic) is the official residence permit issued by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to non-Saudi nationals living or working in the country. It is the single most important identification document for any foreign resident in Saudi Arabia: it serves as proof of legal residence, work authorization, identification for almost every government and commercial transaction (bank account opening, mobile contracts, healthcare, school enrolment, real estate), and the basis for any exit or re-entry travel. Without a valid iqama, a foreign national cannot legally live or work in Saudi Arabia.
The iqama is issued by the Ministry of Interior through the General Directorate of Passports (المديرية العامة للجوازات, commonly called Jawazat), and operates under the long-standing kafala (sponsorship) system in which the foreign worker’s residence and work rights are tied to a Saudi sponsor (the employer in almost all cases). The kafala framework has been significantly reformed under Saudi Vision 2030, particularly through the Labor Reform Initiative which took effect in March 2021. Under the reforms, qualifying foreign workers can now transfer between employers without sponsor permission in defined circumstances, apply for exit and re-entry visas without sponsor approval after meeting certain conditions, and exit Saudi Arabia permanently without sponsor sign-off in qualifying scenarios. The reforms have not abolished kafala, but they have materially reduced the friction that previously bound workers to a single employer for the duration of an iqama validity period.
For foreign companies hiring in Saudi Arabia, and for the foreign workers themselves, the iqama process is unavoidable and consequential. Mishandling the iqama application, renewal, profession change, or exit can result in fines, blocked accounts, inability to travel, deportation, or in serious cases prosecution. This guide covers what the iqama is, how to apply, what it costs in 2026, how renewal works, what the Labor Reform Initiative changed, how to check iqama status, how profession changes and sponsor transfers work, exit and re-entry procedures, and the compliance traps that catch foreign employers and their workers most often.
What is an iqama?
An iqama is the Saudi Arabian residence permit issued to non-Saudi nationals authorized to live and work in the Kingdom. It is the Saudi equivalent of a residence card, residence permit, or green card in other jurisdictions, with the important difference that the iqama is tied to a Saudi sponsor (the kafeel, کفیل) under the kafala framework. The sponsor is in almost all cases the foreign worker’s Saudi employer.
The iqama serves multiple operational functions in Saudi life:
Identification. The iqama is the primary identity document for all foreign residents. It is required to open a bank account, sign a mobile phone contract, rent property, register for healthcare under the Saudi Council of Health Insurance, enrol children in school, register vehicles, and almost every other interaction with Saudi government or private sector institutions.
Work authorization. The iqama explicitly states the profession (sometimes called the occupation code) under which the holder is authorized to work. Working in a profession other than the one stated on the iqama is considered illegal work and subject to penalties under Saudi labor law.
Travel basis. A valid iqama is required for any exit and re-entry to Saudi Arabia. Foreign residents apply for an exit/re-entry visa before each trip outside the Kingdom (or, under the post-2021 reforms, may not need sponsor approval for qualifying scenarios).
Family residency basis. Foreign workers with iqama above certain salary thresholds can sponsor family members (spouse, children) for dependent iqamas. The salary thresholds and dependent fee structure were significantly tightened from 2017 onward as part of Saudi labor market nationalization policies.
Iqama is distinct from the initial work visa (which is granted by a Saudi consulate abroad and allows the worker to enter Saudi Arabia for the first time) and from the muqeem ID number that is generated when the iqama is first issued and stays with the worker across iqama renewals.
How to get an iqama Saudi Arabia
Getting an iqama follows a defined sequence that runs in parallel between the Saudi employer (the sponsor) and the foreign worker. The employer drives most of the back-office work; the worker provides documentation and completes the in-person steps. Total elapsed time from job offer acceptance to iqama in hand typically runs 6 to 14 weeks depending on visa availability and documentation quality. The seven-step process:
Iqama fees 2026
The iqama fees for 2026 include a base iqama issuance or renewal fee paid annually, the Saudi government-mandated dependent fee for any family members, the work permit (musaned) fee that scales with Saudization status, plus health insurance and Wafid online portal fees. Headline costs:
The dependent fee is the line item that catches foreign employers off guard
Foreign companies negotiating Saudi compensation packages routinely focus on the SAR 9,600 work permit levy because it is the largest single iqama-related cost. The dependent fee at SAR 4,800 per family member per year is often overlooked at offer stage and then becomes a flashpoint at contract signing. For a senior expat hire with a non-working spouse and three children, the annual dependent fee burden is SAR 19,200 (approximately USD 5,100) on top of the SAR 9,600 work permit and the iqama renewal fees. Saudi labor law is clear: this fee is the worker’s responsibility, not the sponsor’s, though many employers reimburse it as part of an expat package. Get the policy decision on this in writing before the offer is accepted. The cost can also affect housing or schooling allowance negotiations because some companies adjust other line items to compensate. Foreign employers running their first Saudi hires should budget SAR 30,000 to SAR 50,000 per year per senior expat in iqama-related total cost, before any salary or benefits.
