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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 |
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Wusool

An HRDF transportation subsidy programme that supports employed Saudi women by covering a portion of their daily commuting costs to work. Updated for 2026.

Donovan Vanderbilt · · 2 min read
Wusool — Encyclopedia — Saudi Vision 2030

Wusool: Saudi Arabia 2026 Explained

Wusool is Saudi Arabia’s Hadaf transport subsidy for working Saudi women and eligible persons with disabilities in 2026. It subsidizes commute trips through approved ride-hailing partners so transport cost does not block private-sector employment.

Overview

Launched by HRDF, Wusool addresses a practical barrier to female employment in Saudi Arabia: the cost and logistics of daily commuting. Before the lifting of the female driving ban in 2018, Saudi women were entirely dependent on male relatives, private drivers, or ride-hailing services to reach their workplaces. Even after the driving ban was lifted, many Saudi women — particularly in lower-income brackets — face significant transportation costs relative to their earnings.

Wusool partners with ride-hailing services to provide subsidized trips for eligible beneficiaries, covering up to 80 percent of commuting costs within defined limits. The programme uses digital platforms for registration, trip tracking, and payment processing, making it efficient to administer and transparent to monitor.

The programme has been credited with enabling tens of thousands of Saudi women to accept and retain private-sector employment that would otherwise be financially unviable due to commuting costs. Wusool operates alongside Qurrah (childcare support) as part of HRDF’s suite of programmes specifically designed to increase female labour force participation.

Key Facts

FactDetail
OperatorHuman Resources Development Fund (HRDF)
Target GroupEmployed Saudi women and persons with disabilities
SubsidyUp to 80% of commuting costs
MechanismPartnerships with ride-hailing services
PlatformDigital registration and trip management
Companion ProgrammeQurrah (childcare subsidy)

Role in Vision 2030

Wusool directly supports Vision 2030’s target of increasing female labour force participation, which has risen dramatically from approximately 17 percent in 2016 to over 30 percent. By removing transportation cost as a barrier, the programme enables women — particularly those in entry-level and mid-level positions — to participate in the workforce and contribute to household income.

The programme exemplifies Vision 2030’s approach of identifying and systematically removing practical barriers to employment, combining policy reform (lifting the driving ban) with programmatic support (transportation subsidies) to achieve measurable outcomes.