Most professionals know that financial services and residential real estate carry VAT exemptions in Saudi Arabia. Far fewer understand exactly where those exemptions end — and what the consequences are when a supply falls just outside the line.
The Legal Framework
Saudi VAT exemptions are governed by Chapter Five of the VAT Implementing Regulations, issued under VAT Law Royal Decree No. M/113 dated 02/11/1438H. Two provisions carry the weight of this entire category:
- Article Twenty-Nine — Financial Services: the scope of exempt financial activity and the critical margin-vs-fee test
- Article Thirty — Real Estate Supplies Exempt from Tax: which transfers and leases are covered, and who is excluded
The GCC VAT Agreement underpins both categories. Article 36 of the Agreement provides that financial services performed by licensed banks and financial institutions are exempt. Article 30 of the Implementing Regulations addresses real estate, and has been amended multiple times — most significantly in October 2020 when commercial property sales were brought into the exemption.
Both exemptions are input-blocked by design. Businesses making exempt supplies generally cannot recover the VAT they incur on related costs. This is not a technicality — it is a permanent structural cost embedded in every exempt business model.
Financial Services: The Core Rule
The starting principle under Article 29(1) is deceptively simple: supplies of the financial services listed in the article are exempt from VAT — except where the consideration is paid by way of an explicit fee, commission, or commercial discount.
That single exception does most of the analytical work in financial services VAT.
Services Covered by the Exemption
Article 29(2) lists the qualifying services:
- Issue, transfer, or receipt of, or any dealing with, money or securities for money
- Provision of credit or credit guarantees
- Operation of current, deposit, or savings accounts
- Dealing in financial instruments — derivatives, options, swaps, credit default swaps, futures
The Margin vs. Fee Test
When a bank earns its return through an interest margin or spread — even when embedded in the product structure — the supply is exempt. When the bank charges an explicit, separately identified fee, that charge is VATable at the standard 15% rate.
| Type of Income | Mechanism | VAT Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Net interest income / margin | Embedded spread | Exempt |
| Murabaha profit element | Implicit margin in sale price | Exempt |
| Diminishing musharaka profit | Embedded in periodic payments | Exempt |
| Transaction processing fees | Explicit, separately charged | 15% VAT |
| Annual card / account fees | Explicit, separately charged | 15% VAT |
| Advisory / arrangement fees | Explicit, separately charged | 15% VAT |
| Life insurance / takaful premiums | Any form (including explicit fee) | Exempt (special rule) |
Article 29(3) is explicit: Shari’ah-compliant products that simulate and achieve the same economic result as a conventional financial product are treated identically for VAT. A murabaha is assessed the same way as a conventional loan. A wakala mirrors conventional investment management. The framework is designed for competitive neutrality.
Real Estate: What the Exemption Actually Covers
Article 30 exempts two distinct categories of real estate supply. They operate differently, and confusing them is one of the most common real estate VAT errors in practice.
Limb One — Ownership Transfers: The supply of real estate through a transfer of ownership covers all property types — commercial, residential, agricultural, and bare land. This is broad and unconditional on property type.
Limb Two — Leases: Only residential real estate leases are exempt. Commercial leases are standard-rated at 15%. The exemption does not extend to commercial lettings, regardless of term or structure.
Defining Residential Real Estate
Article 30(2) defines residential real estate as a permanent dwelling designed for human occupation — including houses, flats, apartments, and other property used or intended as a primary home. Student accommodation and school pupil accommodation are expressly included.
The definition hinges on two elements: the property must be permanent, and it must be designed for occupation as a home. Both matter. A property structurally repurposed for temporary use, or marketed and operated as short-term accommodation, loses its residential character.
The Hard Exclusion: Hotels and Temporary Accommodation
Article 30(3) draws an unambiguous line. Hotels, inns, guest houses, motels, serviced accommodation, and any building designed to offer temporary accommodation to visitors or travellers are explicitly not residential real estate.
The exclusion does not depend on how long guests stay. A purpose-built serviced apartment block is excluded even if some occupants stay for months. The design and operational purpose of the building determines its VAT classification — not any individual guest’s length of stay.
