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Commercial Real Estate Intelligence — $50B New Murabba District

Institutional commercial real estate intelligence — office, retail, and mixed-use investment analysis across the $50 billion New Murabba mega-development.

Independent Intelligence Disclaimer

This platform provides independent analysis for informational purposes only. Content does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or professional advice. Always consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions. This platform is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially connected to New Murabba Development Company, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), or any Saudi government entity. All analysis represents independent editorial judgment. Full Disclaimer

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Featured Intelligence

What We Track

Institutional-grade intelligence covering every dimension of properties development inside The Mukaab and New Murabba.

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OFFICE INVESTMENT

Grade-A Corporate Real Estate

Investment analysis of 80+ story office towers, corporate headquarters demand, co-working economics, and Grade-A office investment returns in Riyadh's new central business district.

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RETAIL REAL ESTATE

Commercial Leasing Intelligence

Luxury retail units, flagship store investment, experiential retail concepts — lease structures, tenant mix analysis, and commercial retail real estate returns.

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DEAL INTELLIGENCE

Investment Transaction Data

Transaction comparables, yield analysis, cap rates, institutional fund flows, and investment frameworks for commercial real estate in Saudi Arabia's fastest-growing district.

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PIPELINE ANALYTICS

Development Investment

Construction cost analysis, phasing economics, developer profiles, and project delivery intelligence for the $50B New Murabba development pipeline.

Market Intelligence Snapshot · February 2026

Key Figures & Developments

$925BPIF Assets Under ManagementWorld's largest sovereign wealth fund backing New Murabba
$50BNew Murabba Estimated CostEstimated by Knight Frank — equivalent to Jordan's GDP
104,000Residential Units PlannedServing 400,000 residents in a 15-minute walkable district
2040Revised Completion TargetExtended from 2030 — phased delivery across the district

The New Murabba Development Company — a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Public Investment Fund and chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman — is developing Riyadh's planned new downtown. The district centers on The Mukaab, a 400-meter cube-shaped megastructure designed to house 2.6 million square meters of immersive hospitality, retail, entertainment, and properties infrastructure. In January 2026, Parsons Corporation was awarded the design and construction management contract for the broader district, while construction of The Mukaab superstructure itself was paused for financial and technical review per Reuters.

The Capital Market Authority (CMA) opened Saudi capital markets to all foreign investors effective February 1, 2026 — eliminating the Qualified Foreign Investor framework. Simultaneously, the Non-Saudi Real Estate Ownership Law (effective January 22, 2026) expanded foreign property ownership rights across the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia also approved 9 companies for real estate tokenization under a regulatory sandbox, with final regulations expected June 2026. These combined reforms create the most favorable investment environment for properties-related opportunities in Saudi history, tracked in detail by Vision 2030 AI.

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Research & Analysis

Intelligence Silos

Deep-dive research organized by vertical — original analysis, data, and strategic intelligence for institutional investors and industry professionals.

Office Market Investment

Corporate tenant demand, lease analysis, co-working economics, and office space investment returns in New Murabba.

16 Reports

Investment Transaction Data

Deal flow, yield analysis, cap rate trends, and institutional investment frameworks for Riyadh commercial real estate.

14 Reports

Retail & Mixed-Use Investment

Retail market sizing, tenant mix optimization, experiential retail economics, and commercial leasing intelligence.

12 Reports

Development Pipeline Economics

Construction costs, phasing schedules, developer financial analysis, and supply-demand projections for New Murabba.

10 Reports
Pillar Intelligence Report

Riyadh Commercial Real Estate Intelligence: Grade-A Office Vacancy at 0.5%, 86% Rent Surge & The $50 Billion New Murabba Opportunity

Updated February 2026 · Independent Analysis · Not Financial Advice

Executive Summary: Riyadh's Commercial Market Supercycle

Riyadh is experiencing the tightest commercial real estate market of any major global city. JLL reports Grade-A office vacancy at just 0.5%, while Knight Frank confirms 98%+ occupancy across premium developments. Prime office rents have reached SAR 3,630/sqm (+7.3% year-on-year), with the King Abdullah Financial District commanding rates exceeding SAR 4,000/sqm. Since 2019, cumulative rent increases have topped 86% — prompting the government to impose a 5-year rent freeze on existing commercial leases in late 2025. Riyadh commercial transactions totaled SAR 65.6 billion in H1 2025 alone (+63% YoY). The New Murabba district, wholly owned by the Public Investment Fund, adds $50 billion in mixed-use development to this already overheated market. Intelligence tracked by Vision 2030 AI.

