Cost of Living in Saudi Arabia for Expats 2026 — Complete Monthly Budget Guide

Saudi Arabia is genuinely one of the best places in the world to save money — zero income tax, subsidised utilities and no alcohol costs make a significant difference to take-home pay. But rent in premium expat areas and international school fees can consume a large budget quickly. This guide breaks down every major cost category with real 2026 numbers for Riyadh, Jeddah and Al Khobar, and builds realistic monthly budgets for single professionals, couples and families.

Quick Summary — Cost of Living 2026

  • Zero income tax — your entire gross salary is take-home pay
  • Single professional: SAR 5,000–9,000/month for comfortable living
  • Couple (no children): SAR 10,000–18,000/month comfortably
  • Family with 2 kids in international school: SAR 22,000–40,000/month
  • Biggest costs: Rent + school fees (together often 60–70% of budget)
  • Biggest savings: No tax, no alcohol, cheap utilities, cheap petrol
  • Riyadh vs Jeddah: Riyadh is 10–20% more expensive for equivalent housing

Why Saudi Arabia Is Different From Other Expat Destinations

Saudi Arabia has a fundamentally different cost structure from most expat destinations, and understanding this is essential before evaluating any job offer.

The biggest single difference is zero personal income tax. A SAR 20,000 monthly salary in Saudi Arabia puts SAR 20,000 in your account — compared to roughly SAR 12,000–14,000 equivalent after tax in the UK, Germany or Australia. This single factor makes Saudi Arabia exceptionally attractive for aggressive savers.

The second major difference is what you do not spend money on: alcohol (not sold), nightclubs (limited), gambling (illegal). For many expats, these categories represent SAR 2,000–5,000 per month in their home countries. In Saudi Arabia, that money is either saved or redirected to dining out, travel and family activities.

Income Tax
0%
Every riyal of salary is take-home pay
Typical Expat Savings Rate
25–40%
Of total salary — vs 5–15% in most Western countries
Petrol Price (per litre)
~0.67
SAR 0.67/litre (Octane 91) — fraction of European cost

Monthly Budget by Expat Profile

Select the profile that best matches your situation — each section below gives a detailed breakdown:

Single Professional — Monthly Budget

1-bedroom apartment in a decent area, one car, eating out 3–4 times per week

Monthly Total
SAR 5,500
to SAR 9,500
Rent — 1-bedroom apartment

Decent expat-friendly area. Riyadh / Jeddah / Khobar.

SAR 2,500–4,200
per month
Food — Groceries + eating out

Mix of supermarket and restaurants. South Asian / Middle Eastern dining is cheap.

SAR 800–1,800
per month
Transport — Car loan / Uber / petrol

Car loan repayment + fuel. Or Uber/Careem if car-free.

SAR 600–1,500
per month
Utilities — Electricity, water, gas

Higher in summer (AC). SAR 150 winter / SAR 400 summer average.

SAR 150–450
per month
Internet + mobile phone

Home fibre (SAR 199) + mobile data plan (SAR 80–120).

SAR 280–360
per month
Healthcare / health insurance top-up

Employer usually provides basic health insurance. Co-pay / top-ups / dentist.

SAR 100–400
per month
Leisure — Gym, travel, activities

Gym membership, weekend trips, streaming subscriptions, shopping.

SAR 500–1,500
per month
Miscellaneous / buffer

Personal care, clothing, unexpected costs.

SAR 200–500
per month

Couple — Monthly Budget

2-bedroom apartment, two cars or one + Uber, comfortable lifestyle, regular dining out

Monthly Total
SAR 9,500
to SAR 18,000
Rent — 2-bedroom apartment

Good expat area in Riyadh or Jeddah. Prices vary significantly by district.

SAR 3,500–6,000
per month
Food — Groceries + dining out

Regular restaurant meals, quality supermarket shopping. No alcohol costs.

SAR 1,500–3,500
per month
Transport — 1–2 cars + petrol

Car loan(s) repayment + very cheap petrol (SAR 0.67–0.90/litre).

