Saudi Arabia VAT Refund for Tourists: How to Claim Back 15 Percent

Saudi Arabia VAT Refund for Tourists: How to Claim Back 15 Percent

How to claim back 15 percent VAT on shopping in Saudi Arabia. Step-by-step refund process, eligible goods, minimum spend, airport kiosk locations and practical tips.

Saudi Arabia charges a 15 percent value-added tax on most retail purchases — but tourists can claim that money back. Since April 2025, the Kingdom has operated a formal VAT refund scheme administered by the Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority (ZATCA), allowing non-resident visitors to reclaim VAT on qualifying goods bought at participating stores. If you are planning a trip as part of a wider Saudi Arabia travel itinerary, understanding how the refund process works before you shop can save you hundreds — or even thousands — of riyals. This guide walks through every step of the process, from finding eligible retailers to collecting your refund at the airport.

🗺 Saudi Arabia VAT Refund — At a Glance

VAT Rate: 15 percent on most goods

Minimum Spend: SAR 500 (approximately US$133) per store per day

Visa Required: Yes — tourist e-visa

Refund Method: Cash (up to SAR 5,000/day) or credit/debit card

Claim Window: Goods must be exported within 90 days of purchase

Avoid: Spending below SAR 500 at a single store — you cannot combine receipts from different retailers

Who Is Eligible for a VAT Refund in Saudi Arabia?

The scheme is open to two groups of travellers:

    • International tourists — any non-resident visitor aged 18 or older holding a valid passport. This includes holders of a tourist e-visa, business visa, or any other short-term entry permit.
    • GCC nationals — citizens of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE who present a valid passport or GCC national ID card.

    You are not eligible if you are a Saudi citizen, a permanent resident of Saudi Arabia, a member of an airline or ship crew on duty, or if your name appears on ZATCA’s VAT refund prohibition list.

    What Purchases Qualify?

    Only physical goods intended for personal use qualify for a VAT refund. The items must be unused and in their original packaging when you present them at the airport for validation. You must also export them from Saudi Arabia within 90 days of the purchase date.

    Eligible Goods

    • Clothing, shoes, and accessories
    • Electronics — phones, tablets, laptops, cameras
    • Watches and jewellery
    • Perfumes and cosmetics
    • Luggage and leather goods
    • Traditional crafts, souvenirs, and Saudi abayas
    • Furniture and home goods (if exportable)

    Excluded Items

    The following categories are explicitly excluded from the refund scheme:

    • Services — hotel stays, restaurant meals, spa treatments, car hire
    • Vehicles and boats
    • Consumables — food, beverages, tobacco products
    • Oil and gas derivatives — fuel, lubricants
    • Goods consumed or used inside Saudi Arabia — if you wear the trainers around Riyadh for a week, they no longer qualify
    Retail store inside Riyadh Park Mall, one of Saudi Arabia's largest shopping destinations
    Shopping malls across Saudi Arabia participate in the VAT refund scheme — look for “Tax Free” signage at the entrance or till. Photo: Keizers / Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

    Minimum Spend Requirement

    To qualify for a refund, you must spend at least SAR 500 (approximately US$133 or £105) at a single participating retailer. You can reach this threshold through:

    • A single transaction of SAR 500 or more, or
    • Up to three separate receipts from the same store on the same day, totalling at least SAR 500

    You cannot combine purchases from different stores to meet the minimum. Each store’s total is assessed independently.

    Tip: If you are close to the SAR 500 threshold at a particular store, consider consolidating your purchases into one visit. Splitting a SAR 600 spend across two days at the same retailer means neither day qualifies.

    Step-by-Step: How to Claim Your VAT Refund

    Step 1: Shop at Participating Retailers

    Not every shop in Saudi Arabia participates in the VAT refund scheme. Look for stores displaying “Tax Free” or “VAT Refund Available” signage — these are ZATCA-approved outlets registered with the refund operator. Major malls in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam have extensive participation, including international brands and local retailers. If you are unsure, ask at the till before making your purchase.

    Step 2: Request a Tax Refund Invoice at the Till

    At the point of sale, present your passport (or GCC national ID) and ask the cashier to generate a Tourist Tax Refund Invoice. This is a separate document from the standard receipt. The cashier will scan your passport and link the purchase to your identity. Without this document, you cannot claim a refund — a normal receipt alone is not sufficient.

