Saudi Arabia’s small business sector is in the middle of a quiet but significant shift. With over one million active commercial registrations and Vision 2030 targeting a 35% SME contribution to GDP, the Kingdom’s entrepreneurial ecosystem is expanding rapidly. But alongside this growth, business owners face a new operational reality: digital compliance is no longer optional.
The Zakat, Tax and Customs Authority (ZATCA) has been rolling out its e-invoicing mandate in phases since December 2021. Phase 1 required businesses to issue invoices electronically. Phase 2 — currently being rolled out in waves throughout 2026 — requires direct integration with ZATCA’s Fatoora platform, meaning every invoice must be validated in real time. For small business owners, this means one thing: the right digital tools are no longer a nice-to-have.
From spreadsheets to cloud software
Until recently, many Saudi SME owners managed their finances through a patchwork of spreadsheets, paper receipts, and manual invoices. This approach worked when requirements were simpler, but the combination of e-invoicing compliance, VAT reporting, and the need for real-time financial visibility has made it unsustainable.
The shift is towards cloud-based accounting software that consolidates invoicing, expense tracking, bank reconciliation, and financial reporting in a single platform. For small business owners who aren’t accountants by training, the key factor isn’t just compliance — it’s clarity. Knowing exactly where their money is, what’s been paid, and what’s outstanding, without waiting for a monthly report from a bookkeeper.
Built for the business owner, not the accountant
One of the solutions gaining traction in the Saudi market is Haseem, a cloud-based accounting, e-invoicing, and financial management software designed specifically for business owners in Saudi Arabia. What sets it apart from enterprise-grade systems is its focus on simplicity: the interface is built for someone running a business, not someone with an accounting degree.
Haseem covers the core functions a small business needs daily: issuing ZATCA-compliant sales invoices and tracking their payment status, recording and categorising expenses in real time, managing supplier bills and purchase orders, reconciling bank and cash accounts, and generating financial reports including a VAT return report ready for review.
The software supports both Phase 1 and Phase 2 of ZATCA’s e-invoicing requirements across all its plans, with technical details like XML formatting, QR codes, and Fatoora integration handled automatically in the background. It also supports Arabic and English, with data hosted locally within Saudi Arabia.
Why this matters beyond compliance
The broader significance of this shift goes beyond meeting regulatory deadlines. When a business owner can see their cash flow in real time, track which invoices are overdue, and understand their expense patterns at a glance, they make better decisions — about hiring, expansion, pricing, and supplier management.
For Saudi Arabia’s growing SME sector, the transition from manual financial management to cloud-based tools represents more than a compliance exercise. It’s a step towards the kind of financial transparency that turns small businesses into sustainable ones — and that aligns directly with the economic diversification goals at the heart of Vision 2030.