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Office Market Fundamentals: Supply Crisis

The supply-demand imbalance driving Riyadh's commercial market stems from two converging forces: the Regional Headquarters Program (RHQ) requiring multinational corporations to establish MENA headquarters in Saudi Arabia, and organic economic expansion under Saudi Vision 2030. To date, 660+ firms have relocated regional headquarters to Riyadh — exceeding the original 500-company target five years ahead of schedule. The Ministry of Investment confirmed that new RHQ arrivals include companies from financial services, consulting, technology, energy, and consumer goods sectors, each requiring 2,000-15,000 sqm of Grade-A office space.

The King Abdullah Financial District has emerged as the epicenter of corporate Riyadh, hosting 140+ tenants including 75+ regional headquarters. KAFD's 15.46-kilometer elevated skyway — certified as a Guinness World Record for the longest continuous pedestrian sky bridge — connects commercial towers to retail, hospitality, and residential components. Current KAFD rents exceed SAR 4,000/sqm, with waiting lists for premium floors. Comparable Grade-A buildings in KAFD, Diplomatic Quarter, and northern Riyadh corridors achieve 100% occupancy before completion according to CBRE.

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REIT Market: 20 Listed Vehicles, SAR 20B+ Assets

Saudi Arabia's real estate investment trust market offers institutional exposure to the commercial property boom. The Saudi Exchange (Tadawul) lists 20 REITs with combined assets exceeding SAR 20 billion and average dividend yields of 6.61%. Top performers include Riyad REIT (SAR 4.2B assets), SEDCO Capital REIT (SAR 3.1B), and Jadwa REIT (SAR 2.8B). The Capital Market Authority (CMA) has progressively liberalized REIT regulations, most recently abolishing the Qualified Foreign Investor (QFI) regime on February 1, 2026 — meaning all foreign investors can now access Saudi REITs directly through the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul). REIT total returns have outperformed the TASI benchmark by 340 basis points annually since 2021 per S&P Global.

Non-Saudi Real Estate Ownership: January 2026 Reforms

Royal Decree M/14 — the new Non-Saudi Real Estate Ownership Law — became effective on January 22, 2026. This landmark reform permits foreign nationals and entities to own commercial and residential property across Saudi Arabia (with Makkah and Madinah exceptions). Previously, foreign ownership was restricted to diplomatic compounds and industrial zones. The reform, administered by Real Estate General Authority (REGA), enables direct commercial property acquisition — a game-changer for institutional investors evaluating New Murabba district opportunities. Combined with QFI abolition and the Saudi Depositary Receipts framework (launched July 2025), Saudi Arabia now offers the most open property investment regime in the Gulf.

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New Murabba Commercial District: $50B Pipeline

The New Murabba Development Company development — spanning 19 square kilometers — is designed to deliver 90,000 residential units, 10,100 hotel rooms, 1.4 million sqm of retail, and 980,000 sqm of prime office space anchored by The Mukaab. While The Mukaab superstructure construction was paused in January 2026 per Reuters, Parsons Corporation was awarded a 60-month Integrated Lifecycle Delivery Contract on January 13, 2026 for the broader district build-out. Foundation work continues: 1,000+ of 1,200 piles complete (83%) and 14 million cubic meters excavated. Knight Frank values the total development at $50 billion, with $3.6 billion commissioned as of late 2023. The Jacobs/AECOM JV was appointed Lead Design Consultants on November 5, 2025.

For commercial tenants, New Murabba's 15-minute-city design integrates Grade-A office towers with residential, retail, entertainment, and cultural districts — mimicking the walkable density model that has driven premium rents at KAFD and Diriyah Gate. A modular fit-out RFI was issued on January 26, 2026 for the district's four corner towers, signaling near-term construction activity even as The Mukaab timeline extends to 2030-2040 phased delivery.

Rent Freeze Analysis: Impact on Commercial Investment

The government's late-2025 imposition of a 5-year rent freeze on existing commercial leases represents both risk and opportunity. For existing tenants, leases signed at SAR 2,000-3,000/sqm are now locked well below market rates. For investors, this creates a two-tier market: frozen legacy leases and new leases at current rates (SAR 3,630+/sqm). New developments like New Murabba are unaffected by the freeze, as all leases will be new. This effectively advantages greenfield developments and creates a pricing premium for new supply — a dynamic tracked in detail by Vision 2030 AI.

