Visa by Nationality
The complete operational guide for South African nationals moving to Saudi Arabia for work — eligibility, document attestation through DIRCO (Department of International Relations and Cooperation) and Saudi Embassy Pretoria, costs, and the realistic end-to-end timeline.
How does a South African citizen get a Saudi Arabia work visa? A South African citizen obtains a Saudi work visa through a Saudi-licensed employer (or an Employer of Record) issuing a block visa via MHRSD, then completing GAMCA medical, attestation of educational and police certificates, and visa stamping at the Saudi Embassy in Pretoria (with consulate in Cape Town). Total timeline is typically 6–9 weeks.
South Africa is one of the most active corridors for workforce mobility into Saudi Arabia. Saudi employers (or an Employer of Record acting as the legal sponsor) hire South African citizens through the standard Saudi work-visa lifecycle: block visa from MHRSD, MOFA-issued visa invitation, embassy stamping in Pretoria (with consulate in Cape Town), GAMCA medical screening (where applicable), arrival in the Kingdom, and Iqama issuance within 90 days.
South African educational documents must be authenticated by the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) in Pretoria, then attested by the Saudi Embassy in Pretoria. SAQA (South African Qualifications Authority) evaluation may be required for Saudi credential recognition in regulated professions.
Where South African hires typically land in Saudi Arabia: Mining, oil & gas, healthcare specialists, education, engineering, hospitality management.
Realistic timing for this corridor: DIRCO authentication takes 2–4 weeks. End-to-end 6–9 weeks.
Tamra Mobility manages the full lifecycle as either the legal sponsor (under our EOR licence) or as the operational partner working with your in-Kingdom entity — including attestation routing, GAMCA scheduling, embassy submission, arrival logistics and Iqama issuance.
| Visa type | Saudi Long-Term Work Visa (converted to Iqama on arrival) |
|---|---|
| Embassy / Consulate | Pretoria (with consulate in Cape Town) |
| Attestation authority | DIRCO (Department of International Relations and Cooperation) and Saudi Embassy Pretoria |
| Estimated cost (per hire) | USD 1,500 – USD 3,000 per applicant |
| End-to-end timeline | 6–9 weeks |
| Iqama issuance | Within 90 days of Saudi entry |
| Family inclusion | Spouse and children eligible after main applicant Iqama issued |
The end-to-end Saudi work visa and Iqama lifecycle.
Typical end-to-end timeline is 6–9 weeks. The longest variable is document attestation in South Africa, which can be compressed with Tamra-managed processing.
Total cost typically falls in the range of USD 1,500 – USD 3,000 per applicant. This covers MHRSD block visa fees, MOFA, embassy stamping, attestation, medical and Iqama issuance. Family inclusion adds further costs.
Yes — once the main applicant's Iqama is issued and provided their job classification meets the MOI threshold (typically white-collar professional roles), they can sponsor a spouse and children under 18.
GAMCA is not mandatory for most Western nationalities, but a Saudi-recognised medical fitness test is still required after arrival as part of Iqama issuance.
Yes. Tamra holds an Employer of Record licence in Saudi Arabia and can sponsor work visas, issue Iqamas and manage payroll for your hire while you retain full operational control of the role.
If the candidate is found unfit on contagious disease grounds (TB, HIV, hepatitis), the visa is rejected and cannot be appealed. Tamra screens candidates pre-application to avoid this.