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Tax Revenue & E-Invoicing in Saudi Arabia 2026: A Data Report

Tax revenue has become one of the pillars of Saudi economic diversification under Vision 2030. VAT revenue grew from around SAR 47 billion in 2019 to more than SAR 130 billion in 2024, making it the Kingdom’s largest source of non-oil revenue. In parallel, e-invoicing is expanding to cover every registered business by mid-2026. This report tracks Saudi Arabia’s tax-revenue system and digital transformation in numbers, and what they mean for businesses.

Qoyod ReportJune 5, 2026
Tax Revenue & E-Invoicing in Saudi Arabia 2026: A Data Report
+130 billionVAT revenue in 2024 (SAR)
×3Roughly the revenue growth since the rate rose in 2020
15%Standard VAT rate
24E-invoicing waves until full coverage

VAT revenue: the largest non-oil source

Since VAT was introduced in January 2018 and its rate raised to 15% in July 2020, revenue has roughly tripled. It rose from around SAR 47 billion in 2019 to more than SAR 130 billion in 2024, leading non-oil revenue sources, supporting public-finance stability, and reducing reliance on oil.

Growth of VAT revenue (SAR billion)
2019
~47

SAR billion

×3 →approx.
2024
+130

SAR billion

VAT rate trajectory
January 2018
5%

at launch

since July 2020
Today
15%

standard rate

Every business whose taxable revenue exceeds SAR 375,000 per year must register for VAT. Filing is monthly for businesses with revenue above SAR 40 million, and quarterly for those below.

E-invoicing: from the largest enterprises to everyone

The Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority (ZATCA) rolled out e-invoicing (“Fatoora”) in two phases: the generation phase in December 2021 for all registrants, and the integration phase from January 2023 across 24 successive waves by revenue size. Coverage widens steadily with each wave, as the revenue threshold dropped from SAR 3 billion in wave 1 to SAR 375,000 in wave 24, covering by 30 June 2026 every business registered for VAT, in the Gulf’s largest mandatory e-invoicing rollout.

E-invoicing coverage widens until every registered business is included
January 2023 · Wave 1
SAR 3 billion+
Largest enterprises
January 2025 · Wave 13
SAR 7 million+
Expanding to mid-sized businesses
March 2026 · Wave 23
SAR 750,000+
Reaching broader segments
June 2026 · Wave 24
SAR 375,000+
100% of VAT registrants
Key Phase 2 e-invoicing waves (revenue threshold and compliance date)
Wave Annual revenue threshold Compliance date
Wave 1 More than SAR 3 billion January 2023
Wave 6 More than SAR 70 million January 2024
Wave 13 More than SAR 7 million January 2025
Wave 17 More than SAR 2.5 million July 2025
Wave 22 More than SAR 1 million December 2025
Wave 23 More than SAR 750,000 March 2026
Wave 24 More than SAR 375,000 June 2026
The two invoice types in Phase 2: the tax invoice between businesses (B2B) requires real-time clearance from the Authority before it is delivered to the buyer, while the simplified tax invoice for consumers (B2C) is delivered instantly and reported to the Authority within 24 hours.

Saudi Arabia’s tax-revenue system

Alongside VAT, ZATCA oversees an integrated system of taxes and levies, each with its own rate and scope. Notably, Saudi individuals pay no personal income tax.

Types of tax revenue and their rates
Tax Rate Scope
VAT 15% Most goods and services
Zakat 2.5% of the zakat base Businesses owned by Saudis/GCC nationals
Corporate income tax 20% Foreign ownership shares
Withholding tax 5% to 20% Payments to non-residents
Real estate transaction tax 5% Property disposal transactions
Excise tax Varies by product Tobacco, energy drinks, and sweetened drinks

What do these numbers mean for businesses?

With e-invoicing covering every registered business, a cloud accounting system compliant with Phase 2 has become essential for a business’s readiness and efficiency. This is where a accounting system compliant with e-invoicing comes in:

  • Issuing Phase 2 invoices: digitally signing and stamping each invoice with a QR code and hash chain in the approved XML format.
  • Integration with the Fatoora platform: real-time clearance for business invoices and reporting within 24 hours for consumer invoices.
  • Automatic VAT calculation: and preparing return-ready data for filing through the Authority’s portal.
Qoyod is an Arabic cloud accounting system compliant with Phase 2 of e-invoicing: it signs and stamps your invoices, integrates with the Fatoora platform, and prepares your VAT return data. Filing the return and paying the tax remain through the Authority’s portal.

Conclusion

Saudi Arabia is writing a pioneering chapter in digital tax transformation under Vision 2030: VAT revenue that has tripled to lead non-oil sources, and an e-invoicing system, the Gulf’s largest mandatory rollout, expanding to cover every registered business by mid-2026. This transformation raises transparency and collection efficiency, and gives businesses that adopt compliant cloud systems full readiness and a real operational edge.

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