Saudi Arabia eases strict booze ban with non-Muslim ‘premium residents’ allowed to purchase alcohol at nation’s solely liquor retailer
Saudi Arabia has eased restrictions on purchasing alcohol for select foreign residents, diplomats and premium via-holders have said.
While the government has not made any statements regarding the sale of alcohol in recent days, sources said non-Muslim individuals with so-called premium resident status are now able to buy booze at the country’s sole liquor store in Riyadh, which was previously reserved for diplomats.
AFP spoke with four people who said the rules had changed, including two diplomatic sources and a couple of residents with premium visa status.
‘I heard about it from friends who tried it. I went there two days ago and it actually worked,’ one anonymous premium visa-holder said.
‘It saved me a lot of money rather than buying from the black market. Prices are reasonable and we finally can buy alcohol.’
Saudi authorities did not immediately comment on the reports.
Started in 2019, premium resident status in Saudi Arabia is available to a select group of foreigners who meet a variety of requirements, including making a one-time payment of 800,000 riyals (£163,000).
The visa allows people to live, work and invest freely in Saudi Arabia without a local ‘sponsor’ – a kind of guarantor required for other non-nationals to live in the kingdom.
An employee serves non-alcoholic draft beer at a halal bar in the capital Riyadh on October 24, 2025
Saudi Arabia has eased restrictions on purchasing alcohol for select foreign residents, diplomats and premium via-holders have said
A premium residency-holder told AFP that he went to the liquor store and saw a man with the same status purchase alcohol before buying bottles himself.
‘It actually worked for me, it’s so easy,’ he said.
A Western diplomat told AFP that acquaintances of his with premium residency had managed to buy alcohol in the past few days.
‘Expats WhatsApp groups are being flooded with the news,’ he added.
A diplomat told AFP that ‘the (liquor) store was packed’ on Saturday, when she saw ‘people walking out with 30 bottles’.
The apparent loosening of the liquor regulations comes nearly two years after the conservative kingdom opened its first and only liquor store in January 2024 in the capital’s diplomatic quarter, catering exclusively to non-Muslim foreign envoys.
There was no official announcement at the time, with two sources confirming the reports to AFP at the time.
Since the rise to power of Saudi Crown Prince and de facto ruler Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom has undergone steady changes in accordance with its plan to diversify the economy and attract tourists and international business.
Saudi women take photographs of their non-alcoholic draft beer at a halal bar in the capital Riyadh on October 24, 2025
Signs of non-alcoholic beer displayed at the A12 cafe in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, November 24, 2025
Women are now allowed to drive, foreign tourists are being welcomed and cinemas have reopened.
Booze, however, remained a sticking point in the kingdom – the birthplace of Islam and home to two of its holiest cities.
Alcohol has been banned in Saudi Arabia since 1952, shortly after the son of then-King Abdulaziz got drunk and, in a rage, shot dead a British diplomat.
The ban on alcohol is still in place, a measure not uncommon in Muslim countries, where alcohol use is often restricted.
