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Non-Oil GDP Share: 55% 2025 real GDP |Saudi Unemployment: 7.2% Q4 2025 |PIF AUM: $925B 2025 approx. |FDI Share of GDP: 2.8% 2025 latest |Female Participation: 35.0% 2025 latest |Credit Rating: Aa3/A+/A+ Moody's/Fitch/S&P |GDP Growth: 4.5% 2025 actual |Umrah Pilgrims: 18M+ 2025 foreign |Non-Oil GDP Share: 55% 2025 real GDP |Saudi Unemployment: 7.2% Q4 2025 |PIF AUM: $925B 2025 approx. |FDI Share of GDP: 2.8% 2025 latest |Female Participation: 35.0% 2025 latest |Credit Rating: Aa3/A+/A+ Moody's/Fitch/S&P |GDP Growth: 4.5% 2025 actual |Umrah Pilgrims: 18M+ 2025 foreign |
Home Vision 2030 Encyclopedia Privatization Program
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Privatization Program

The Vision 2030 programme transferring government-owned assets and services to the private sector through divestitures, IPOs, and public-private partnerships.

Donovan Vanderbilt · · 2 min read
Privatization Program — Encyclopedia — Saudi Vision 2030

Privatization Program Saudi Arabia 2026 Explained

Saudi Arabia’s Privatization Program in 2026 is a Vision Realization Program designed to increase private-sector participation by transferring selected government-owned enterprises and public services to private-sector management or ownership through divestitures, IPOs, concessions, and PPP arrangements.

Overview

Saudi Arabia’s economy has historically been dominated by the public sector, with the government directly operating everything from healthcare and education to water utilities and postal services. The Privatization Program aims to transform this model by systematically transferring suitable government assets and services to the private sector, improving efficiency, generating government revenue, and creating new investment opportunities.

The programme, overseen by the National Center for Privatization and PPP (NCP), has identified 16 sectors for potential privatization. Transactions range from full divestitures (selling government-owned companies outright) to partial IPOs on the Tadawul, to PPP contracts where private operators manage government facilities under performance-based agreements.

Notable privatization transactions and initiatives include the Saudi Aramco IPO (the world’s largest), the planned IPO of additional state entities, the corporatization and potential partial privatization of water utilities (NWC), health sector corporatization, and PPP contracts for educational facility management and municipal services. The programme faces challenges including political sensitivity, regulatory readiness, workforce transition, and the need to protect public interest in essential services.

Key Facts

FactDetail
TypeVision Realization Program
OversightNational Center for Privatization (NCP)
Sectors Identified16
Transaction TypesDivestitures, IPOs, PPPs, concessions
Landmark TransactionSaudi Aramco IPO
Key SectorsHealthcare, water, education, transport, energy
ObjectivesEfficiency, revenue, private-sector growth

Role in Vision 2030

The Privatization Program is essential to Vision 2030’s goal of expanding the private sector’s role in the economy from 40 percent to 65 percent of GDP. Privatization generates immediate fiscal revenue from asset sales, improves service delivery through private-sector management practices, creates investment opportunities for domestic and foreign capital, and deepens the Tadawul through new listings.

The programme also supports Saudisation by creating private-sector employment in newly privatized entities and encourages foreign investment as international operators bid for Saudi PPP contracts and concessions.