CHAPTER 1 - MARKET SUMMARY
Market Overview
The Riyadh Retail Mall Market operates as a landlord-led service market in which operators monetize base rent, turnover rent, service charges, advertising, kiosks, parking, and event income. Demand is anchored by a metropolitan population estimated above 8 million residents in 2025 , while national consumer spending reached USD 376 billion in 2024 . This scale supports deep tenant demand but raises the importance of catchment-specific curation.
North and central Riyadh concentrate premium malls, corporate employment, higher-income households, and major transport corridors. Citywide organized retail stock reached approximately 4.0 million sqm in Q1 2025 , while occupancy rose to 92% . Commercially, these hubs sustain stronger headline rents and international brand density, although new supply is increasingly redirecting investment toward Al Malqa, Al Raed, Khuzam, and mixed-use growth corridors.
Market Value
USD 2,480 million
2025
Dominant Region
North Riyadh
2025
Dominant Segment
Regional Malls
fastest growing: Super-Regional Malls, 2026-2031
Total Number of Players
38
Future Outlook
The Riyadh Retail Mall Market is projected to increase from USD 2,480 million in 2025 to USD 4,450 million by 2031, representing a forecast CAGR of 10.2%. This acceleration follows a 9.7% historical CAGR during 2020-2025, when market recovery combined with additions to occupied GLA and improved leasing conditions. The growth path assumes that committed super-regional, regional, and mixed-use projects are phased rather than delivered simultaneously, moderating vacancy shocks while increasing investable retail districts across north, central, and western Riyadh. Citywide occupancy is expected to remain near 89%-91%, allowing most new capacity to become revenue-generating within three to five years.
Profit pool expansion will be led by experiential formats, higher non-GLA revenue, curated food and beverage, entertainment anchors, media inventory, and premium brand clusters. Occupied GLA is forecast to reach 6.43 million sqm by 2031, while operator revenue per occupied sqm recovers after near-term dilution from new supply. The central strategic risk is absorption: headline supply can grow faster than tenant sales. Operators with differentiated catchments, data-driven leasing, variable-rent structures, and asset-management capability should outperform passive landlords reliant on fixed rent and undifferentiated fashion-led tenant mixes. Capital allocation should favor flexible unit configurations and measurable tenant-sales data.
10.2%
Forecast CAGR
$4,450 Mn
2030 Projection
Base Year
2025
Historical Period
2020-2025
Forecast Period
2026-2031
Historical CAGR
9.7%
CHAPTER 2 - SCOPE OF REPORT
Scope of the Market
CHAPTER 3 - Key Stakeholders
Key Target Audience
Key stakeholders who can leverage from this market analysis for investment, strategy, and operational planning.
Investors
occupancy, rental yield, capex, absorption, exit value, risk
Corporates
location strategy, rent burden, footfall, conversion, brand adjacency
Government
zoning, mobility, investment, Saudization, consumer access, resilience
Operators
leasing, tenant mix, dwell time, service charge, retention
Financial institutions
debt service, covenants, valuation, refinancing, downside coverage
CHAPTER 4 - Market Size & Growth
Market Size, Growth Forecast and Trends
This section evaluates the historical market size, analyzes year-over-year growth dynamics, and presents forecast projections supported by market performance indicators and demand-side drivers.
Historical & Projected Market Size ($ Million)
Year-over-Year Growth Rate (%)
Market Value vs Volume Growth (%)
Historical Market Performance (2020-2025)
The market's trough occurred in 2020 as movement restrictions and tenant relief measures compressed collections and footfall. The strongest annual rebound followed in 2022, when value increased by 13.0% and occupied GLA reached 2.83 million sqm. Growth normalized to 8.9% in 2023, then strengthened through 2024-2025 as new supply was absorbed. Revenue per occupied sqm declined from USD 675 in 2022 to USD 626 in 2025, indicating that space growth outpaced pricing and shifted management focus toward tenant productivity and ancillary income. The period combined demand recovery with structural revenue-density dilution as supply expanded faster than mature-mall pricing.
Forecast Market Outlook (2026-2031)
Forecast value growth accelerates from 9.5% in 2026 to above 10% annually from 2027 as major destination assets mature. Terminal market size reaches USD 4,450 million in 2031, while occupied GLA expands to 6.43 million sqm. The near-term supply wave reduces operator revenue per occupied sqm to USD 583 in 2026, followed by recovery to USD 692 by 2031 as lease-up improves, premium formats gain share, and turnover-linked structures capture tenant sales. This implies stronger returns for active asset managers than for undifferentiated capacity providers. New openings should widen performance dispersion between top-tier destinations and secondary centers with limited repositioning capex.
