Riyadh qualifies firms for One-Stop Stations PPP

02 February 2026
Forty-nine local and international firms expressed interest in the project last year

Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access 

Saudi Arabia’s Roads General Authority (RGA), in collaboration with the National Centre for Privatisation & Public-Private Partnership (NCP), has qualified four groups and two standalone companies for a contract to develop the kingdom’s One-Stop Station project on a public-private partnership (PPP) basis.

The groups include:

  • Al-Ayuni Investment & Contracting Company / Al-Jeri
  • IC Ictas / Algihaz Holding / Al-Drees
  • TechTrade Global / Al-Habbas / Fuelax / Markabat / Naqleen Company
  • Petromin / Red Sea Housing
  • Asyad 
  • Sasco

The project includes the development of facilities at several locations across the RGA’s 73,600-kilometre intercity road network.

The facilities include refuelling stations, commercial outlets, parking lots, driver rest areas, vehicle maintenance centres and other hospitality amenities.

The project will be implemented under a 30-year design, build, finance, operate and maintain (DBFOM) contract, and will be tendered in three waves comprising six packages.

The first wave will include the initial package, the second wave will encompass the second and third packages, and the third wave will cover the remaining three packages.

In August last year, 49 Saudi and international firms expressed interest in the contract to develop the kingdom’s One-Stop Station project, as MEED reported.

In January, Saudi Arabia launched a National Privatisation Strategy, which aims to mobilise $64bn in private sector capital by 2030.

The strategy was approved by Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Finance and chairman of the National Centre for Privatisation (NCP), Mohammed Bin Abdullah Al-Jadaan.

The strategy builds on the privatisation programme, which was first introduced in 2018. It will focus on unlocking state-owned assets for private investment and privatising selected government services.

The value of PPP contracts in Saudi Arabia has risen sharply over the past few years as the government seeks to develop projects through the private sector and diversify funding sources

PPPs have been used in Saudi Arabia and the wider GCC region for over two decades, but have primarily been limited to power generation and water desalination projects, where developers benefit from guaranteed take-or-pay power purchase agreements that eliminate demand risk.

As capital expenditure continues to increase, the NCP is expected to add dozens more PPPs to its future pipeline to reduce the state’s financial burden and stimulate private sector involvement in the local projects market.

A MEED Subscription...

Subscribe or upgrade your current MEED.com package to support your strategic planning with the MENA region’s best source of business information. Proceed to our online shop below to find out more about the features in each package.

Take advantage of our introductory offers below for new subscribers and purchase your access today! If you are an existing client, please reach out to your account manager.