Expo 2030 & FIFA 2034: Commercial Demand Catalysts

Expo 2030 Riyadh (October 2030 - March 2031) is projected to attract 42 million visits with $7.8 billion in capital expenditure across a 6 million sqm site. Bechtel serves as PMC, with Buro Happold leading design. As of February 2026, 1.5 million sqm (25%) of the site has been leveled, with building construction targeted for Q3 2026. FIFA 2034 requires 15 stadiums (11 new) across 5 cities with investment exceeding $20 billion. The King Salman International Stadium (92,760 capacity, 2029 completion) anchors this program. Both mega-events will generate sustained demand for commercial space, corporate hospitality suites, media centers, and ancillary office requirements well beyond event periods.

Construction Market: $819 Billion Pipeline

Saudi Arabia's construction sector — valued at $78.6-101.4 billion annually with 5,200+ active projects — feeds directly into commercial real estate supply. Knight Frank reports giga-project contracts rose 20% in 2025 to $196 billion, though KAMCO Invest noted a 72.5% YoY contract decline in Q2 2025 to $9.8 billion, reflecting selective capital deployment. The total pipeline exceeds $819 billion. Modular construction is accelerating: China Harbour Engineering commissioned a 200,000 sqm modular facility in February 2025, while NEOM-Samsung C&T formed a SAR 1.3 billion robotics JV targeting 40% cost savings.

Investment Risk Factors

Key risks include: supply overshoot (if multiple giga-projects deliver simultaneously post-2030), oil price dependency (IMF Saudi Country Report forecasts ~4% fiscal deficits through 2027), construction cost inflation, and the 5-year rent freeze compressing yields on existing assets. The Mukaab's January 2026 pause introduces timeline uncertainty for New Murabba commercial space specifically. Currency risk remains minimal (SAR-USD peg at 3.75). Net-zero commitments (2060 target, 58.7 GW clean energy capacity) increasingly influence commercial building specifications per World Bank Saudi Data.

Conclusion: The Commercial Real Estate Investment Case

Riyadh's commercial real estate market offers a rare institutional opportunity: near-zero vacancy, 86% rent appreciation in five years, structural demand from 660+ multinational relocations, and a $50 billion new district backed by the world's largest sovereign wealth fund. The combination of QFI abolition, non-Saudi ownership reforms, and REIT market maturation creates the most accessible entry framework in Saudi history. Track evolving opportunities through Vision 2030 AI, Capital Market Authority (CMA), and Real Estate General Authority (REGA).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Riyadh's Grade-A office vacancy rate?

JLL reports 0.5% vacancy as of late 2025. Knight Frank confirms 98%+ occupancy. This is the tightest major-city office market globally. KAFD commands SAR 4,000+/sqm. Cumulative rent increase since 2019: 86%.

How many companies relocated HQs to Riyadh?

660+ firms under the Regional Headquarters Program — exceeding the 500 target five years early. Companies from financial services, consulting, tech, energy, and consumer goods. Each requires 2,000-15,000 sqm Grade-A space.

What is the Non-Saudi Ownership Law?

Royal Decree M/14 effective January 22, 2026. Foreign nationals/entities can now own commercial and residential property across Saudi Arabia (except Makkah/Madinah). Administered by REGA. Game-changer for institutional CRE investors.

Can foreigners invest in Saudi REITs?

Yes. CMA abolished QFI regime February 1, 2026. All foreign investors now eligible. 20 Tadawul-listed REITs, SAR 20B+ assets, 6.61% average yields. No minimum asset requirement.

What is the 5-year rent freeze?

Government imposed late 2025 on existing commercial leases. Protects current tenants but creates two-tier market. New developments like New Murabba unaffected — all leases priced at current market rates (SAR 3,630+/sqm).

What is New Murabba's commercial office supply?

980,000 sqm prime office space within the $50B, 19 sqkm district. Plus 1.4M sqm retail, 90,000 residential units, 10,100 hotel rooms. Parsons awarded 60-month delivery contract January 2026.

What is KAFD's role in Riyadh CRE?

King Abdullah Financial District: 140+ tenants, 75+ regional HQs, 15.46km skyway (Guinness record). Rents above SAR 4,000/sqm. Waiting lists for premium floors. Benchmark for New Murabba commercial pricing.

What are Expo 2030 commercial implications?

6M sqm site, $7.8B capex, 42M projected visits. 25% of site levelled by February 2026. Bechtel PMC. Generates demand for offices, media centers, corporate hospitality. FIFA 2034 adds 15 stadiums, $20B+ investment across 5 cities.

