Commercial Lease Requirements in Saudi Arabia
A guide to commercial lease requirements in Saudi Arabia, statutory Ejar registration, and managing complex long-term business contracts.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Commercial leasing in Saudi Arabia demands precision, clear terms, and strict adherence to the Ejar electronic registration platform. Gone are the days of informal paper leases for retail storefronts and office towers.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Landlord-tenant laws change frequently. Always consult a licensed attorney in Saudi Arabia for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
The Mandatory Commercial Ejar Contract
In Saudi Arabia, all commercial lease contracts must be registered and authenticated through the Ejar platform. A commercial lease kept off the books is fundamentally legally unenforceable.
By registering the commercial lease on Ejar, the contract achieves the status of an "executive instrument," enabling landlords to bypass lengthy civil litigation and utilize the Enforcement Court for swift action in the event of tenant default.
Flexibility Within Commercial Ejar
Unlike standard residential contracts which are relatively rigid, the commercial Ejar contract provides landlords and business tenants with vastly more freedom to dictate the terms of their agreement.
1. Multi-Year Leases
While residential leases typically default to one year, commercial leases in Saudi Arabia can be structured for vast durations—e.g., 5, 10, or 20-year terms—providing businesses with the stability needed to invest in expensive retail build-outs.
2. Automatic Renewal and Non-Renewal
Similarly to the residential sector, commercial Ejar contracts often contain a default clause stipulating automatic renewal for a similar term. To break this cycle, either the landlord or the commercial tenant must formally register a non-renewal notice at least 60 days before the contract expires.
Note: In Riyadh, landlords generally cannot refuse to renew a commercial lease due to the sweeping 2025 rent stabilization ordinance, unless strict exemptions are met.
3. Escalation Clauses
Commercial parties can heavily customize rent progression. An Ejar contract can dictate a set percentage increase of rent (an escalation clause) over a multi-year lease. However, these escalation clauses may be superseded by the 5-year Riyadh rent freeze starting in September 2025.
4. Customizing Maintenance and Taxes
The commercial Ejar contract allows landlords to draft "Triple Net" (NNN) equivalent leases. Landlords can legally shift the burden of structural maintenance, property insurance, and municipal taxes entirely onto the commercial tenant, provided it is explicitly agreed upon in the electronic contract.
Commercial Subleasing
Subleasing is a critical component of commercial real estate. Under Saudi law, a commercial tenant cannot sublease the property to a third business entity without the explicit, written consent of the landlord, which must usually be formalized via the Ejar platform. Proceeding without authorization is grounds for immediate eviction.
Rely on Landager to manage the complexities of multi-year commercial leases, tracking escalation clauses and automated renewal dates to keep your Saudi commercial portfolio compliant and profitable.
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