Palm trees and buildings in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia GDP Q1 2026

Saudi Arabia: Economic growth decelerates in the first quarter of 2026

GDP growth exceeds estimates: Saudi Arabia’s GDP expanded 3.0% in annual terms in Q1, following a 5.2% expansion in the previous quarter. While this marked the weakest reading since Q2 2024, it remained above the country’s three-year average and overshot market estimates.

On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, the economy contracted 1.2% in Q1, following a 1.3% expansion in the prior quarter. The quarterly decline was primarily driven by a drop in oil activities.

Drivers: Relative to the previous quarter’s data, readings in Q1 softened for exports of goods and services (+1.4% in annual terms vs +11.2% in Q4) and imports of goods and services (-5.5% vs -0.3% in Q4). In contrast, readings strengthened for private consumption (+5.3% vs +3.2% in Q4), government consumption (+11.3% vs -8.5% in Q4) and fixed investment (+3.9% vs -4.9% in Q4).

Panelist insight: Commenting on the reading, Farouk Soussa, analyst at Goldman Sachs, stated:

“A detailed breakdown of the numbers reveal a surge in government final consumption on a yoy basis and government capital expenditure. […] The surge in government spending is consistent with the Q1 fiscal data which showed a 20% increase in government spending yoy. Exports were up modestly on a yoy basis, despite our estimate of a ~45% decline in oil exports volumes in March due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Imports, however, declined […], reflecting mainly supply chain disruptions, in our opinion (45% of Saudi imports come via the Strait of Hormuz). Offsetting the growth in government spending and net exports was a sharp decline in inventories (-89%yoy, -88%qoq), consistent with the decline in imports.”

On the GDP outlook, Simon Williams, chief economist at HSBC, commented:

“For 2026 as a whole, we see growth averaging around 2% – some 3ppt below the five-year average and well down on our pre-crisis projection. Nevertheless, the growth forecast is stronger than our expectations for the Middle East as a whole and masks a positive growth profile that sees the economy contracting in the first half of the year before returning to growth in H2 as the impact of the crisis fades. […] The forecast is premised on a sharp rise in oil exports as traffic through the Strait of Hormuz normalises and OPEC keeps production quotas loose amid global inventory restocking. But we also look for non-oil activity to firm as confidence recovers and supply-chain disruption fades.”

Free sample report

Access essential information in the shortest time possible. FocusEconomics provide hundreds of consensus forecast reports from the most reputable economic research authorities in the world.
Close Left Media Arrows Left Media Circles Right Media Arrows Right Media Circles Arrow Quote Wave Address Email Email Team Member Linkedin Team Member Telephone Man in front of screen with line chart Document with bar chart and magnifying glass Application window with bar chart Target with arrow Line Chart Stopwatch Globe with arrows Document with bar chart in front of screen Bar chart with magnifying glass and dollar sign Lightbulb Document with bookmark Laptop with download icon Calendar Icon Nav Menu Arrow Arrow Right Long Icon Arrow Right Icon Chevron Right Icon Chevron Left Icon Briefcase Icon Linkedin In Icon Full Linkedin Icon Filter Facebook Linkedin Twitter Pinterest X Fullscreen Line Chart Globe Download Share Embed FocusEconomics
Skip to toolbar