The kafala system and 2021 Labor Reform Initiative
The kafala system (نظام الكفالة) is the sponsorship framework that has historically governed foreign work and residence in Saudi Arabia and most Gulf Cooperation Council states. Under the traditional system, a foreign worker’s legal status in Saudi Arabia (including iqama validity, work authorization, exit travel, sponsor change, and exit permanent) was entirely dependent on the consent of the Saudi sponsor. The system has been the subject of international criticism for over two decades, and the Saudi government has progressively reformed it under Saudi Vision 2030.
The most significant reform was the Labor Reform Initiative (LRI) announced by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development and effective from 14 March 2021. The LRI introduced three categories of mobility rights for foreign workers under iqama:
The Labor Reform Initiative does not apply to domestic workers (housekeepers, drivers, cooks, nannies employed in private households), who remain under traditional kafala rules. For foreign workers in commercial employment, the reforms have meaningfully improved labor market flexibility, though practical implementation still varies by employer and by region. The reforms run in parallel with the Wage Protection System (WPS), which since 2013 has required private-sector employers to pay salaries through traceable bank transfers, materially reducing the previous problem of unpaid wages.
For foreign companies hiring in Saudi Arabia, the practical effect of the LRI is that the iqama no longer functions as a lock-in mechanism. Workers who are mistreated, unpaid, or otherwise unwilling to stay can transfer or exit without the previous sponsor veto. Employers therefore need to compete on actual employment quality (pay, working conditions, career development) rather than on the friction cost of leaving. This is a meaningful operational change from pre-2021 norms.
How to check iqama status
Foreign residents in Saudi Arabia routinely need to check iqama status for several practical reasons: confirming the iqama is currently valid (not expired or invalidated by sponsor), verifying the printed expiry date matches the system record, checking work permit (musaned) validity, confirming exit/re-entry status before travel, and checking for any government holds (traffic violations, unpaid fees) that could block travel.
Three official channels can be used to check iqama information:
1. Absher portal (absher.sa). The Saudi government’s primary digital services platform. Foreign residents with a registered Absher account can check iqama validity, work permit validity, exit/re-entry status, and other personal information. Requires a Saudi mobile number registered to the user.
2. Muqeem portal (muqeem.sa). The Ministry of Interior’s system for tracking foreign residents. Allows iqama status checks by iqama number, by passport number, or by border number. Useful when Absher access is not available or for sponsor-side verification.
3. Tawakkalna app. The government super-app originally launched for COVID-19 health passes, now consolidated with general government services. Shows iqama status, traffic violations, and other personal records in a mobile interface.
For a more detailed walkthrough of what each portal does and how to navigate them, see our iqama check Saudi Arabia guide. For employers, the equivalent sponsor-side verification runs through the Muqeem business portal which lets HR check the iqama and work permit status of every foreign worker on the sponsor’s file.
Iqama renewal procedure
Iqama renewal is the sponsor’s responsibility and must be completed before the existing iqama expires. The standard iqama is valid for 1 to 2 years depending on the issuance terms (some senior expat iqamas are issued for 5 years for management roles in major projects). Renewal is a routine annual administrative step but failing to renew on time triggers significant penalties:
Renewal process. The sponsor pays the renewal fees (iqama fee + work permit levy + dependent fees for each family member) through the Ministry of Human Resources online portal or via SADAD banking. The renewal is processed in Absher within 1 to 3 business days of payment. The new expiry date is 1 year (or 2 years) from the renewal date. The physical iqama card does not need to be reissued; the validity is extended in the Jawazat system.
Late renewal penalties. Allowing an iqama to expire triggers a sliding penalty scale: SAR 500 for the first late renewal, SAR 1,000 for the second, and increasing penalties plus potential blocked services for repeat violations. Critically, if an iqama remains expired for an extended period (typically 90+ days), the worker can become classified as out-of-status (huroob), which has much more serious consequences including potential prosecution and deportation.
Health insurance during renewal. Iqama renewal requires confirmation of valid health insurance under the Council of Health Insurance system. Lapsed health insurance will block iqama renewal until the policy is renewed or replaced.
Iqama profession change and sponsor transfer
Foreign workers in Saudi Arabia sometimes need to change the profession listed on the iqama (the occupation code) or transfer iqama sponsorship to a new employer. Both are common, both follow defined procedures, and both have caught foreign workers and their employers off guard often enough to warrant attention.
