Hala Law is an independent Saudi project with a single purpose: making Saudi legal information available with its official source attached, in plain language, alongside free tools that help you understand your situation before taking any step — nothing more, nothing less.

Our mission

Saudi legal information exists, but it is scattered across laws, regulations, and government platforms. Our mission is to collect, document, and simplify it: every statement we publish carries its official source, the article number, and a verification date, and every tool we build — such as the end-of-service calculator — shows its computation logic and the statutory article it rests on. Our full methodology is in the Editorial Policy.

What we are

  • A legal information platform: we explain Saudi laws and procedures as stated in their official sources.
  • Official-source-first: the Bureau of Experts at the Council of Ministers, the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Human Resources, and the competent government platforms are our references — we do not publish anything we cannot trace to them.
  • Free tools: calculators and helpers that work transparently and show their results line by line.

What we are not

Being explicit here is both a regulatory and an ethical commitment:

  • We are not a law firm, and the site does not operate as a licensed lawyer.
  • We do not provide legal advice, legal representation, or legal opinions. The platform is a technology and information platform; any legal services are provided exclusively by independently licensed lawyers under a direct lawyer-client relationship.
  • No government status and no official partnership: we link you to the official source; we do not represent any government body, and no official partnership with any government platform exists unless expressly announced.

Who is behind the project?

Hala Law is an independent Saudi project, and our scope is Saudi law exclusively. In plain terms: formal company registration is currently in progress, and this page will be updated as soon as it completes. Until then, our editorial commitment stands unchanged: full documentation, a visible change log on every page, and an open corrections channel.

Our limits: when do you need a licensed lawyer?

Everything here is general information describing the law as it stands; it does not replace a professional opinion on a specific case. Once a matter turns on your own facts — an active dispute, a contract that needs drafting or review, an approaching statutory deadline, or an assessment of your position before a court — the proper route is a licensed lawyer registered with the Ministry of Justice who can review your full circumstances. Saudi law reserves legal consultation for licensed professionals, and we respect that line and remind you of it on every page.