SAR 1,000–2,500
per month
Utilities — Electricity, water, gas

Larger apartment — higher AC bill in summer months.

SAR 250–700
per month
Internet + 2 mobile phones

Home fibre + two SIM plans.

SAR 400–600
per month
Healthcare for two

Employer typically covers employee — spouse may require separate insurance or top-up.

SAR 300–900
per month
Leisure — Travel, gym, entertainment

Weekend trips, annual leave flights home, activities, shopping.

SAR 1,200–3,000
per month
Miscellaneous / buffer

Personal care, clothing, household items, home help (cleaner / driver).

SAR 500–1,200
per month

Family — Monthly Budget

Villa or large apartment, 2 children in international school, 2 cars, full expat lifestyle

Monthly Total
SAR 22,000
to SAR 40,000+
Rent — Villa or large 3-bed apartment

Family-sized property in a good expat area or compound.

SAR 5,500–12,000
per month
International school fees — 2 children

British / American curriculum SAR 80K–120K/year per child. Many employers cover this.

SAR 7,000–20,000
per month (2 children)
Food — Family groceries + dining

Family of 4. Western supermarkets, regular restaurant outings.

SAR 2,500–5,000
per month
Transport — 2 cars + school run

Two car loans / leases, petrol, school bus if available.

SAR 2,000–4,000
per month
Utilities — Villa / large home

Villa electricity bills are significant in summer — SAR 800–1,500/month possible.

SAR 400–1,200
per month
Healthcare — Family coverage

Family health insurance top-up, dental, specialist appointments.

SAR 600–1,500
per month
Leisure — Family activities, travel

Weekend activities, school activities, annual leave flights for 4, shopping.

SAR 2,500–5,000
per month
Household help — Cleaner / nanny

Domestic help is affordable in Saudi Arabia and very common in expat families.

SAR 800–2,000
per month

Grocery & Everyday Prices — 2026 Reference

Saudi Arabia's supermarkets (Tamimi, Danube, Panda, Carrefour, Lulu) stock a wide range of local and imported products. Local and Gulf-produced items are cheap — imported Western speciality goods carry a premium.

Item Typical Price (SAR) Notes
🛒 Supermarket Staples
Chicken (1kg, fresh)SAR 12–20Local produce — very affordable
Beef / Lamb (1kg)SAR 30–60Imported beef is higher
Eggs (12 pack)SAR 10–16Local — good value
Rice (5kg bag)SAR 18–35Basmati or local varieties
Bread (local flatbread)SAR 2–5Very cheap — local bakers
Milk (1 litre)SAR 5–9Local brands affordable
Cheese (imported 200g)SAR 18–35Imported carries premium
Vegetables (per kg)SAR 3–15Tomatoes, cucumber — cheap
🍽️ Eating Out
Local restaurant meal (1 person)SAR 20–50Indian, Pakistani, Lebanese
Western chain (McD / KFC)SAR 35–60Per person with drink
Mid-range restaurant (1 person)SAR 60–120Decent sit-down meal
Fine dining (1 person)SAR 150–350Premium restaurants, Riyadh
Coffee (café)SAR 18–28Specialty coffee culture is strong
🚗 Transport & Fuel
Petrol — Octane 91 (per litre)SAR 0.67Among cheapest in the world
Petrol — Octane 95 (per litre)SAR 0.90Premium fuel
Uber / Careem (5km trip)SAR 12–25Widely available and reliable
Car wash (full)SAR 25–60Very affordable

International School Fees in Saudi Arabia 2026

School fees are the largest variable cost for expat families — and the most important thing to negotiate as part of your employment package. Many employers cover school fees as a separate benefit; if yours does not, the numbers below should guide your negotiation.

