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VAT Registration in Saudi Arabia for Non-Residents (2026 Full Guide)

ISZ Global Team10 June 2026

Foreign companies supplying to KSA may need VAT registration even without a local office. Who must register, how to apply via ZATCA, and common mistakes non-residents make in 2026.

Foreign businesses increasingly sell goods and services into Saudi Arabia without establishing a full local branch. E-commerce, digital services, construction contracts, and cross-border B2B supply can all trigger VAT obligations for non-resident suppliers under ZATCA rules. Getting registration wrong leads to blocked invoices, withheld payments, and penalties — while correct registration allows you to operate compliantly and recover input VAT where permitted.

Who Is a Non-Resident for Saudi VAT?

A non-resident is a person or entity that has no fixed place of business in Saudi Arabia but makes taxable supplies in the Kingdom. Typical examples include:

- Foreign software and SaaS providers billing Saudi customers - Overseas consultants performing services in KSA (or remotely with KSA benefit) - Importers and distributors without a Saudi CR but with local sales - E-commerce sellers shipping goods to Saudi consumers above registration thresholds - Foreign contractors on project work in the Kingdom

If you have a fixed establishment (office, branch, or permanent staff location) in Saudi Arabia, you are generally treated as a resident taxpayer — different rules apply.

When Must Non-Residents Register for VAT?

Non-residents must register if they make taxable supplies in Saudi Arabia and are not already registered through a local entity. Key triggers include:

Mandatory registration when taxable supplies exceed SAR 375,000 in any 12-month period (same threshold as resident businesses).

Voluntary registration is possible from SAR 187,500 — often advisable for B2B suppliers whose customers need valid VAT invoices to reclaim input tax.

Specific categories — certain digital services and imported goods may require registration regardless of volume under ZATCA guidance. Always confirm against the latest ZATCA non-resident FAQ.

Important: A Saudi customer may withhold VAT on payments to an unregistered foreign supplier in some cases. Registration protects your cash flow and commercial credibility.

Step-by-Step: Non-Resident VAT Registration with ZATCA

Step 1 — Prepare documentation Gather commercial registration or equivalent from your home country, passport/ID of authorised signatory, proof of taxable activity in KSA (contracts, invoices, customer details), bank account information, and a local tax representative appointment letter if required.

Step 2 — Appoint a tax representative (if required) Many non-residents must appoint a ZATCA-approved tax representative in Saudi Arabia to file returns and communicate with the authority on their behalf. Your representative must be registered on ZATCA's portal.

Step 3 — Create a ZATCA account Register on the ZATCA taxpayer portal at zatca.gov.sa. Select non-resident registration and complete the entity profile.

Step 4 — Submit the VAT registration application Complete all mandatory fields: business activity, expected turnover, supply type (goods/services/both), first supply date, and representative details. Upload supporting documents in the requested format.

Step 5 — Receive your VAT number (TIN) ZATCA typically processes straightforward applications within 5–15 working days. Complex cases (multi-country groups, high-risk activities) may take longer.

Step 6 — Issue compliant Fatoorah invoices Once registered, you must issue Phase 2 e-invoices where your integration wave applies, charge VAT at 15% on standard-rated supplies, and file returns on your assigned period.

Ongoing Obligations After Registration

- VAT returns — monthly or quarterly depending on assignment; due within 30 days of period end - E-invoicing — integrate with ZATCA Fatoorah for clearance/reporting where applicable - Record keeping — maintain Arabic or bilingual records for at least 6 years - Amendments — notify ZATCA of changes to address, activity, or representative within prescribed timelines

Common Mistakes Non-Residents Make

- Assuming a UAE or other GCC VAT registration covers Saudi supplies (it does not) - Delaying registration until a customer demands a VAT number - Using non-compliant invoice formats that fail Fatoorah validation - Missing reverse-charge scenarios on imported services - Failing to appoint a qualified local tax representative

How ISZ Global Helps

ISZ Global is a consultant matching portal — not a single firm. We connect non-resident businesses with ZATCA-registered tax advisors in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam who handle non-resident VAT registration, e-invoicing integration, and ongoing filing.

Message us on WhatsApp or request a free consultation. We will guide you to the right specialist for your sector and supply type — without you searching dozens of websites.

*Reference: ZATCA VAT Implementing Regulations | zatca.gov.sa — non-resident registration guidance updated 2025–2026.*

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