Profession change (تعديل المهنة). The iqama lists the worker’s specific profession (e.g. “Software Engineer”, “Project Manager”, “Accountant”). Working in a profession other than the one stated is technically illegal under Saudi labor law and can result in fines for both worker and sponsor. Workers being promoted, moving between departments, or whose actual role differs from the original visa designation should apply for a profession change through the Ministry of Human Resources. Fees apply (typically SAR 100 to 1,000+ depending on whether the new profession is restricted for non-Saudis). Some professions are reserved for Saudi nationals under Nitaqat (Saudization) policies and cannot be granted to foreign workers regardless of qualification.
Iqama transfer (نقل الكفالة). Transferring iqama sponsorship to a new employer used to be the single most contentious process in Saudi expatriate labor relations. Under the pre-2021 framework, the existing sponsor needed to issue a “no objection certificate” (NOC) or the transfer could not proceed, giving sponsors significant leverage over workers wanting to change jobs. The Labor Reform Initiative substantially changed this: after one year of service with the current sponsor, workers can initiate transfer through Absher and the existing sponsor receives notification but cannot block the transfer in most scenarios. Notice periods apply, financial settlement of any outstanding obligations is required, and the new sponsor must have available work visa quota and meet Saudization requirements to absorb the transfer.
For a foreign company hiring an experienced expat already living in Saudi Arabia, the iqama transfer route is usually faster than running a fresh work visa application from outside the country: 4 to 6 weeks for a transfer versus 8 to 14 weeks for a fresh entry. Build the transfer timeline into hiring plans.
Exit and re-entry visa procedures
A foreign resident on an iqama needs an exit/re-entry visa to travel outside Saudi Arabia and return. Final exit visas are required for permanent departure (end of contract, contract termination, leaving Saudi Arabia for good). Three categories of exit-related visa:
1. Single-entry exit/re-entry visa. Valid for one trip out and back, with maximum stay outside Saudi Arabia of 60 to 90 days depending on issuance. Fee approximately SAR 200. Processed via Absher in minutes for qualifying workers under the LRI; previously required sponsor approval.
2. Multi-entry exit/re-entry visa. Valid for multiple trips up to 12 months. Fee approximately SAR 500. Useful for frequent travellers and senior expat roles requiring regular international travel. Same Absher processing.
3. Final exit visa (تأشيرة خروج نهائي). For permanent departure from Saudi Arabia. Issued at end of contract or by sponsor at contract termination. Under the LRI, workers can apply for final exit without sponsor approval in qualifying scenarios at end of contract. All financial obligations (any debts, traffic fines, government dues) must be settled before final exit is issued. The iqama is cancelled at final exit and cannot be reactivated; any return to Saudi Arabia requires a fresh visa.
Critically, exiting Saudi Arabia on a final exit visa before the iqama expiry forfeits any remaining validity. Workers planning short-term departures should use exit/re-entry rather than final exit, even if they are uncertain whether they will return.
Iqama compliance traps and common mistakes
Six recurring issues catch foreign workers and their employers running iqama Saudi Arabia processes. Each is straightforward to avoid; each is expensive once it happens.
1. Missing the 90-day iqama issuance window. Workers arriving on a work visa have 90 days to complete the medical, biometrics, and iqama issuance steps. Missing the window puts the worker out of status and exposes the sponsor to penalties.
2. Working in a profession different from the iqama designation. A worker whose iqama states “Accountant” but who is actually working as “Marketing Manager” is technically in violation of Saudi labor law. The fines apply to both worker and sponsor. Process a profession change whenever the actual role differs materially from the iqama designation.
3. Letting the iqama expire. Sponsor responsibility, but workers should set a personal calendar reminder 30 days before expiry. Lapsed iqamas trigger penalties, blocked services (banking, mobile), and eventually serious consequences if extended.
4. Not paying the dependent fees on time. The dependent fee structure can be forgotten between renewals because it is sometimes billed separately from the main iqama renewal. Missing it blocks iqama renewal for the worker.
5. Travelling on final exit when exit/re-entry was intended. Final exit cancels the iqama. Workers occasionally process the wrong visa type at sponsor request and find themselves unable to return. Verify the visa type in Absher before travelling.
6. Not settling financial obligations before final exit. Unpaid traffic fines, government fees, or commercial debts can block final exit issuance, leaving the worker in limbo at end of contract. Run a clearance check through Absher at least 30 days before planned departure.