CHAPTER 5 - Market Data
Market Breakdown
Riyadh's mall economy combines a rapidly expanding physical footprint with strong demand from residents, corporate relocation, tourism, and lifestyle spending. For CEOs and investors, the key issue is not aggregate supply alone, but the relationship among occupied GLA, effective operator revenue, and asset-level differentiation.
Year | Market Size (USD Mn) | YoY Growth (%) | Occupied GLA (Mn sqm) | Occupancy (%) | Effective Operator Revenue per Occupied sqm (USD) | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | $1,560 Mn | +- | 2.55 | 88.0% | Forecast | |
| 2021 | $1,690 Mn | +8.3% | 2.64 | 88.5% | Forecast | |
| 2022 | $1,910 Mn | +13.0% | 2.83 | 89.8% | Forecast | |
| 2023 | $2,080 Mn | +8.9% | 3.12 | 90.5% | Forecast | |
| 2024 | $2,280 Mn | +9.6% | 3.52 | 90.3% | Forecast | |
| 2025 | $2,480 Mn | +8.8% | 3.96 | 91.0% | Forecast | |
| 2026 | $2,715 Mn | +9.5% | 4.65 | 89.5% | Forecast | |
| 2027 | $2,990 Mn | +10.1% | 4.94 | 89.0% | Forecast | |
| 2028 | $3,300 Mn | +10.4% | 5.44 | 88.5% | Forecast | |
| 2029 | $3,650 Mn | +10.6% | 5.82 | 88.8% | Forecast | |
| 2030 | $4,030 Mn | +10.4% | 6.14 | 89.0% | Forecast | |
| 2031 | $4,450 Mn | +10.4% | 6.43 | 89.3% | Forecast |
Occupied GLA
3.96 million sqm, 2025, Riyadh . Scale supports deeper brand assortments but also increases lease-up risk. Approximately 2.2 million sqm of additional retail development is planned for Riyadh by 2030, requiring phased openings and clear catchment differentiation. Source: Knight Frank, 2025.
Occupancy
91.0%, 2025, Riyadh . High occupancy supports rental collections, yet super-regional performance masks weaker secondary assets. Q1 2025 market-wide occupancy reached 92%, five percentage points above Q1 2024, confirming strong tenant demand in flagship locations. Source: Knight Frank, 2025.
Effective Operator Revenue
USD 626 per occupied sqm, 2025, Riyadh . Productivity dilution reflects new supply and incentives, not weak demand. Average headline rents in regional and super-regional malls reached the equivalent of about USD 759 per sqm in Q1 2025 before anchor exclusions and lease incentives. Source: Knight Frank, 2025.
CHAPTER 6 - Segmentation
Market Segmentation Framework
Comprehensive analysis across key dimensions providing insights into market structure, consumer preferences, and distribution patterns.
No of Segments
7
Dominant Segment
Asset Type
Fastest Growing Segment
Property Type
Asset Type
Property Type
Customer Type
Price Tier
Transaction Type
Ownership Model
Operating Model
Key Segmentation Takeaways
Comprehensive analysis across all extracted segmentation dimensions providing insights into market structure, consumer preferences, and distribution patterns.
Asset Type
Regional malls remain the dominant commercial format because they balance citywide catchment, family usage, tenant variety, and manageable development scale. Their revenue resilience is supported by fashion, food, services, and cinema anchors rather than a single category. Super-regional malls command greater strategic attention, but regional malls retain the broadest operating base and the deepest pipeline of repeatable leasing benchmarks.
Property Type
Open-air lifestyle centers, mixed-use retail podiums, and entertainment-led districts are growing fastest as consumers shift from transaction-only visits toward dining, leisure, events, and social experiences. The strongest sub-segment is entertainment-led retail districts, where developers can monetize longer dwell times, sponsorship, ticketed attractions, and hospitality spillovers while reducing dependence on conventional fashion rents.
CHAPTER 7 - Regional Analysis
Regional Analysis
Riyadh ranks second among selected GCC retail-mall city peers by estimated 2025 operator revenue, behind Dubai but ahead of Jeddah, Kuwait City, and Doha. Its advantage is a combination of metropolitan scale, lower organized GLA per resident, policy-backed urban development, and a large committed pipeline, creating above-peer growth but also elevated absorption risk.
Peer-City Ranking
2nd
Riyadh Market Size (2025)
USD 2.48 Bn
Riyadh CAGR (2026-2031)
10.2%
Peer-City Ranking
2nd
Riyadh Market Size (2025)
USD 2.48 Bn
Riyadh CAGR (2026-2031)
10.2%
Regional Analysis (Current Year)
Market Position
Riyadh ranks second with USD 2.48 billion in estimated 2025 operator revenue, supported by 4.35 million sqm of retail stock and an expanding resident catchment.
