The Gulf is one of the fastest-growing e-commerce markets in the world, but success here needs a different setup than Western markets: legal registration, VAT, and local payment gateways. This guide gathers the real numbers and steps for 2026 — no fluff.
Saudi Arabia's e-commerce market alone was valued at roughly $27.96 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach about $49.5 billion by 2030. Over 70% of Saudis are under 30, and internet penetration exceeds 98%. That's a young, connected audience used to shopping online — and your advantage is that you speak their language.
Saudi Arabia: to trade properly you need a Commercial Registration (CR) via the Ministry of Commerce platform, and listing your store on Maroof builds trust with Saudi buyers. UAE: you need an e-commerce license (from the emirate's economic department, or a free zone). Without a license you can't open a business bank account or register for VAT.
The practical rule: never sell without pricing VAT into your product — ignoring it piles up as a debt later.
The most common mistake in the Gulf: offering only international cards. Gulf buyers want their local methods:
SAMA-licensed gateways, with approximate fees:
Important: Stripe is not SAMA-licensed for MADA, so it doesn't work for a Saudi-resident merchant. Don't build your Saudi store on it.
Services like Tabby and Tamara carry roughly 35–40% of Saudi checkouts, and adding them lifts average order value by 20–40%. Tamara is Sharia-compliant (no interest). At least one is close to mandatory.
COD has dropped to about 15–20% (down from over 40%), but it still matters for new customers and certain categories. For shipping, carriers like Aramex, SMSA, Naqel and Fetchr cover major cities with COD handling.
Right-to-left (RTL) layout, correct Arabic copy, and clear local payment options. Gulf buyers trust a store that "feels like theirs" — and that's exactly where you beat foreign competitors.
DropAI helps with the part before the store: finding the winning product, validating it, and writing the ad — with a full Arabic interface. Try it free.
The Gulf is a real opportunity with real numbers, but it rewards those who set up correctly: register legally, price in VAT, and offer MADA + Apple Pay + BNPL. Get these basics right and you're ahead of most competitors who ignore them.
Next step after setup: how to find a winning product.
This guide is general educational information, not legal or tax advice — consult a professional for your specific case.
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