    Important: Always request the refund invoice at the time of purchase. You cannot return to the store later to generate one retrospectively.

    Step 3: Keep Your Goods Unused and Packed

    The items you intend to claim a refund on must remain unused, with tags attached and original packaging intact. Customs officers at the airport may ask to inspect the goods before validating your refund. If an item has clearly been worn or used, the refund will be denied for that item.

    Step 4: Validate at the Airport Before Departure

    When you arrive at the airport for your departing flight, head to the VAT Refund validation kiosk before checking in your luggage (if the goods are in your checked bags) or after security (if they are in your hand luggage). You will need:

    • Your passport or GCC ID
    • Your boarding pass
    • All Tax Refund Invoices
    • The purchased goods (for potential inspection)

    The validation kiosk will scan your invoices and verify your departure. Once validated, you proceed to collect your refund.

    Step 5: Collect Your Refund

    After validation, you choose how to receive your money:

    • Cash — available at the airport refund counter, up to SAR 5,000 per person per day (approximately US$1,330). Note that cash is not available at Jeddah Airport North Terminal.
    • Card credit — the refund is deposited directly onto the international credit or debit card you used for the purchase (or any card issued outside Saudi Arabia). Card refunds typically arrive within 3 to 5 business days.
    VIA Riyadh shopping and entertainment destination entrance
    VIA Riyadh is one of the capital’s newest retail destinations where many stores participate in the tax-free shopping programme. Photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

    Airport VAT Refund Locations

    Saudi Arabia currently operates VAT refund validation points at its three main international airports. Arrive at least three hours before your flight during peak travel periods — Hajj season, Eid holidays, and the Riyadh Season entertainment calendar generate heavy passenger volumes.

    Airport City IATA Code Refund Points Notes
    King Khalid International Airport Riyadh RUH 10 Largest number of kiosks; available in all terminals
    King Abdulaziz International Airport Jeddah JED 4 Cash refunds unavailable at North Terminal
    King Fahd International Airport Dammam DMM 4 Serves the entire Eastern Province

    Note: If you are departing from a smaller regional airport (such as Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Airport in Medina or Abha Regional Airport), VAT refund kiosks may not be available. Plan to validate at one of the three major airports listed above, or contact ZATCA before your trip to confirm availability at your departure point.

    King Abdulaziz International Airport terminal exterior in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
    King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah has four VAT refund validation points — head there before checking luggage if your refund items are in your hold bags. Photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0

    How Much Will You Actually Get Back?

    The headline figure is 15 percent — Saudi Arabia’s standard VAT rate. In practice, the refund is calculated on the VAT-inclusive price you paid. Here is how it works:

    Purchase Price (SAR) VAT Included (15%) Approximate Refund
    500 65.22 ~SAR 65
    1,000 130.43 ~SAR 130
    2,500 326.09 ~SAR 326
    5,000 652.17 ~SAR 652
    10,000 1,304.35 ~SAR 1,304

    The VAT component of a SAR 500 purchase is SAR 65.22 (since the pre-tax price was SAR 434.78). A small administrative fee may be deducted by the refund operator, but the vast majority of the VAT is returned to you.

    Where to Shop for Maximum Refund Value

    Saudi Arabia’s retail landscape has expanded dramatically under Vision 2030, and the largest malls are your best bet for finding participating “Tax Free” retailers. Here are the top shopping destinations:

    Riyadh

    • Riyadh Park Mall — over 350 stores including luxury and high-street brands
    • VIA Riyadh — the capital’s newest retail and entertainment complex
    • Kingdom Centre Mall — upscale shopping beneath Riyadh’s most iconic skyscraper
    • Panorama Mall — large-format retail with strong electronics selection

    If you are spending several days in the capital, our Riyadh walking tour passes several shopping districts where tax-free stores are concentrated.

    Jeddah

    • Red Sea Mall — Jeddah’s largest, with over 400 outlets
    • Mall of Arabia — strong on international fashion and jewellery
    • Jeddah Corniche — waterfront retail near the Jeddah Old Town

    Dammam and Al Khobar

    • Dhahran Mall — the Eastern Province’s premier shopping destination
    • Al Rashid Mall — popular with visitors from neighbouring Bahrain

    For a broader look at the Kingdom’s retail and lifestyle scene, see our Saudi art and gallery guide — many galleries sell artwork and prints that qualify for VAT refunds.

