The amended Social Insurance Law, effective July 3, 2024, establishes a new social security retirement system for new entrants to the labor market and introduces changes for many individuals already employed. The new system applies uniformly to both public and private sector employment — which was not previously the case — thus making it easier for employees to move between sectors. As a result, the benefits landscape for Saudi nationals has shifted. As before, the new system is managed by the General Organization for Social Insurance and applies in full to Saudi employees but not to other expatriate workers (who constitute close to 80% of the private-sector workforce).
Significant changes under the new system (and notes on how they compare with the preexisting system for private-sector workers) follow:
Younger Saudi employees will have to work longer, and new workers will accrue benefits more slowly while they and their employers will contribute at higher rates than under the old system. According to the General Authority for Statistics, the labor force participation rate for workers age 55 or older was only 28% in early 2024 (40% for males), compared with an average of 67% among OECD countries, while life expectancy at birth in Saudi Arabia (age 78 as of 2022 according to World Bank data) has risen by over 25 years since the old social security system was established in 1969. Only 5% of companies surveyed offer supplemental retirement benefits; 13% enhance mandatory end-of-service benefits (payable to all employees with at least two years of service). Interest in company-provided retirement plans may grow under the new social security system. As companies are no longer required to pay salaries during maternity leave, they may be further encouraged to hire female employees. Reportedly, the government is also considering developing a requirement that employers pre-fund the mandatory end-of-service benefits.