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Programs delivering the change

Every outcome on this portal traces back to a program, an institution, or a project doing the work. This page surfaces all 50 of them, grouped by the sector they serve. Click any entry to see the full definition and the metrics it powers.

50 entries10 sectors22 institutions17 programs7 projects4 concepts

Jobs & Saudization

1 program

Economy & Investment

11 programs

IKTVA

Program

In-Kingdom Total Value Add

The local-content program in the energy sector. Requires Aramco and its supply chain to source a progressively higher share of inputs domestically, forcing the development of supplier industries that didn't exist a decade ago. Many of those suppliers now export.

Regional HQ Program

Program

A program that requires foreign firms with regional operations to host their MENA headquarters in the kingdom if they want major government contracts. The number of qualifying regional HQs grew from 44 in 2021 to over 700 by 2025 — the most direct policy driver of the kingdom's FDI inversion.

STC Pay

Program

The kingdom's largest digital wallet, owned by Saudi Telecom Company. Reached unicorn valuation (over $1.3B) in late 2020 after the Western Union investment — the first Saudi fintech to hit that mark. Operates as a digital bank under the SAMA framework since 2021, with 14M+ users by 2024. Now a regional payments brand expanding through Pakistan, Egypt, and Bahrain.

Almarai

Institution

The kingdom's dominant food and beverage company, founded 1977 and Tadawul-listed since 2005. The largest vertically-integrated dairy operation in the world by some measures: roughly 200,000+ cattle, the largest fleet of milk-collection trucks anywhere, and processing facilities serving the GCC and parts of Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain. Has diversified into juices, bakery, poultry, and infant formula. The visible domestic counterweight to the import-heavy food strategy.

GAMI

Institution

General Authority for Military Industries

The kingdom's regulator for the defense industrial sector, established 2017. Issues defense-manufacturing licenses, sets local-content requirements, and tracks progress against the 50%-by-2030 domestic-content target. Distinct from SAMI — GAMI is the regulator; SAMI is the industrial-holding operator. The relationship parallels SAMA-and-banks or NCA-and-cyber-firms: a state authority sets the framework while a sovereign-investment vehicle operates within it.

mada

Institution

Saudi Payments Network

The kingdom's national payment switch, operated by Saudi Payments (a subsidiary of SAMA). Connects every Saudi bank's debit cards to every Saudi point-of-sale terminal, ATM, and e-commerce gateway. Effectively universal in the kingdom — over 99% of Saudi debit cards are mada-enabled. Has expanded to support contactless, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and mada Pay, and to interoperate with the GCC's AFAQ cross-border settlement network.

PIF

Institution

Public Investment Fund

Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund. Originally established in 1971 to hold state stakes in domestic industrial champions like SABIC, it was designated under Vision 2030 as the primary instrument for economic diversification. Assets grew from SAR 720B in 2017 to SAR 3.41T in 2025.

SALIC

Institution

Saudi Agricultural and Livestock Investment Company

PIF-owned strategic food-security vehicle, established 2011. Holds agricultural land and processing operations in Ukraine, Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, and elsewhere — securing long-horizon supply of grains, animal feed, and protein for the Saudi market following the 2008-2016 domestic wheat phaseout. Owns G3 Global Grain Group (Canada's largest grain handler) and Continental Farmers Group (Ukraine's largest cropping operation). The institutional answer to the food-security side of Saudi water scarcity.

SAMI

Institution

Saudi Arabian Military Industries

PIF-owned defense industrial holding company, established 2017 as the central vehicle for the kingdom's domestic defense-industry buildup. Operates joint ventures with major international primes including Lockheed Martin (SAMI-LM), Boeing, Raytheon, BAE Systems, Leonardo, and Navantia. Has grown from zero employees at founding to over 10,000 by 2025. The institutional engine for the 50%-by-2030 domestic-content target on Saudi defense procurement.

Savvy Games Group

Institution

The PIF-owned gaming holding company, established 2022, with a SAR 142 billion ($38B) capital commitment to scale Saudi Arabia into a global gaming hub by 2030. Made the headline acquisition of ESL FACEIT Group for $1.5B in 2022, consolidating two of the world's largest esports operators. Operates Savvy Games Studios as the in-house game development arm and is the institutional backbone of the Esports World Cup hosted annually in Riyadh.

SRMG

Institution

Saudi Research and Media Group

The kingdom's largest publishing and digital-media group, founded 1972 and listed on the Tadawul. Owns flagship Arabic newspapers Asharq Al-Awsat and Al Eqtisadiah, English-language daily Arab News, the publishing house Hachette Antoine, and a roster of digital and broadcast assets. Has transitioned aggressively into digital products since 2020, including Tahaduth (a digital-content joint venture) and SRMG Plus (subscription platform).