    Gold and Jewellery: A Special Case

    Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s most competitive markets for gold, and the Gold Souk districts in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam offer prices well below European or North American retailers. Gold jewellery purchases qualify for the VAT refund provided the retailer is registered with ZATCA’s tax-free scheme.

    A SAR 10,000 gold necklace includes approximately SAR 1,304 in VAT — reclaiming that at the airport represents a significant saving on top of already competitive gold prices. Always confirm the store displays “Tax Free” signage before assuming the refund applies.

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    Based on how refund schemes operate across the Gulf and globally, these are the most frequent errors tourists make:

    • Forgetting to request the Tax Refund Invoice at the till — a standard receipt does not qualify. You must ask for the specific refund document at the time of purchase.
    • Using or wearing purchased items before departure — if customs officers see signs of use, the refund is denied.
    • Falling short of the SAR 500 minimum — two SAR 300 purchases at different stores do not combine to reach the threshold.
    • Arriving at the airport too late — validation and refund collection take time, especially during Hajj and Eid travel peaks. Allow at least 30 minutes for the refund process alone.
    • Packing refund items in checked luggage before validation — if customs needs to inspect the goods and they are already checked in, you lose the refund.
    • Assuming all stores participate — the scheme covers ZATCA-registered retailers only. Ask before you buy.

    VAT Refund for Hajj and Umrah Pilgrims

    If you are visiting Saudi Arabia on an Hajj or Umrah visa, the same VAT refund rules apply — you are a non-resident visitor and qualify for the scheme. Pilgrims often purchase gifts, prayer items, perfumes, and traditional clothing in Makkah and Madinah. The key constraint is that refund validation currently only operates at the three major airports listed above. If you are flying out of Madinah’s Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Airport, check ZATCA’s latest announcements for kiosk availability.

    VAT Refund vs Duty Free: What Is the Difference?

    These are two separate systems that tourists frequently confuse:

    VAT Refund (Tax Free Shopping) Duty Free (Airport Shops)
    Where you shop Any participating retailer in the city Airside shops after passport control
    What you save 15% VAT refunded after purchase No VAT charged at point of sale
    Product range Anything the store sells (within eligible categories) Limited to airport shop inventory
    Minimum spend SAR 500 per store per day No minimum
    Process Request invoice → validate at kiosk → collect refund Automatic — no paperwork

    For high-value purchases like electronics, watches, or gold, the VAT refund scheme almost always offers better value because city retailers have wider selection and more competitive base prices than airport duty-free shops.

    Practical Tips for Maximising Your Refund

    • Consolidate purchases — buy everything you need from one store in a single visit to comfortably exceed the SAR 500 threshold.
    • Keep all paperwork together — store your Tax Refund Invoices in one envelope or folder. Losing a form means losing that refund.
    • Photograph your invoices — as backup in case originals are damaged.
    • Choose card refund for large amounts — the SAR 5,000 daily cash limit means big spenders should opt for card credit.
    • Shop early in your trip — this gives you time to resolve any invoice issues before your departure date. You have 90 days, so there is no need to leave shopping until the last day.
    • Check the store’s participation — before making a large purchase, confirm the retailer is ZATCA-registered for tax-free shopping.

    Currency and Payment Considerations

    The Saudi Riyal (SAR) is pegged to the US dollar at a fixed rate of approximately SAR 3.75 to US$1. This means there is no currency fluctuation risk for dollar-denominated travellers. For visitors from the UK, EU, or other regions, the refund amount will be converted at your card issuer’s prevailing exchange rate when credited to your card.

    Most Saudi retailers accept international Visa, Mastercard, and American Express cards. Apple Pay and Google Pay are widely accepted in malls. Cash (SAR) is accepted everywhere but is less common for large purchases.

    ZATCA Contact and Official Resources

    If you encounter any issues with the VAT refund process — a retailer refusing to issue a Tax Refund Invoice, a kiosk malfunction, or a dispute over eligibility — contact ZATCA directly:

    • ZATCA helpline: 19993 (from inside Saudi Arabia)
    • Website: zatca.gov.sa
    • Service hours: Sunday to Thursday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM (Saudi time, GMT+3)

    You can also submit a VAT refund request through the Saudi national portal (my.gov.sa) if you need to follow up after departing the country.

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