Practical Scenarios
A bank charges a corporate client an annual facility fee, explicitly stated in the facility letter and billed separately. Result: Standard-rated at 15%. The margin on the facility itself remains exempt.
A developer transfers ownership of a residential villa to a buyer. Result: Exempt. All ownership transfers of all property types fall under Article 30(1)(a) — property type does not restrict the exemption on sale.
A landlord leases a furnished flat to a family under a two-year residential contract. Result: Exempt. Residential lease under Article 30(1)(b).
A company leases office space under a monthly licence. Result: Standard-rated at 15%. Commercial real estate leases are taxable; only residential leases are exempt.
A hospitality company operates nightly and weekly lets in a furnished apartment building marketed to business travellers. Result: Standard-rated at 15%. Explicitly excluded under Article 30(3) — designed for temporary accommodation.
An investment manager charges a quarterly fee of 0.75% of AUM, billed to the client separately. Result: Standard-rated at 15%. An explicit, identifiable fee for a service — not an embedded margin.
The Input VAT Recovery Consequence
This is where the financial stakes become real — and where many businesses underestimate the cost of operating in exempt territory.
| Feature | Zero-Rated | Exempt |
|---|---|---|
| Output VAT charged to customer | 0% | None |
| Input VAT on related costs | Fully Recoverable | Blocked |
| Mixed-use cost recovery | Full (if exclusively for zero-rated) | Proportional only |
| Examples | Exports, medicines, international transport | Financial margin income, residential leases |
Under Article 51(2) of the Implementing Regulations, VAT incurred on costs exclusively attributable to exempt supplies is not recoverable. For mixed businesses — banks, insurance companies, real estate developers — the default proportional deduction method under Article 51(3) applies: a fraction of taxable supply value over total supply value, based on the prior year’s figures.
For a large bank generating 70% of its income from exempt margin-based activities, approximately 70% of the VAT on technology, premises, and professional services is permanently irrecoverable. At the scale of major Saudi financial institutions, this represents a material cost — potentially hundreds of millions of riyals annually.
Compliance Risks
- Misclassifying explicit fees as margin-based income. Banks that recharacterise fees as embedded margin to access the exemption face significant audit risk. ZATCA assesses the economic substance of the charge — not its label.
- Treating short-term lettings as residential. Furnished apartments let nightly or weekly, or operated through accommodation platforms, are not residential real estate. The design and operational model of the letting, not the physical property, determines the classification.
- Failing to track partial exemption correctly. Mixed-use businesses without a robust apportionment methodology are exposed to over-claimed input VAT — which ZATCA will assess with penalties and interest.
- Assuming all real estate costs are VAT-free. The sale of residential property is exempt, but the input VAT on construction costs is not automatically recoverable. If the development was always intended for exempt use, the VAT on construction is a permanent cost that must be modelled into project economics from day one.
- Ignoring the April 2025 amendments. The April 2025 bylaw amendments introduced new rules for online marketplace deemed-supplier status, credit note timing, and input tax language — all with direct implications for financial sector businesses operating digital platforms or murabaha portfolios.
- Financial services are exempt when consideration is earned through an embedded margin or spread. Explicit fees, commissions, and discounts are standard-rated at 15%.
- Life insurance and reinsurance carry a special exemption — they remain exempt even when charged as an explicit fee.
- Islamic finance products follow the same VAT treatment as their conventional equivalents. The framework is designed for neutrality.
- All real estate ownership transfers are exempt, regardless of property type — commercial, residential, or bare land.
- Only residential real estate leases are exempt. Commercial leases are standard-rated at 15%.
- Hotels, serviced apartments, and temporary accommodation are explicitly excluded from the residential exemption — by design, not by duration of stay.
- Exempt supplies block input VAT recovery. Zero-rated supplies do not. This distinction is one of the most commercially significant in the entire Saudi VAT framework.
- Mixed-use businesses must apply proportional deduction methodology to shared overhead — and must document it rigorously.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Regulations referenced are based on ZATCA publications current at time of writing. Always verify with a qualified Saudi tax professional for your specific circumstances.