Sehhaty

Program

The Ministry of Health's national patient-facing app. Hosts vaccination records, lab results, prescription tracking, medical appointment booking, and telemedicine consultations. Centralized what had previously been a fragmented health-records system distributed across separate provider IT systems.

CHI

Institution

Council of Cooperative Health Insurance

The body that regulates and certifies private health-insurance providers in the kingdom. Established in 1999, it became the central architecture for the universal health coverage rollout that took basic coverage to 97.5% by 2025. The transition from fragmented employer-provider arrangements to a regulated unified scheme runs through CHI.

KFSH&RC

Institution

King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre

The kingdom's flagship academic medical center, founded in 1975. Internationally ranked as one of the world's top hospitals (consistently top 25 globally by Newsweek's specialty-medical ranking). Hosts the national programs in oncology, organ transplantation, cardiac surgery, and clinical research; runs the kingdom's largest stem-cell transplant program in MENA.

Weqaya

Institution

Saudi Public Health Authority

The national public health authority, established in 2021 in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Consolidated disease surveillance, outbreak response, vaccination programs, and population-health monitoring that had previously been distributed across the Ministry of Health and several agencies. Modeled in part on the US CDC and Public Health England structures.

Tourism & Hospitality

12 programs

Nusuk

Program

The unified platform for Umrah and Hajj planning, launched by the Ministry of Hajj and Umrah in 2022. Consolidated what had been a fragmented multi-agency process (visa application, travel package, accommodation, transport, mosque-access permits) into a single application. By 2025, the bulk of Umrah pilgrims from outside the GCC enter the kingdom through Nusuk-issued visas.

Riyadh Season

Program

A months-long annual entertainment program in Riyadh, launched in 2019 and managed by GEA. Combines concerts, sports, food festivals, theme park openings, and cultural programming across multiple zones (Boulevard, Wonder Garden, BLVD City, etc.). The 2024–2025 edition drew 13 million visits.

Saudi Pro League

Program

The kingdom's top-tier professional football league, founded in 1976. Underwent a major financial transformation starting June 2023, when PIF acquired controlling stakes in the four largest clubs (Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad, Al-Ahli) and the league launched an aggressive international transfer cycle. The 2023-24 window included signings of Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema, Neymar, Sadio Mané, and Riyad Mahrez, briefly making the SPL the highest-spending football league in the world by transfer fees.

GAS

Institution

Ministry of Sport

The kingdom's central authority for sports policy, established as a Ministry in 2020 (previously the General Sports Authority, founded 2016). Oversees federations, infrastructure development, and major-event bidding including the F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, the 2034 FIFA World Cup, the 2027 AFC Asian Cup, and the 2029 Asian Winter Games at Trojena. Distinct from the General Entertainment Authority (GEA) — sports and entertainment sit under separate institutional structures.

GEA

Institution

General Entertainment Authority

The government body that licenses and curates public entertainment events in the kingdom, established in 2016. Oversees concerts, festivals, theme park operations, and Riyadh Season programming. Its annual visit aggregate is the source of the 89M entertainment visits figure tracked in this portal.

MDLBeast

Institution

A PIF-backed entertainment and music company. Operates Soundstorm — the largest electronic music festival in the Middle East — and a portfolio of concert and festival properties across Saudi Arabia. Soundstorm 2024 drew 700,000+ attendees over four nights.

MoHU

Institution

Ministry of Hajj and Umrah

The ministry responsible for managing the Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages, including visa issuance, pilgrim accommodation licensing, transport coordination, and the Nusuk platform. Oversees the kingdom's role as Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques in operational terms. The 2022 launch of Nusuk and the 2023 visa-simplification reforms were the most consequential MoHU policy moves of the Vision 2030 era.

Diriyah Gate

Project

A heritage-led urban development on the western edge of Riyadh, on the site of the first Saudi state's capital. Mixes restored historic quarters (At-Turaif, a UNESCO World Heritage site) with new luxury hotels, residential, retail, and cultural spaces.

Haramain HSR

Project

Haramain High Speed Rail

The 450-km high-speed rail line connecting the two holy mosques (Mecca and Medina) via Jeddah and King AbdulAziz International Airport. Operational since October 2018, running at speeds up to 300 km/h. Cuts the Mecca-Medina trip from 5+ hours by road to about 2.5 hours, and has been a major capacity multiplier for the pilgrimage logistics during peak seasons.

KSIA

Project

King Salman International Airport

The planned expansion and rebranding of King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, announced 2022. The target buildout includes six parallel runways, an airport city covering 57 km², and capacity for 185 million passengers per year by 2050 — which would make it one of the largest airports in the world by passenger volume. Operated through a special-purpose vehicle backed by PIF.

Qiddiya

Project

An entertainment-led development southwest of Riyadh — theme parks, sports venues, a motor-racing circuit, and the planned home of Saudi Arabia's first Formula 1 race. Targets 2024–2027 phased openings.

