Types of Saudi Arabia Work Visas 2026 — Complete Guide
Saudi Arabia offers several work-related visa categories: the standard Work Visa (Iqama), Freelance/Self-Employment Visa, Premium Residency (Green Card), Seasonal Work Visa, and the Visit Visa with work permission. Each has different costs, eligibility rules, and rights. The most common for expats is the employer-sponsored Work Visa leading to an Iqama.
Why Your Visa Type Matters
Your visa type in Saudi Arabia determines far more than just how you entered the country. It controls your right to change employers, bring family members, access government services, open bank accounts, and even rent property. With Saudi Vision 2030 expanding residency options significantly, understanding which category applies to you — and which might be better — is more important than ever.
There are currently six main pathways for foreigners who want to live and work in the Kingdom. Here is each one explained in full.
1. Standard Work Visa (Employment Visa)
🏢 Employer-Sponsored Work Visa
Most Common for ExpatsThis is by far the most common route for the 13+ million foreign workers in Saudi Arabia. Your employer (a Saudi company or licensed business) applies for a work visa on your behalf through the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development (HRSD). Once you arrive and complete the paperwork, your visa converts into an Iqama (Resident Permit).
Key points: You are legally tied to your sponsor (kafeel) under the Kafala system, though Saudi Arabia has been reforming this. Since 2021, many private sector workers can change jobs without employer consent. Your employer must pay for your initial visa and is responsible for your return ticket upon contract end.
2. Iqama — Resident Permit
The Iqama is not a visa itself — it is the residency permit you receive after entering Saudi Arabia on a work visa. It is your primary ID document as an expat. Losing it or letting it expire has serious consequences.
| Iqama Type | Validity | Annual Fee | Late Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Work Iqama | 1 year | SAR 650 | SAR 500/month |
| Domestic Worker Iqama | 1 year | SAR 300 | SAR 500/month |
| Dependent Iqama (spouse/child) | 1 year | SAR 400/month (levy) | SAR 500/month |
| Premium Residency | Permanent / 5-year renewable | SAR 800,000 (one-time) or SAR 100,000/year | N/A |
Use our free Iqama Expiry Tracker to check exactly how many days remain on your Iqama and what the late renewal penalty would be.
3. Premium Residency (إقامة مميزة) — Saudi Green Card
💎 Premium Residency
High Net Worth / InvestorsLaunched in 2019 as part of Vision 2030, Saudi Premium Residency gives qualifying foreigners long-term residency without a Saudi sponsor. It is designed for investors, entrepreneurs, skilled professionals, and their families.
Benefits: No employer sponsorship required. Freely change jobs without permission. Start a business without a Saudi partner. Bring family members. Access most government services. Limitations: Does not grant Saudi citizenship. Some professions still require special licensing. High upfront cost makes this suitable only for wealthy individuals or investors.
4. Freelance / Self-Employment Visa
💻 Freelance Work Permit
Independent ProfessionalsIntroduced to attract global talent in creative, tech, and professional fields, the Saudi freelance permit allows qualified individuals to work independently without a fixed employer. It is issued through the Ministry of Human Resources and is linked to specific professions.
How to apply: Through the HRSD portal (hrsd.gov.sa) or the Qiwa platform. You must demonstrate a skill in an eligible profession. Freelancers are responsible for their own health insurance and cannot sponsor dependents on this permit alone.
5. Seasonal Work Visa
🌙 Seasonal / Temporary Work Visa
Hajj, Agriculture & Tourism SectorsSaudi Arabia issues seasonal work visas for industries with peak demands — primarily the Hajj and Umrah season, agriculture, hospitality, and construction projects. These are time-limited visas tied to a specific employer and project.
Seasonal workers are entitled to all Saudi Labour Law protections including minimum rest periods, overtime pay, and end-of-service rights proportional to their working period. They must exit the Kingdom upon expiry of the visa.
6. Visit Visa with Work Permission (New 2024–2026)
Since 2024, Saudi Arabia has piloted a scheme allowing certain visit visa holders to perform short-term paid work under licensed agencies. This is still limited and sector-specific, primarily in technology, events, and media production. It is not a standard path for general employment and should not be used by workers in unapproved sectors as it carries deportation risk.
Comparison Table — All Saudi Work Visa Types
| Visa Type | Sponsor Required | Change Jobs Freely | Bring Family | Cost (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Work Visa / Iqama | Yes (employer) | Limited (reforms apply) | Yes (+ SAR 400/mo levy) | SAR 650/yr |
| Premium Residency (Permanent) | No | Yes | Yes | SAR 800,000 one-time |
| Premium Residency (Annual) | No | Yes | Yes | SAR 100,000/yr |
| Freelance Permit | No | Yes | Limited | SAR 500–2,000/yr |
| Seasonal Work Visa | Yes (employer) | No | No | Employer bears cost |
The Kafala Reform — What Changed Since 2021
Saudi Arabia's Kafala (sponsorship) system has historically tied workers tightly to their employer, making it difficult to change jobs or leave the country without permission. Since 2021, major reforms have been rolled out for private sector workers:
- Job mobility without employer consent — Private sector workers who have completed at least one year with their employer can now transfer to a new employer without the current employer's approval, subject to conditions.
- Exit and re-entry — Workers can now obtain their own exit/re-entry visas through Absher without requiring employer approval (for most categories).
- Final exit — Workers can initiate a final exit independently after notifying the employer.
These reforms do not apply universally — domestic workers and some other categories still operate under the traditional Kafala rules. Always confirm your specific situation with your employer and HRSD.