What is the construction pipeline?

$819B total pipeline, 5,200+ active projects, $78.6-101.4B annual market. Giga-project contracts +20% in 2025 to $196B. Modular construction scaling: China Harbour 200K sqm facility, NEOM-Samsung SAR 1.3B robotics JV.

What transaction volume does Riyadh generate?

SAR 65.6B in H1 2025 alone (+63% YoY). Market driven by RHQ relocations, domestic expansion, and foreign capital inflows following QFI abolition and ownership reforms.

What yields do Riyadh commercial properties offer?

Saudi REIT average: 6.61%. Direct property yields vary by grade and location — KAFD/DQ premium at 5-7%, secondary locations 7-9%. New Murabba expected to command premium pricing given PIF backing and mixed-use design.

What sustainability standards apply?

1,816 LEED projects registered, 1,162 certified in Saudi Arabia. Net-zero 2060 target. 58.7 GW clean energy capacity. New commercial developments increasingly require LEED Gold+ or equivalent certification.

How does Saudi CRE compare to Dubai?

Riyadh vacancy (0.5%) vs Dubai Grade-A (~10-15%). Riyadh rent growth outpacing Dubai. Saudi market larger by GDP but Dubai more mature institutionally. January 2026 reforms narrow the regulatory gap significantly.

What is the Mukaab construction status?

Superstructure paused January 2026. Foundation: 83% piles complete, 14M cubic meters excavated. Jacobs/AECOM Lead Design (November 2025). Modular RFI for corner towers (January 2026). Timeline: phased 2030-2040 delivery.

What role does PIF play?

PIF ($925B+ AUM) wholly owns New Murabba. Revised 2026-2030 strategy (February 2026 soft launch). Knight Frank $50B valuation. PIF also drives demand through RHQ program, giga-project spending, and subsidiary operations.

What is the investment risk profile?

Risks: supply overshoot post-2030, oil dependence (IMF: ~4% fiscal deficits), construction cost inflation, rent freeze on existing assets. Mitigants: SAR-USD peg, structural demand, PIF backing, zero income tax on real estate gains for individuals.

Frequently Asked Questions

Key Questions Answered

New Murabba encompasses $50 billion in total development value across 2.6 million square meters of mixed-use space. Commercial investment opportunities include Grade-A office towers (80+ stories), luxury retail units, R&D centers, co-working spaces, and corporate headquarters. Riyadh's commercial real estate market is experiencing unprecedented demand driven by government mandates requiring international companies to establish regional HQs in the Kingdom.
Riyadh's Grade-A office market delivers 7-10% yields with strong capital appreciation driven by supply constraints and growing demand. Prime vacancy rates have fallen below 5% as corporate relocations accelerate under Vision 2030. New Murabba's positioning as Riyadh's new downtown — with integrated transit, hospitality, and entertainment — supports premium rents and institutional investor interest.
Riyadh has overtaken Dubai in several commercial real estate metrics, driven by Saudi Arabia's larger economy, government relocation mandates, and Vision 2030 investment flows. While Dubai offers established infrastructure and regulatory frameworks, Riyadh's supply gap, population growth, and institutional backing (PIF) create compelling risk-adjusted returns for commercial property investors.
Prime retail space in Riyadh's top developments commands SAR 3,000-6,000+ per square meter annually, with strong occupancy rates driven by consumer spending growth and tourism expansion. The Mukaab's integrated live-work-play model and massive footfall projections (tens of millions annually) support premium lease rates and attractive yields for retail real estate investors.
While The Mukaab superstructure was paused in January 2026 for feasibility review, surrounding New Murabba district development — including commercial real estate — continues. Knight Frank estimates projects commissioned so far at approximately $100 million, with the broader $50 billion development program extending to 2040.
Riyadh's commercial real estate attracts capital from PIF, Saudi REITs (Riyad REIT, Al Rajhi REIT), international institutional investors (Brookfield, Blackstone), sovereign wealth funds, and regional family offices. The Capital Market Authority's REIT framework and progressive foreign ownership regulations create accessible entry points for institutional and private investors.
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Independent Intelligence Disclaimer

This platform provides independent analysis for informational purposes only. Content does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or professional advice. Always consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions. This platform is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially connected to New Murabba Development Company, the Public Investment Fund (PIF), or any Saudi government entity. All analysis represents independent editorial judgment. Full Disclaimer