The Red Sea Project

Project

A luxury tourism development along the Red Sea coast, comprising over 90 islands and several hundred kilometers of coastline. Operated by Red Sea Global (a PIF subsidiary). The first hotels opened in 2023; the project's 2030 buildout targets ~50 hotels and a regional airport.

Riyadh Season

Program

A months-long annual entertainment program in Riyadh, launched in 2019 and managed by GEA. Combines concerts, sports, food festivals, theme park openings, and cultural programming across multiple zones (Boulevard, Wonder Garden, BLVD City, etc.). The 2024–2025 edition drew 13 million visits.

Saudi Pro League

Program

The kingdom's top-tier professional football league, founded in 1976. Underwent a major financial transformation starting June 2023, when PIF acquired controlling stakes in the four largest clubs (Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad, Al-Ahli) and the league launched an aggressive international transfer cycle. The 2023-24 window included signings of Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema, Neymar, Sadio Mané, and Riyad Mahrez, briefly making the SPL the highest-spending football league in the world by transfer fees.

GAS

Institution

Ministry of Sport

The kingdom's central authority for sports policy, established as a Ministry in 2020 (previously the General Sports Authority, founded 2016). Oversees federations, infrastructure development, and major-event bidding including the F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, the 2034 FIFA World Cup, the 2027 AFC Asian Cup, and the 2029 Asian Winter Games at Trojena. Distinct from the General Entertainment Authority (GEA) — sports and entertainment sit under separate institutional structures.

GEA

Institution

General Entertainment Authority

The government body that licenses and curates public entertainment events in the kingdom, established in 2016. Oversees concerts, festivals, theme park operations, and Riyadh Season programming. Its annual visit aggregate is the source of the 89M entertainment visits figure tracked in this portal.

Savvy Games Group

Institution

The PIF-owned gaming holding company, established 2022, with a SAR 142 billion ($38B) capital commitment to scale Saudi Arabia into a global gaming hub by 2030. Made the headline acquisition of ESL FACEIT Group for $1.5B in 2022, consolidating two of the world's largest esports operators. Operates Savvy Games Studios as the in-house game development arm and is the institutional backbone of the Esports World Cup hosted annually in Riyadh.

SRMG

Institution

Saudi Research and Media Group

The kingdom's largest publishing and digital-media group, founded 1972 and listed on the Tadawul. Owns flagship Arabic newspapers Asharq Al-Awsat and Al Eqtisadiah, English-language daily Arab News, the publishing house Hachette Antoine, and a roster of digital and broadcast assets. Has transitioned aggressively into digital products since 2020, including Tahaduth (a digital-content joint venture) and SRMG Plus (subscription platform).

Qiddiya

Project

An entertainment-led development southwest of Riyadh — theme parks, sports venues, a motor-racing circuit, and the planned home of Saudi Arabia's first Formula 1 race. Targets 2024–2027 phased openings.

Riyadh Metro

Project

The kingdom's first major urban metro system. Six lines, 85 stations, 176 km of track — opened in staged phases starting December 2024 and continuing through 2025. The largest single metro inauguration in modern transit history by line count opened simultaneously. Operated by the Royal Commission for Riyadh City and the Public Transport Authority. Initial 2025 ridership running ahead of the conservative projection but below the 3.6M-passengers-per-day long-term capacity.

Absher

Program

The kingdom's citizen-services super-app, launched in 2010 by the Ministry of Interior and steadily expanded. Hosts ~200+ government services in one interface: passport and ID services, license and vehicle registration, residency permits, civil records, and dependent management. Processed over 430 million transactions in 2024 — roughly 12 transactions per Saudi resident per year.

Nusuk

Program

The unified platform for Umrah and Hajj planning, launched by the Ministry of Hajj and Umrah in 2022. Consolidated what had been a fragmented multi-agency process (visa application, travel package, accommodation, transport, mosque-access permits) into a single application. By 2025, the bulk of Umrah pilgrims from outside the GCC enter the kingdom through Nusuk-issued visas.

Sehhaty

Program

The Ministry of Health's national patient-facing app. Hosts vaccination records, lab results, prescription tracking, medical appointment booking, and telemedicine consultations. Centralized what had previously been a fragmented health-records system distributed across separate provider IT systems.

STC Pay

Program

The kingdom's largest digital wallet, owned by Saudi Telecom Company. Reached unicorn valuation (over $1.3B) in late 2020 after the Western Union investment — the first Saudi fintech to hit that mark. Operates as a digital bank under the SAMA framework since 2021, with 14M+ users by 2024. Now a regional payments brand expanding through Pakistan, Egypt, and Bahrain.