School Type / Curriculum Annual Fee (per child) Notes
British curriculum (top schools)SAR 70,000–120,000BSJ Jeddah, BISAK Riyadh — premium
American curriculumSAR 60,000–100,000American International Schools
IB (International Baccalaureate)SAR 55,000–95,000Growing number of IB schools
French / German curriculumSAR 40,000–75,000Smaller number of schools
Indian curriculum (CBSE)SAR 12,000–30,000Most affordable — widely available
Pakistani / Filipino curriculumSAR 10,000–25,000Budget option — large networks
Aramco Camp schoolsIncluded (Aramco employees)Arabian American Academy — no fee for qualifying staff
💡 Negotiate school fees: If you have children and an employer is not offering a school fee allowance, negotiate for one. Frame it as: "The school fee costs are SAR X per child per year — I'd need this covered to make the relocation financially viable." Many employers, particularly multinationals and oil & gas firms, have established school fee policies and simply do not volunteer them upfront.

Cost of Living by City — Riyadh vs Jeddah vs Al Khobar

📍 Riyadh

1-bed rent/monthSAR 2,800–4,500
2-bed rent/monthSAR 4,000–6,500
Restaurant (mid)SAR 70–130
Gym membershipSAR 200–500/mo
Domestic cleanerSAR 50–100/visit
Overall ratingMost expensive

📍 Jeddah

1-bed rent/monthSAR 2,300–3,800
2-bed rent/monthSAR 3,200–5,500
Restaurant (mid)SAR 60–110
Gym membershipSAR 180–450/mo
Domestic cleanerSAR 45–90/visit
Overall rating10–15% cheaper

📍 Al Khobar

1-bed rent/monthSAR 1,800–3,200
2-bed rent/monthSAR 2,800–4,800
Restaurant (mid)SAR 55–100
Gym membershipSAR 150–400/mo
Domestic cleanerSAR 40–80/visit
Overall rating15–25% cheaper

Frequently Asked Questions — Cost of Living Saudi Arabia 2026

How much does it cost to live in Saudi Arabia as an expat?

A single professional living modestly can manage on SAR 4,000–6,000 per month. A couple with a comfortable lifestyle needs SAR 9,000–18,000. A family with children in international school typically spends SAR 22,000–40,000 per month. Saudi Arabia offers significant savings potential — zero income tax, cheap utilities and no alcohol costs — but international school fees and premium housing can be very expensive.

Is Saudi Arabia expensive for expats?

Saudi Arabia is mid-range — less expensive than Dubai or Singapore, but more expensive than most Southeast Asian expat destinations. The biggest savings are zero income tax, subsidised utilities, no alcohol costs and very cheap petrol. The biggest costs are rent in premium areas and international school fees. The net effect for most professional expats is significantly higher savings than in Western countries.

What is a good salary to live comfortably in Saudi Arabia?

For a single professional to live comfortably in Riyadh or Jeddah, a total package of SAR 12,000–16,000 per month (including housing allowance) is comfortable. For a couple without children, SAR 18,000–25,000 gives a very comfortable lifestyle. For a family with children in international school, SAR 30,000–45,000+ is needed — though many employers cover school fees as a separate benefit.

How much does rent cost in Saudi Arabia?

In Riyadh, a 1-bedroom apartment in a decent expat area costs SAR 30,000–50,000 per year. A 2-bedroom costs SAR 45,000–70,000. Jeddah is 10–20% cheaper and Al Khobar is 15–25% cheaper. Rent is typically paid annually or semi-annually in Saudi Arabia — you need a significant lump sum available upfront, which is an important cash flow consideration.

Is food expensive in Saudi Arabia?

Supermarket basics — meat, rice, bread, eggs, vegetables — are reasonably priced. Imported Western specialty items carry a premium. Eating at local restaurants is very affordable (SAR 20–50 per person). Western chain restaurants and upscale dining are more expensive. A single person can manage a comfortable food budget of SAR 1,200–2,500 per month including groceries and regular eating out.

How much are international school fees in Saudi Arabia?

British and American curriculum schools charge SAR 60,000–120,000 per year per child. Indian and Pakistani curriculum schools are significantly cheaper at SAR 10,000–30,000. Many employers — particularly multinationals and oil and gas companies — provide school fee allowances. Always negotiate school fee coverage as part of your offer if you have children.