Saudi Reinsurance Company posted its strongest first-quarter results on record in 2026, with net profit rising 32% year-on-year to SAR 46.7 million and insurance revenue surging 73% to SAR 560 million. The Saudi Re Q1 2026 figures — released alongside a Moody’s A2 rating affirmation — reflect a structural shift in the MENA reinsurance landscape that is as much regulatory as commercial.
A Q1 Record Backed by Both Revenue and Ratings
Gross written premiums reached SAR 2.38 billion in Q1 2026, up 37% from SAR 1.74 billion in the same period last year. Insurance revenue grew 73% to SAR 560 million, while net profit after Zakat rose 32% to SAR 46.7 million. The company’s three-year average combined ratio under IFRS 17 stands at 83% — a level that compares favorably with global reinsurance peers, whose averages typically range between 88% and 95%.
Credit rating agencies have moved in step with the operational results. Moody’s affirmed Saudi Re’s A2 Insurance Financial Strength Rating with a stable outlook in April 2026, citing sustained capital adequacy and improving underwriting performance. S&P Global Ratings maintains an A- issuer credit rating with a positive outlook, projecting continued revenue expansion above 35% annually through 2027, driven by domestic regulatory requirements and MENA market growth.
The 30% Cession Rule That Structured This Growth
Saudi Re’s growth trajectory cannot be understood without its regulatory context. The Saudi Insurance Authority implemented a mandatory domestic cession schedule that required insurers to exhaust an increasing proportion of reinsurance capacity locally before placing risk internationally: 20% in 2023, 25% in 2024, and 30% effective January 1, 2025. As the largest licensed domestic reinsurer in Saudi Arabia, Saudi Re is the primary beneficiary of this flow.
This is not a margin business driven by pricing cycles; it is a volume business with a regulatory floor. The 30% cession rule effectively converts a significant portion of Saudi Arabia’s insurance premium base — a market projected to grow from USD 11.17 billion in 2026 to USD 23.59 billion by 2031 — into a captive reinsurance flow that competitors cannot access through underwriting skill alone. The Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) oversees the insurance and reinsurance sector and enforces cession compliance as a core supervisory tool.
Capital Discipline in a Market Expanding at 37%
Saudi Re’s paid-up capital stands at SAR 1.7 billion (approximately USD 453 million), the largest in the MENA reinsurance sector. Total capital expanded from SAR 1.1 billion in December 2023 to SAR 2.1 billion by September 2024 — a 91% increase that supports both domestic cession absorption and international expansion across the 40-plus markets where Saudi Re now operates in MENA, Asia, and Africa.
Maintaining a combined ratio of 83% during a period of 45% nine-month growth (per S&P’s 9M 2025 data) is the metric that most distinguishes Saudi Re from regional peers. Rapid premium growth typically pressures loss ratios as new business seasons; Saudi Re’s ability to hold underwriting discipline at scale suggests actuarial pricing is calibrated to the actual risk profile of the domestic cession pool, not to aggressive market share targets.
What Global Reinsurers Competing for MENA Must Consider
The 30% cession floor creates a structural market divide. International reinsurers can compete only for the remaining 70% of capacity placement — and within that, predominantly for excess layers, specialty lines, and treaty structures where Saudi Re’s domestic franchise advantage is less decisive. New entrants, including recently licensed foreign brokers and the emerging Riyadh Re platform, add pricing pressure without changing the cession mechanics.
The geopolitical backdrop adds a further dimension. Iran-US tensions and elevated Gulf Corridor risk premiums are increasing the volume of specialty and war risk placements in the region — lines where international expertise remains important but where Saudi Re’s local relationships and regulatory standing position it as the anchor cedent partner. For global reinsurers, the strategic question is no longer whether to engage with Saudi Re but on what terms.