Saudi Arabia introduced a new “Resident ID” system that replaces the old annual residency-renewal routine with a single, five-year card and a simplified online workflow. Officials and local outlets say the move will dramatically cut visits to passport and residency offices for over 13 million residents, reduce waiting times and move most transactions onto the Absher / e-services platforms.
Why does the 5-year Saudi Resident ID matter?
The core benefit is practical: instead of renewing an Iqama every year (and standing in long lines), residents will get a card valid for five years and renew digitally via Absher. Reports estimate this will eliminate tens of millions of annual visits to government counters and save households and the economy substantial time and cost. Fees mentioned in local coverage put the one-time five-year cost at roughly SAR 500 for adults and SAR 600 for domestic workers, replacing repeated annual payments.
Absher: Saudi ’s digital government platform
Absher is Saudi Arabia’s official digital platform that allows residents and citizens to access government services without visiting physical offices. Operated by the Ministry of Interior, it connects more than 350 services from different government entities in one place.Through Absher, users can renew residency permits, update personal information, pay government fees, book appointments, track applications, and receive official documents through registered postal addresses. It works across web and mobile apps, and every user has a secure digital profile linked to their identity.Absher has become one of Saudi Arabia’s most important digital-government tools, handling millions of transactions every day and reducing paperwork, queues, and in-person visits. The new Resident ID system relies on Absher as the main portal for issuing, renewing and managing the five-year ID, making the process fully online and significantly faster.
How does the new system work?
The rollout is tied to Saudi’s digital services: applicants will be able to request and manage the Resident ID through Absher and related government platforms. The new ID is designed to work as a trusted digital identity (usable in transactions and verifications), and the authorities ask residents to register a postal address through the “Wasil”/“Wasil Digital” (Waṣil) mail service so official documents and the physical card are delivered reliably. The interior ministry’s e-services page has long supported the electronic issuance and renewal of resident documents, the new plan makes that the standard.
Bigger picture
This monumental policy shift is not just about convenience; it is a core pillar of Saudi Arabia’s ambitious Vision 2030. The comprehensive strategy aims to modernize the government structure and transition the Kingdom into a global digital leader. By eliminating the time-consuming annual renewal cycle, the government expects to cut out an astonishing 65 million annual visits to public service offices over the next five years. This reduction in administrative clutter translates directly into massive economic gains. Experts predict the new electronic system will save the national economy over 2.6 billion Saudi Riyals by dramatically reducing wasted time and boosting overall productivity. Dr. Khalid, a Digital Government Expert, lauded the change, describing it as a “qualitative leap, like moving from using copper coins to adopting bank cards.“

