Saudi Arabia is edging closer to a landmark in its financial history: a digital version of the riyal. Over the last two years Saudi Arabia’s central bank (SAMA) has moved from experimenting to joining an international, multi-central-bank platform that tests wholesale CBDCs for bank-to-bank cross-border settlement. That step joining the mBridge project and its “minimum viable product” ties recent Saudi work to earlier Gulf pilots with the UAE and places Riyadh firmly in regional efforts to make cross-border payments faster and cheaper.
Saudi Arabia’s CBDC plans: What’s already done
- In 2019–2020, SAMA (Saudi Arabia’s central bank) worked with the UAE central bank on Project Aber, a pilot to test cross-border, wholesale CBDCs.
- On 5-6 June 2024, Saudi officially joined BIS-led Project mBridge as a full participant, at a time when the project reached its Minimum Viable Product (MVP) stage.
- As of recent tracking, Saudi is in the pilot phase exploring wholesale use-cases (bank-to-bank, cross-border) rather than launching a retail CBDC just yet. No public announcement has set a firm date for general rollout.
Launch timing & speculations: When might Saudi announce or roll out a digital Riyal
- No confirmed date yet for retail CBDC launch. Saudi has made clear: experiments and research continue, but no decision has been made for launching a digital version of the riyal for general public use.
- The BIS-mBridge project’s MVP stage in mid-2024 suggests that real-value cross-border wholesale use is now technically viable. The next logical phase would be countries (including Saudi) running tests with commercial banks and possibly releasing pilot transactions.
- Related countries regionally (like UAE) are aiming for retail CBDC launches or legal tender status by 2026 in some cases. That sets a comparative benchmark. Saudi might follow similar timelines or lag depending on legal/regulatory readiness.
Why Saudi’s approach is smart — Key benefits and risks
Benefits:
- Faster Cross-Border Payments: mBridge promises near-instant bank-to-bank settlement across participating countries, cutting costs and delays.
- Wholesale First Strategy: By focusing on large-value, interbank and cross-border flows first, the risks are lower. It lets SAMA test infrastructure, governance, legal issues before touching millions of retail users.
- Tech Compatibility: The platform is compatible with blockchain tools (e.g. Ethereum Virtual Machine) which could help in building more use cases and integrations.
Risks and challenges:
- Regulatory and Legal Framework: Laws about privacy, AML/KYC, data governance must be set. Without that, wide use (especially among consumers) is unlikely.
- Adoption & Trust: Banks, fintechs, and the public need to trust the system’s security and usability. Any misstep (technical glitch, privacy concerns) could slow down adoption.
- No Rush Advantage: Saudi has indicated it sees no advantage in being first better to do it right than do it quickly.
What to watch In your radar
Project mBridge expansion: Keep an eye on when Saudi (and its partner banks) announce live trials using real money between banks across borders.
- Regulatory announcements: Watch for legal acts or frameworks specifying CBDCs, digital riyal, or rules for digital payment systems. Those may come from SAMA or relevant government ministries.
- Public pilot or retail plan launch: This would be the first time Saudi says: “We are going to issue a digital riyal for everyday people.” If it happens, it will likely be in the roadmap around 2025-2027, given regional pace.
- Comparisons with GCC neighbours: UAE is pushing ahead with its Digital Dirham plans, including aspirations by 2026. How Saudi matches or differs will be important.
What this means for you & global money
Saudi Arabia is building something big careful, methodical, and with international partners. It’s not rushing into issuing a digital riyal for all citizens yet, but the pieces are in motion: technical infrastructure, pilot experiments, legal groundwork. If all aligns, a wholesale or even retail version could be announced in the next few years, possibly around 2026 or later, matching regional momentum. For now, what you should expect is announcements about trials, regulations, and cross-border use, rather than immediate consumer rollout.