Tawakkalna

Program

Launched in 2020 by SDAIA (the Saudi Data and AI Authority) for COVID-19 contact tracing and movement permits. Evolved post-pandemic into a general-purpose citizen-services platform offering ~250 services from various government agencies through a single sign-on. One of the most-installed apps in the Saudi market.

MCIT

Institution

Ministry of Communications and Information Technology

The ministry overseeing the kingdom's digital transformation strategy, broadband and 5G infrastructure rollout, and supervision of the National Cybersecurity Authority (NCA) and SDAIA. Sets the institutional framework that underpins Absher, Tawakkalna, Sehhaty, Nusuk, and the wider government-services digital layer.

MGI

Program

Middle East Green Initiative

The regional counterpart to SGI, also announced in 2021. Pledges 40 billion trees planted across the MENA region by 2030 (with the kingdom contributing 10 billion under SGI), reduction of regional carbon emissions by 60%, and coordinated dust and sand storm mitigation. Hosts include the kingdom, Egypt, the UAE, Jordan, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman.

SGI

Program

Saudi Green Initiative

Announced in March 2021, the umbrella program for the kingdom's domestic decarbonization targets: 50% renewable electricity by 2030, 10 billion trees planted within the kingdom, 30% of land area designated as protected, and net-zero emissions by 2060. As of 2025, SAR 705 billion has been allocated across 86 initiatives under the SGI label.

ACWA Power

Institution

Saudi Arabia's flagship utility-scale renewables developer. PIF-backed, listed on the Tadawul. Developed the kingdom's largest operational solar plants (Sudair, Al Shuaibah) and is the lead developer on the NEOM green hydrogen project. Operates across 12 countries with a portfolio of solar, wind, and water-desalination projects.

SALIC

Institution

Saudi Agricultural and Livestock Investment Company

PIF-owned strategic food-security vehicle, established 2011. Holds agricultural land and processing operations in Ukraine, Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, and elsewhere — securing long-horizon supply of grains, animal feed, and protein for the Saudi market following the 2008-2016 domestic wheat phaseout. Owns G3 Global Grain Group (Canada's largest grain handler) and Continental Farmers Group (Ukraine's largest cropping operation). The institutional answer to the food-security side of Saudi water scarcity.

Cross-sector concepts and institutions

Terms that operate across multiple sectors or describe the program as a whole.

GASTAT

Institution

General Authority for Statistics

Saudi Arabia's national statistical agency. Publishes the quarterly Labor Market Bulletin (unemployment, participation), the Census, the Real Estate Price Index, and most of the official indicators tracked in this portal. The single most-cited source on the platform.

SAMA

Institution

Saudi Central Bank

The kingdom's central bank, founded in 1952. Manages the SAR-USD peg, banking sector regulation, and FX reserves. Was known as the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority until a 2020 renaming.

Aramco

Institution

Saudi Arabian Oil Company

The kingdom's national oil company and one of the largest companies in the world by market capitalization. Its December 2019 partial IPO — the largest in history at the time — transferred the government's ~5% stake to PIF, seed-funding the modern fund.

Tadawul

Institution

Saudi Exchange

The kingdom's stock exchange. Hosts the Aramco IPO, the largest in history, and has become a key venue for Saudi small and mid-cap companies to raise growth capital.

NEOM

Project

The largest of the kingdom's gigaprojects: a planned 26,500 km² futuristic region in the northwest, anchored by The Line (a 170km linear smart city), Trojena (an alpine resort), Sindalah (a luxury island), and Oxagon (an industrial port). Funded by PIF, with stated 2030 milestones that depend on continued state capital allocation.

Sovereign Wealth Fund

Concept

A state-owned investment fund. PIF is the kingdom's primary SWF; peers include Norway's GPFG, Singapore's GIC and Temasek, and Abu Dhabi's ADIA. SWFs typically invest with longer horizons and lower fee-sensitivity than private institutional investors.

FDI

Concept

Foreign Direct Investment

Investment by foreign individuals or firms that takes the form of direct ownership of a business or asset (10%+ stake), as opposed to portfolio investment (passive equity holdings). The kingdom's FDI inflows rose from SAR 28B in 2017 to SAR 133B in 2025.

Non-oil exports

Concept

Goods and services exported by Saudi entities that aren't crude oil, oil derivatives, or related petroleum products. A key Vision 2030 diversification indicator. Non-oil exports moved from SAR 184B in 2017 to SAR 624B in 2025, with petrochemicals, building materials, food products, and services as the fastest-growing categories.

Labor force participation

Concept

The share of working-age adults who are either employed or actively seeking work. Distinct from unemployment, which measures the share of the labor force without a job. Saudi female labor force participation rose from 17% in 2017 to over 36% by Q1 2025 — the most dramatic shift in this dataset.

Looking for an alphabetical reference? See the full glossary.