For broader context on hiring through an Employer of Record in Saudi Arabia rather than setting up a sponsoring legal entity, see our best Saudi Arabia EOR providers guide. For the full cost picture across employer levies, payroll, and statutory benefits, our EOR cost guide walks through total employer cost across markets. If you are weighing Saudi Arabia against other Gulf markets, the best countries to hire developers guide puts Saudi in context against 12 other markets including the UAE, Bahrain, and Qatar.
For the contractor-versus-employee question that often comes up alongside Saudi hiring planning, our contractor vs EOR employee comparison covers the operational ground. Saudi Arabia’s iqama framework effectively rules out informal contractor arrangements for foreign nationals: there is no contractor equivalent of the iqama, so working in Saudi Arabia without sponsorship is illegal for non-Saudi nationals.
Frequently Asked Questions: Iqama Saudi Arabia
An iqama is the residence permit issued by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to non-Saudi nationals authorized to live and work in the country. The word means “residence” in Arabic (إقامة). The iqama is issued by the Ministry of Interior through the General Directorate of Passports (Jawazat), is tied to a Saudi sponsor (typically the foreign worker’s employer) under the kafala system, and serves as the primary identification document for foreign residents covering banking, healthcare, mobile contracts, and government interactions. Standard validity is 1 to 2 years, renewable annually.
Iqama (إقامة) literally means “residence” or “dwelling” in Arabic. In Saudi Arabia, the word is used as the official term for the residence permit issued to non-Saudi nationals. Separately, in Islamic religious practice, the same word (sometimes transliterated as “iqamah”) refers to the second call to prayer recited immediately before salah (the obligatory prayer). The two meanings are unrelated and apply in completely different contexts. This guide covers the Saudi residence permit.
In Saudi Arabia, iqama is the official residence permit (residence ID card) for non-Saudi nationals legally living and working in the country. Issued by the General Directorate of Passports (Jawazat), the iqama operates under the kafala sponsorship system in which the worker’s residence status is tied to a Saudi sponsor (typically the employer). The iqama is the primary identity document for all foreign residents and is required for banking, healthcare, mobile contracts, school enrolment, exit and re-entry travel, and almost every interaction with Saudi institutions. Standard validity is 1 to 2 years.
Iqama status can be checked by passport number through three official Saudi government channels: the Absher portal (absher.sa) for individual account holders, the Muqeem portal (muqeem.sa) for both individual and sponsor-side verification, and the Tawakkalna mobile app. The Muqeem portal is typically the easiest for a passport-number-based check: select “Inquiries”, enter the passport number plus visa number or iqama number, and the system returns iqama validity, work permit status, and exit/re-entry status. Verification is real-time against the Ministry of Interior database.
An iqama is typically issued for 1 year or 2 years, depending on the terms set at issuance. Senior expat roles in major Vision 2030 projects, government partnerships, and specific approved categories can receive 5-year iqamas. The iqama must be renewed before expiry by the sponsor, with renewal fees paid annually for the work permit levy and any dependent fees. The physical card does not need to be reissued each renewal; validity is extended in the Jawazat system.
The annual cost of an iqama for a foreign worker in Saudi Arabia includes several components: the iqama issuance/renewal fee of approximately SAR 650 per year, the work permit (musaned) levy of SAR 9,600 per year (SAR 800/month, reduced if sponsor meets Saudization targets), mandatory health insurance of SAR 600 to SAR 5,000+ depending on coverage, and the dependent fee of SAR 4,800 per year for each family member (spouse, child). Total annual iqama-related cost for a senior expat with family typically runs SAR 30,000 to SAR 50,000 (approximately USD 8,000 to USD 13,000).
Profession changes in iqama (تعديل المهنة) are processed by the sponsor through the Ministry of Human Resources online portal. The sponsor submits the requested new profession (occupation code), pays the applicable fee (typically SAR 100 to SAR 1,000+ depending on whether the new profession is restricted), and the Ministry of Human Resources approves or rejects based on Saudization (Nitaqat) status of the sponsor and whether the profession is reserved for Saudi nationals. Approved changes update in Absher within 1 to 3 business days. Some professions are reserved for Saudi nationals and cannot be granted to foreign workers regardless of qualification.
Yes. Iqama sponsorship transfer (نقل الكفالة) is permitted under the Labor Reform Initiative effective from March 2021. After one year of service with the current sponsor, the worker can initiate transfer through the Absher portal without requiring a “no objection certificate” from the current sponsor. The current sponsor receives notification but cannot block the transfer in most scenarios. Notice periods apply, all financial obligations must be settled, and the new sponsor must have available work visa quota and meet Saudization requirements. Transfers are typically processed in 4 to 6 weeks.
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