Utilities & Internet Setup in Saudi Arabia 2026 — Complete Expat Guide

Moving into a new apartment in Saudi Arabia means sorting out electricity, water, gas and internet — all at once, often without much guidance. This guide covers every utility you need to set up, what it costs, which providers to choose, and the practical steps to get everything running as quickly as possible.

Quick Summary — What You Need to Set Up

  • Electricity: Saudi Electricity Company (SEC) — register at mysec.com.sa or in person with Iqama + lease
  • Water: NWC (National Water Company) in most cities — often pre-connected by landlord
  • Gas: LPG cylinder delivery — no registration needed, just call a local supplier
  • Internet: STC is the largest and most reliable — fibre available in most urban areas from SAR 199/month
  • Mobile SIM: STC, Zain or Mobily — need Iqama for postpaid, passport for prepaid
  • Streaming: Netflix, Spotify, Disney+ and YouTube all work without VPN
  • Average monthly utility total: SAR 300–700 for a 2-bed apartment (excluding summer AC peak)

Who Pays Utilities — Landlord or Tenant?

In the vast majority of Saudi Arabia apartment rentals, utilities are the tenant's responsibility. Electricity and water bills are registered in the tenant's name (or sometimes the landlord's name with costs passed through), and the tenant pays monthly based on usage. Gas cylinders are always the tenant's responsibility.

Some furnished serviced apartments include utilities in the rent — always confirm this in writing before signing. Standard unfurnished or semi-furnished apartments almost never include utilities. Always ask your landlord before moving in:

The Four Utilities — Costs and Setup

Electricity — SEC

Saudi Electricity Company

Winter / Month SAR 50–200
Summer / Month SAR 200–700
  • Register at mysec.com.sa or any SEC office
  • Need: Iqama, meter number, lease contract
  • Connection fee: approx. SAR 100–200 for new accounts
  • Rates are government-subsidised — much cheaper than Europe
  • Tiered pricing — heavy users pay more per kWh
  • Bill via SMS — pay online, at ATM or SEC app

Water — NWC / SWCC

National Water Company

1-Bed / Month SAR 20–60
Villa / Month SAR 60–180
  • Water is very cheap — heavily subsidised
  • Often already connected when you move in
  • Register at nwc.com.sa or NWC office
  • In Eastern Province: MARAFIQ handles utilities
  • In many apartments: water included in rent or building charges
  • Drinking water: most expats use bottled or filtered water

Gas — LPG Cylinder

Cylinder Delivery Service

Per Cylinder SAR 15–25
Monthly Est. SAR 15–50
  • No piped gas in most residential buildings
  • LPG (butane/propane) cylinders used for cooking
  • Ask your building guard or landlord for a local supplier number
  • Delivery within hours — no registration needed
  • An average kitchen uses 1 cylinder per 3–6 weeks
  • Some newer buildings have piped gas — check with landlord

Internet — Fibre Broadband

STC / Zain / Mobily

Basic Fibre SAR 199/mo
1 Gbps SAR 349–499
  • Fibre (FTTH) widely available across Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam
  • STC is the most widely available and reliable
  • Contract: 12 months typical — need Iqama to sign
  • Installation: usually within 3–7 working days
  • Speeds: 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps available in most areas
  • Router included in subscription

Internet Providers in Saudi Arabia — Which Should You Choose?

Saudi Arabia has three main telecoms providers for both home broadband and mobile data. STC dominates the market but competition has improved quality and pricing significantly since 2022. Here is how they compare for expats:

STC
Best Overall Coverage
Fibre fromSAR 199/mo
Max speedUp to 1 Gbps
CoverageWidest — all cities
Mobile networkBest 5G coverage
Contract12 months
Zain
Strong Value Packages
Fibre fromSAR 179/mo
Max speedUp to 1 Gbps
CoverageGood — major cities
Mobile networkGood 4G/5G
Contract12 months
Mobily
Popular for Mobile Data
Fibre fromSAR 189/mo
Max speedUp to 1 Gbps
CoverageGood — urban areas
Mobile networkGood — popular prepaid
Contract12 months
💡 Tip: Before signing a 12-month broadband contract, check whether your building is already wired for a specific provider. Some buildings have exclusive agreements with STC or Zain — switching providers may require running new cabling, which adds delay. Ask your landlord or building manager before ordering.

SIM Cards — Getting Connected Immediately

Getting a local SIM card should be one of your first tasks after arriving in Saudi Arabia. Mobile data is excellent across all three networks in urban areas, and prepaid packages are among the most affordable in the Gulf region.

Provider Prepaid Available Typical Data Package Monthly Cost Best For
STC Yes — passport only 50GB + unlimited calls SAR 85–120 Best overall coverage and reliability
Zain Yes — passport only 40GB + calls SAR 65–100 Value packages, good for data-heavy users
Mobily Yes — passport only 40GB + calls SAR 60–95 Popular prepaid — often cheaper entry plans
⚠️ Postpaid vs Prepaid: You can get a prepaid SIM with just your passport at the airport on arrival. For a postpaid contract with a monthly plan, you need your Iqama. Most expats start on prepaid and switch to postpaid once their Iqama is ready — postpaid usually offers better value for regular users.

