Kuwait sets October deadline for residential PPP bids

15 September 2025

 

Kuwait’s Public Authority for Housing Welfare (PAHW) has invited local and international firms to submit their statements of qualifications (SoQs) by 30 October for a tender covering the development of three residential cities under a public-private partnership (PPP) framework.

The projects will be developed on a design, finance, build, operate, maintain, sell and transfer basis. The contract term is 30 years, with four years allocated for construction.

The projects include:

  • Al-Mutlaa City (2.12 million square metres)
  • East Saad Al-Abdullah City (1.02 million sq m)
  • West Saad Al-Abdullah and the commercial services strip in Jaber Al-Ahmad City (1.01 million sq m)

Interested companies can collect the request for qualification (RFQ) documents between 18 September and 1 October.

To qualify, firms must have at least 10 years of experience in delivering large-scale residential or mixed-use developments.

These projects will be the first to be implemented under Kuwait’s new real estate development law, introduced in 2023. The law opens Kuwait's housing sector to private investment and enables the establishment of joint ventures between local and foreign investors to deliver new developments on a PPP basis.

Kuwait construction market overview

Kuwait’s construction and infrastructure projects market continued its recovery in the first half of 2025, with over $1.8bn-worth of contracts awarded by 8 August.

The outlook for the remainder of the year appears promising, following the government’s approval of capital spending worth KD1.7bn ($5.7bn) in May for more than 90 projects.

According to local media, these projects include rail, road, water and electricity infrastructure, as well as the Grand Mubarak Port.

The country invested over $45bn in construction and transport projects during 2015 and 2016, amid high oil prices. However, parliamentary gridlock and declining oil revenues since then led to a slowdown in contract awards.

The sector has seen particularly low award levels since 2019, when the total fell below $2bn for the first time. Awards increased modestly in 2020 and 2021, but then dropped again to a low of $1.4bn in 2022.

In contrast, 2023 marked a significant recovery, with awards reaching $3.6bn.

According to data from regional tracker MEED Projects, 2024 was the best year in recent times, with contract awards totalling approximately $5.6bn for construction and infrastructure schemes.


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

Doha’s Olympic bid; Kuwait’s progress on crucial reforms reinforces sentiment; Downstream petrochemicals investments take centre stage

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

To see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click here
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Yasir Iqbal
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