The General Rule: Court-Ordered Transfers Are Taxable
Real estate does not always move between parties by mutual agreement. Courts order property transfers in enforcement proceedings, liquidations, divorce settlements, partition disputes, and expropriation processes. The RETT Law does not exempt involuntary transfers simply because they are ordered by a court. A court order directing a real estate transfer creates a taxable event under the same principles as a voluntary sale — the ownership changes, and RETT is assessed on the value of the real estate transferred.
The assignor (seller/transferring party) remains the person primarily responsible for RETT even in an involuntary transfer. Where that party lacks the means to pay — as in insolvency proceedings — RETT becomes part of the administration of the estate. Understanding which specific transfers are exempt is therefore critical for insolvency practitioners, court-appointed receivers, liquidators, and their advisors.
The Key Exemptions for Involuntary Transfers
Exemption 1: Forced Sale under Bankruptcy Law (Article 3(15))
Real estate transactions implementing a forced sale order issued by a competent court are exempt from RETT — but only in cases of liquidation and administrative liquidation in accordance with the Bankruptcy Law and its Implementing Regulations.
This is a specific, narrow exemption. It covers court-directed property sales in formal bankruptcy or administrative liquidation proceedings under Saudi Arabia’s Bankruptcy Law. The rationale: in these proceedings, the property is being sold to satisfy creditors, and imposing RETT would reduce creditor recoveries and conflict with the purpose of the Bankruptcy Law.
The exemption is limited to the specific bankruptcy context. A forced sale in other enforcement contexts — for example, a court ordering a property sold to satisfy a judgment debt outside the Bankruptcy Law framework — is not automatically exempt under this provision. Legal analysis of the specific court order and its statutory basis is required.
Exemption 2: Expropriation for Public Benefit (Article 3(6))
Real estate transactions resulting from the expropriation of property or its temporary seizure in accordance with relevant Saudi regulations — including the return of the property to the original owner in accordance with those regulations — are exempt from RETT.
This covers the compulsory acquisition of private real estate by the government for public benefit (road construction, utilities, infrastructure). The owner receives compensation but is not required to pay RETT on the transfer to the government. Similarly, if the property is temporarily seized and subsequently returned to the owner, neither the outward transfer nor the return triggers RETT.
Scenario
The Ministry of Transport issues an expropriation order for a strip of Hamad Al-Shammari’s agricultural land in Al-Qassim to accommodate a new highway. The land parcel expropriated has a value of SAR 800,000. Compensation of SAR 800,000 is paid to Hamad.
RETT Position
Exempt under Article 3(6) of the RETT Implementing Regulations. The expropriation is carried out pursuant to the relevant regulations for public benefit. Hamad receives his full compensation without a SAR 40,000 RETT reduction. The transaction must still be registered with ZATCA and the exemption obtained before the title transfer is processed.
The Critical Distinction: Foreclosure vs. Expropriation
These two types of involuntary transfer are frequently confused, and the RETT treatment differs significantly.
| Type of Transfer | Initiated By | Legal Basis | RETT Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expropriation for public benefit | Government / public authority | Expropriation regulations for public interest | Exempt |
| Forced sale under Bankruptcy Law | Court / bankruptcy trustee | Bankruptcy Law and Implementing Regulations | Exempt |
| Mortgage foreclosure (outside Bankruptcy Law) | Lender / court | Finance Law / general enforcement | Taxable — unless public auction exemption applies |
| Court-ordered partition with compensation | Court | Civil court proceedings | Taxable on the compensation element |
| Voluntary liquidation property sale | Company / liquidator | Companies Law voluntary winding-up | Taxable |
| Divorce settlement property transfer | Court / parties | Personal status / Sharia court | Generally taxable (analyse as sale or gift depending on facts) |
The bankruptcy exemption covers court-ordered forced sales in liquidation and administrative liquidation under the Bankruptcy Law. Voluntary liquidation — where a company chooses to wind up and sell its assets — does not benefit from this exemption. A voluntarily liquidating company transferring real estate is executing a taxable RETT disposal at 5% of FMV. The distinction matters enormously in corporate restructuring and insolvency planning.
Public Auction Sales
Real estate sold by public auction is a specific category addressed in the RETT timing rules. The notarization of a real estate sale at a public auction (except for cases related to the execution of a forced sale order that is exempt) is treated like a standard notarized sale for RETT purposes — tax is due before or on the date of notarization with the Notary Public or Accredited Notary. The public auction mechanism does not change the RETT obligations; it only changes how the buyer is identified.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Court-ordered transfers are taxable by default. Involuntary does not mean exempt.
- Two key exemptions: (a) forced sales under the Bankruptcy Law in liquidation/administrative liquidation proceedings, and (b) expropriation for public benefit.
- Voluntary liquidation property sales are taxable. Only court-ordered Bankruptcy Law forced sales are exempt.
- Mortgage foreclosure outside the Bankruptcy Law framework is generally taxable.
- Expropriation exemption covers the transfer to the government and the return of temporarily seized property — both legs are exempt.
Related Articles
Grounded in the RETT Law (Royal Decree No. M/84, effective 10 April 2025), Implementing Regulations (ZATCA Board Resolution No. 01-03-25, 24 March 2025), and ZATCA’s Detailed Guideline Version 6 (May 2026). For informational purposes only. dariba.co is an independent knowledge platform.
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