Step-by-Step — Setting Up Home Internet (STC)

1

Check building fibre availability

Go to stc.com.sa and enter your address to confirm fibre coverage. Most urban apartments in Riyadh, Jeddah and Al Khobar built after 2015 are fibre-ready. Older buildings may only have ADSL or 4G home broadband options.

2

Choose your package

STC offers tiered packages — typically 100 Mbps (SAR 199), 300 Mbps (SAR 249), 500 Mbps (SAR 299) and 1 Gbps (SAR 399–499). For a single person or couple, 100–300 Mbps is more than sufficient. For families or multiple devices streaming simultaneously, 500 Mbps or above.

3

Order online or visit an STC store

You can order online at stc.com.sa or visit any STC store. Bring your Iqama and a copy of your lease contract. The agent will check your address, confirm the package and schedule a technician visit for installation.

4

Technician visit and installation

A technician will visit within 3–7 working days to install the fibre connection and router. The router is included in the package. Installation typically takes 1–2 hours. Make sure someone is home during the appointment window.

5

Activate and download the MySTC app

Once connected, download the MySTC app to manage your account, pay bills, monitor usage and contact support. Bills are issued monthly and can be paid via the app, online banking or at any STC store or ATM.

Monthly Utility Cost Summary — What to Budget

Utility 1-Bed Apt (Low Season) 1-Bed Apt (Summer Peak) 3-Bed Villa (Summer)
Electricity (SEC) SAR 80–150 SAR 300–600 SAR 600–1,200
Water (NWC) SAR 20–40 SAR 30–60 SAR 60–150
Gas (LPG) SAR 15–30 SAR 15–30 SAR 25–50
Internet (fibre) SAR 199–299 SAR 199–299 SAR 249–499
Mobile SIM (1 person) SAR 65–120 SAR 65–120 SAR 65–120
Total Estimate SAR 380–640 SAR 610–1,100 SAR 1,000–2,020
🌡️ Summer Warning: Saudi Arabia's summer (June–September) regularly exceeds 45°C. Air conditioning runs 24 hours a day — electricity bills can triple or quadruple compared to winter months. Budget for this when calculating your monthly living costs. Many expats are surprised by their first summer electricity bill.

Streaming, Apps and What Works in Saudi Arabia

The digital landscape in Saudi Arabia has improved dramatically since 2019. Most major streaming and communication platforms work without any issues:

Some adult content sites, gambling sites and certain politically sensitive content remains blocked. For typical expat day-to-day digital life, virtually nothing you need will be unavailable.

Frequently Asked Questions — Utilities in Saudi Arabia

Who pays utilities in Saudi Arabia — landlord or tenant?

In the vast majority of Saudi Arabia rentals, utilities are the tenant's responsibility. Electricity and water are paid by whoever uses them. Always confirm in writing with your landlord before signing — some furnished apartments include utilities in the rent, but most standard rentals do not. Gas cylinders are always the tenant's responsibility.

How much is the electricity bill in Saudi Arabia?

Electricity is heavily subsidised in Saudi Arabia — much cheaper than Europe or North America. For a 1-bedroom apartment, expect SAR 80–150 per month in winter and SAR 300–600 per month in summer (June–September) when air conditioning runs constantly. A large villa can reach SAR 1,000–1,500 per month in peak summer. Budget carefully for your first summer.

What is the best internet provider in Saudi Arabia for expats?

STC (Saudi Telecom Company) is the largest and most widely available provider and the default choice for most expats. Fibre packages start at SAR 199/month for 100 Mbps. Zain and Mobily are good alternatives — Zain often has competitive bundle deals. Check which provider has existing infrastructure in your building before ordering, as this affects installation speed.

Can expats get a SIM card in Saudi Arabia?

Yes — easily. Prepaid SIM cards are available at the airport with just your passport. For a postpaid contract with a monthly plan, you need your Iqama. STC, Zain and Mobily all sell SIMs at retail stores across the country. Prepaid data packages are very affordable — around SAR 60–120 per month for 40–50GB plus calls.

Does WhatsApp work in Saudi Arabia?

Yes — WhatsApp calls, video calls and messaging all work fully in Saudi Arabia. This has been the case since 2017 when Saudi Arabia lifted restrictions on VoIP calling. FaceTime, Zoom, Teams, Skype and most other communication platforms also work normally. No VPN is needed for WhatsApp or most standard communication apps.

Are there VPN restrictions in Saudi Arabia?

VPNs are not explicitly banned for personal use in Saudi Arabia, and many expats use them without issue. Saudi Arabia blocks some websites — primarily adult content, gambling sites and certain politically sensitive material. For typical expat digital life, almost nothing you need is blocked. Netflix, Spotify, Disney+, YouTube, WhatsApp and social media all work without a VPN.