‎Budget 2026: SAR 351B in tourism spending, receiving 20M Umrah pilgrims

‎Budget 2026: SAR 351B in tourism spending, receiving 20M Umrah pilgrims ‎Budget 2026: SAR 351B in tourism spending, receiving 20M Umrah pilgrims

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The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s flag

Saudi Arabia’s 2026 budget showed that the Kingdom’s targets for the tourism sector include achieving total tourism spending of SAR 351 billion by the end of the year, through offering tourism products and services with added value that are attractive to both domestic and international tourists.

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The budget also aims to increase the number of Saudi nationals employed in the tourism sector to 110,000 employees by 2026, through supporting employment programs, enhancing training and professional qualification, and expanding quality job opportunities across various tourism sectors.

In the Hajj and Umrah sector, the Kingdom targets receiving more than 20 million Umrah pilgrims from abroad during 2026, in addition to launching the “Nusuk” card for pilgrims, which will serve as a unified ID to facilitate access to pilgrim data and enhance the level of organization and service throughout the Umrah journey.

According to Argaam’s data, Saudi Arabia aims for the tourism sector to become the second-largest contributor to its economy after the oil sector by 2030, as the Ministry of Tourism is working to raise the sector’s contribution to around 10% of GDP by that year.

 

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s flag

Saudi Arabia’s 2026 budget showed that the Kingdom’s targets for the tourism sector include achieving total tourism spending of SAR 351 billion by the end of the year, through offering tourism products and services with added value that are attractive to both domestic and international tourists.

The budget also aims to increase the number of Saudi nationals employed in the tourism sector to 110,000 employees by 2026, through supporting employment programs, enhancing training and professional qualification, and expanding quality job opportunities across various tourism sectors.

In the Hajj and Umrah sector, the Kingdom targets receiving more than 20 million Umrah pilgrims from abroad during 2026, in addition to launching the “Nusuk” card for pilgrims, which will serve as a unified ID to facilitate access to pilgrim data and enhance the level of organization and service throughout the Umrah journey.

According to Argaam’s data, Saudi Arabia aims for the tourism sector to become the second-largest contributor to its economy after the oil sector by 2030, as the Ministry of Tourism is working to raise the sector’s contribution to around 10% of GDP by that year.

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