Growth Advantage
Riyadh's 10.2% forecast CAGR exceeds Jeddah's 7.4% and Dubai's 5.6%, reflecting a lower GLA-per-capita base and a larger committed development pipeline.
Competitive Strengths
Riyadh combines more than 8 million residents, 176 km of metro infrastructure, and 85% electronic-payment penetration nationally, strengthening catchment accessibility and omnichannel conversion.
CHAPTER 8 - INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
Growth Drivers, Market Challenges & Market Opportunities
Comprehensive analysis of key factors shaping the Riyadh Retail Mall Market, including growth catalysts, operational challenges, and emerging opportunities across development, leasing, operations, and consumer segments.
Growth Drivers
Population and Corporate Catchment Expansion
- Saudi Arabia's population reached 35.3 million and grew 4.7% (2024, Saudi Arabia) ; Riyadh captures a disproportionate share of employment-led migration, supporting weekday and evening retail demand.
- Riyadh combines an estimated 8.2 million residents and 0.53 sqm of mall GLA per capita (2025, Riyadh) , indicating selective whitespace in underserved districts rather than uniform citywide shortage.
- Citywide mall occupancy reached 92%, up 5 percentage points (Q1 2025, Riyadh) , demonstrating tenant demand while increasing the commercial value of well-connected catchments and differentiated assets.
Consumer Spending and Digital Payment Depth
- Point-of-sale transactions reached USD 178 billion and grew 9% (2024, Saudi Arabia) ; better sales visibility supports category benchmarking, lease underwriting, and auditable variable-rent structures.
- Electronic payments represented 85% of retail payments (2025, Saudi Arabia) , reducing cash friction and enabling mall loyalty, tenant-sales analytics, and conversion measurement at scale.
- Electronic transaction count reached 14.6 billion, up from 12.6 billion (2025, Saudi Arabia) , creating a deeper data layer for retailers, operators, banks, and payment-platform partnerships.
Experience-Led Supply and Infrastructure Investment
- More than 50% of upcoming projects (2025 pipeline, Riyadh) include entertainment, dining, or cinemas, increasing dwell time and creating sponsorship, event, ticketing, and media income.
- The Riyadh Metro spans 176 km (2025, Riyadh) , improving access to activity corridors and supporting transit-linked retail, higher visit frequency, and lower dependence on parking capacity.
- Regional and super-regional headline rents reached approximately USD 759 per sqm (Q1 2025, Riyadh) , confirming premium pricing power where tenant mix, accessibility, and experience quality are differentiated.
Market Challenges
Pipeline Absorption and Tenant Negotiating Power
- Approximately 540,000 sqm was scheduled for delivery (2025, Riyadh) , increasing competition for international anchors and extending pre-opening leasing, fit-out, and cash-conversion periods.
- Occupancy reached 92% (Q1 2025, Riyadh) , yet major chains negotiated capex contributions and location holds; investors must therefore assess net effective rent rather than occupancy alone.
- Modeled operator revenue intensity falls from USD 626 to USD 583 per occupied sqm (2025-2026, Riyadh) as supply opens, making lease-up velocity and incentive discipline critical.
Rent Regulation and Operating Cost Recovery
- The five-year measure effective September 2025 (Riyadh) applies to existing and new commercial leases, increasing exposure to utilities, security, maintenance, and labor-cost inflation.
- Prime headline rent of USD 759 per sqm (Q1 2025, Riyadh) does not reflect incentives or cost recovery; service-charge governance becomes central to protecting asset-level margins.
- Electronic-payment penetration of 85% (2025, Saudi Arabia) creates the operating infrastructure for turnover rent, but landlords require standardized sales reporting and auditable lease clauses.
Format Obsolescence and Category Imbalance
- Food and beverage POS value reached approximately USD 53 billion (2024, Saudi Arabia) , attracting supply but increasing churn risk for undifferentiated coffee and casual-dining concepts.
- More than 50% of future schemes (2025 pipeline, Riyadh) include entertainment or dining, so identical anchors can dilute revenue density unless projects develop unique programming.
- Hayat Mall reported 96% occupancy (2024, Riyadh) , illustrating the gap between established assets and older centers that defer capex, digital systems, circulation, and tenant-mix repositioning.
Market Opportunities
Variable-Rent and Non-GLA Monetization
- 14.6 billion electronic transactions (2025, Saudi Arabia) support hybrid rent, digital media, loyalty, sponsorship, and tenant-performance services with measurable attribution.
- Cenomi's portfolio of about 1.3 million sqm GLA (2025, Saudi Arabia) demonstrates the scale at which media, events, kiosks, and data products can become material.
