AstroLabs provides comprehensive hiring guidance addressing the compliance questions foreign companies face when expanding to Saudi Arabia. From General Manager onboarding through employee hiring procedures, AstroLabs helps businesses navigate regulatory requirements, manage risks, and establish compliant operations from operational activation.
Why General Manager Onboarding Comes First
The first person companies hire in Saudi Arabia must be the General Manager (GM). Ignoring this step renders entire business setup processes noncompliant. Whether GMs serve as ultimate owners, shareholders, or founders, once they hold Saudi resident IDs (Iqamas), they receive treatment as employees requiring complete government platform updates and standard employment compliance fulfillment.
GM Onboarding Process: Establishing GM legal employment requires creating work contracts linked to Iqama IDs on Qiwa, with Iqamas tied to company sponsorship, and completing GOSI registrations. Once GMs receive full portal registration, health insurance must be provided and maintained. After GMs enter payroll systems, they receive month-to-month payments complying with Wage Protection System requirements, continuing throughout employment.
Work Contract and Insurance Requirements: Registering contracts through Qiwa represents core compliance requirements. Without registered work contracts, individuals lack full work eligibility in Saudi Arabia. Systems issue alerts and flag companies as noncompliant. Over time, this impacts overall compliance scores, restricting abilities to hire additional employees or issue new contracts.
Health insurance proves equally mandatory. The Council of Health Insurance (CHI) requires all residents with valid IDs to maintain health insurance coverage. Even when General Managers hold global insurance policies, locally registered policies remain required. Failures result in Iqama renewal issues, operational disruptions, and potential penalties.
Global entities using the company setup in Saudi Arabia services through AstroLabs complete GM onboarding systematically, ensuring compliance from operational activation, preventing the complications affecting delayed or improper processing.
Navigating Saudi and Non-Saudi Employee Hiring
After GM onboarding, hiring procedures vary depending on whether employees are Saudi nationals or non-Saudis, and for non-Saudis, whether they reside inside or outside the Kingdom.
Mandatory Saudi Hiring Timing: Requirements depend on business objectives. When needing Saudization certificates required for projects or tenders, companies cannot obtain certificates without Saudi national employment. Practical approaches involve hiring Saudis as first employees meeting criteria.
When setting up new entities, allowance periods may enable limited work visa issuance. Once allowance periods end, companies must hire Saudi nationals to unlock additional visas, maintaining compliance. This allowance remains valid only when no expatriate employees are onboard during periods since additional expatriate hiring quotas equal zero. Companies intending early expatriate hiring must also employ Saudi nationals to stay compliant.
Hiring Process Differences: Saudi vs. Non-Saudi
Saudi National Hiring: Straightforward processes begin with formal role offers. Work contracts are initiated through Qiwa specifying job titles, salaries, and contract types. Employees receive notifications reviewing and approving contracts; once approved, onboarding officially occurs.
Following onboarding, employees register with GOSI. Health insurance arrangements prove mandatory for full-time employees. Finally, employees join payroll systems with monthly salary
payments processing, complying with the Wage Protection System. When employment relationships end, offboarding is handled through Qiwa, including contract termination, notice period management, GOSI removal, and end-of-service benefit settlement.
Non-Saudi Employees in the Kingdom: Similar processes require additional
employer-managed steps. Employers must legally perform sponsorship transfers and renew Iqamas. When parties separate, employers either facilitate transfers to new sponsors or process Final Exit visas canceling Iqamas when employees leave Saudi Arabia.
Handling Iqama Expiration During Transfers
Transferring sponsorship does not reset or change existing expiration dates.
Once transfers are complete, companies assume full residency responsibility, requiring active Iqama renewals, ensuring continued legal status. New expiration dates are determined by renewal dates rather than original expirations. Tracking these dates during hiring processes proves critical. When transfers complete without immediate Iqama renewals, employee status could expire shortly after joining, leading to operational disruptions, fines, or government portal service blocks.
Companies completing commercial registration in Saudi Arabia through AstroLabs gain comprehensive hiring guidance preventing portal triggers and compliance gaps affecting workforce development.