Riyadh to tender high-speed rail in first half of 2026

16 October 2025

 

The Royal Commission for Riyadh City, in collaboration with Qiddiya Investment Company and the National Centre for Privatisation & PPP, is expected to issue the request for proposal notices to the market in the first half of 2026 for the Qiddiya high-speed rail project, which will connect King Salman International airport and King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD) with Qiddiya City. 

The project, which is also known as Q-Express, was previously planned to be developed under a conventional model, but the client is exploring alternative financing options for the project, which include a public-private partnership (PPP) model and an engineering, procurement, construction and finance (EPC+F) model.

The tendering for the EPC+F model will likely begin in March 2026.

The tender for the PPP model is expected to be floated in May next year.

The direct link between King Salman International airport and Qiddiya City will travel at speeds of up to 250 kilometres an hour, reaching Qiddiya in 30 minutes.

MEED recently reported that firms had expressed interest in the Qiddiya high-speed rail project on 12 October.

The clients issued the expression of interest notice to the market in September.

The line is expected to be developed in two phases. The first phase will connect Qiddiya with KAFD and King Khalid International airport.

The second phase will start from a development known as the North Pole – which is understood to include the Public Investment Fund’s proposed 2-kilometre-tall tower – and travel to the New Murabba development, King Salman Park, central Riyadh and Industrial City in the south of Riyadh. 

In November 2023, MEED reported that French consultant Egis had been appointed as the technical adviser for the project.

UK-based consultancy Ernst & Young is acting as the transaction adviser on the project. Latham & Watkins is the legal adviser.

Qiddiya is one of Saudi Arabia’s five official gigaprojects and covers a total area of 376 square kilometres (sq km), with 223 sq km of developed land. 


READ THE OCTOBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF

Private sector takes on expanded role; Riyadh shifts towards strategic expenditure; MEED’s 2025 power developer ranking

Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the October 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:

> AGENDA 1: A new dawn for PPPs
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Yasir Iqbal
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