- the five-year commercial rent increase stop (2025, Riyadh) makes standardized POS reporting, privacy controls, and turnover clauses necessary for bankable revenue diversification.
Underserved Catchment and Community Retail
- more than 1,250 retail units (2025, Unified portfolio) show the repeatability of grocery, pharmacy, fitness, education, clinics, and daily-service tenant mixes.
- citywide occupancy of 92% (Q1 2025, Riyadh) supports smaller institutional projects where neighborhood density and convenience demand lower stabilization risk.
- estimated mall provision of 0.53 sqm per resident (2025, Riyadh) must be analyzed by drive-time and district, preventing capital deployment into already saturated catchments.
Destination Retail in Mixed-Use Megaprojects
- Jawharat Riyadh and Murcia Mall add approximately 185,000 sqm and 180,000 sqm GLA (pipeline, Riyadh) , enabling retail, hospitality, events, and entertainment revenue pools.
- the 176 km metro network (2025, Riyadh) improves destination accessibility for master developers, hospitality operators, global brands, and cultural or entertainment providers.
- the 2.2 million sqm pipeline to 2030 (Riyadh) requires phased delivery, coordinated events, tenant exclusivity, and common data platforms to limit internal cannibalization.
CHAPTER 9 - Competitive Landscape
Competitive Landscape Overview
The market is moderately concentrated by prime GLA but fragmented across ownership and management models. Entry barriers include land, capex, tenant relationships, leasing capability, infrastructure integration, and the operating depth needed to sustain footfall across large mixed-use destinations.
Market Share Distribution
Top 5 Players
Market Dynamics
8 new entrants in the past 5 years, indicating strong market attractiveness and growth potential.
Company Name | Market Share | Headquarters | Founding Year | Core Market Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Cenomi Centers | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | 2002 | Large-scale lifestyle malls, flagship centers, leasing, and non-GLA revenue |
Abdullah Al Othaim Investment Co. | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | - | Regional malls, community retail, family entertainment, and mixed-use destinations |
Hamat Holding | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | - | Third-party mall management, leasing, operations, and retail destination development |
Kinan International Real Estate Development | - | Jeddah, Saudi Arabia | - | Mall ownership, retail asset management, and mixed-use real estate development |
Alandalus Property Co. | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | 2006 | Retail mall ownership, operations, hospitality, and income-producing assets |
Unified Real Estate Development | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | - | Open-air community centers, anchored lifestyle centers, and mixed-use retail |
Kingdom Holding Company | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | 1980 | Kingdom Centre retail, luxury mixed-use real estate, and hospitality assets |
Shomoul Holding | - | Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia | - | The Avenues Riyadh and large-scale destination retail development |
Diriyah Company | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | - | Heritage-led mixed-use destination retail, hospitality, culture, and public realm |
Qiddiya Investment Company | - | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | - | Entertainment-led destination development with integrated retail and hospitality |
Cross Comparison Parameters
The report provides detailed cross-comparison of key players across 10 performance parameters to identify competitive strengths and weaknesses.
Occupancy Rate
Net Effective Rent per sqm
Revenue Growth
EBITDA Margin
Analysis Covered
Market Share Analysis:
Quantifies operator positioning using GLA, rent, occupancy, and footfall benchmarks.
Cross Comparison Matrix:
Compares operating scale, leasing productivity, profitability, and portfolio quality systematically.
SWOT Analysis:
Evaluates internal capabilities, external threats, and investable strategic responses clearly.
Pricing Strategy Analysis:
Assesses headline rents, incentives, turnover clauses, and tenant economics comparatively.
Company Profiles:
Profiles ownership, portfolio footprint, development pipeline, and strategic differentiation comprehensively.
CHAPTER 10 - REPORT TOC
Table of Contents
Phase 1Market Assessment Phase
11
Chapters
Phase 2Go-To-Market Strategy Phase
17
Chapters
Complete Report Coverage
201+ detailed sections covering every aspect of the market
143
Assessment Sections
58
Strategy Sections
CHAPTER 11 - Our Approach
Research Methodology
Desk Research
- Mapped Riyadh mall stock and pipeline
- Reviewed occupancy and rental benchmarks
- Analyzed consumer payment and spending
- Tracked zoning and lease regulation
Primary Research
- Interviewed Riyadh mall general managers
- Consulted retail leasing and asset directors
- Surveyed anchor and specialty tenant executives
- Engaged retail property investment professionals
Validation and Triangulation
- Validated 362 structured respondent observations
- Reconciled GLA, occupancy, and revenue estimates
- Cross-checked rent, occupancy, and tenant productivity
- Tested base, bear, and bull scenarios
CHAPTER 12 - FAQ
FAQs
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CHAPTER 13 - Related Research
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