eSignature legality summary
Saudi law does not require a written signature for a contract to be valid — a contract is generally formed when legally competent parties agree, whether verbally, electronically, or on paper. Article 5 of the Electronic Transactions Law confirms that a contract cannot be denied enforceability merely because it was concluded electronically. Because a party may need to prove a contract in court, purely verbal or simple click-through and email arrangements can be harder to establish than a higher-assurance method backed by a strong audit trail.
Types of permitted electronic signature
The Electronic Transactions Law defines an electronic signature as electronic data included in, added to, or logically linked to an electronic transaction that is used to identify the signatory, show their approval of the transaction, and reveal any later alteration. Saudi Arabia has also rolled out licensed “digital certification”: while a certificate is not required to form a contract, a certificate-backed signature is materially harder to challenge and is recommended for high-stakes matters.
Documents that may be signed electronically
Parties may use electronic signatures for contracts and documents of any kind that are not subject to a specific statutory form requirement; if contested, evidential weight is at the judge’s discretion. Typical uses include commercial agreements that do not require notarization — NDAs, vendor and SaaS contracts, and similar B2B documents.
Use with caution / not typically appropriate
Transactions that are barred from electronic processes — or that require a handwritten (wet-ink) signature or a formal notarial process — are not suitable for electronic signature. For the highest-stakes, regulated, or government-facing matters, a certificate-backed (digitally certified) signature provides the strongest footing.
- Real-property title-deed transfers
- Powers of attorney
- Articles of association of a limited-liability company and amendments to them
- Civil-status (personal-status) documentation
- Any document requiring notarization or wet-ink execution
Seminal court cases
None reported.
Primary sources
- Electronic Transactions Law (2007) and Implementing Regulations (2024)
- Law of Evidence (2022)
Disclaimer: This guide is general information, not legal advice, and is not a guarantee that any signature will be enforceable for a particular document, transaction, or jurisdiction. E-signature and data-protection laws change frequently. Confirm the requirements for your specific document and parties, and consult a licensed lawyer in the relevant country before relying on electronic signing.
Last reviewed: June 15, 2026