Custom software development in Saudi Arabia
Software built for how your business actually runs — Arabic-first, hosted in-region, and owned by you, not rented from a foreign SaaS that never fit the Saudi market.
Why imported software keeps failing Saudi operations
Most business software sold in the Kingdom was designed for a different market, then translated. Arabic is treated as a localisation afterthought, so the right-to-left layout breaks, names sort wrong, dates fall back to a foreign calendar, and reports read awkwardly. Worse, the data sits on servers abroad and the workflow assumes a process your team does not actually follow. Teams end up maintaining spreadsheets beside the expensive tool just to make the real work happen.
Custom software flips that. Instead of forcing your operation to match an imported product, the product is built around your operation — your terminology, your approvals, your customers, your compliance obligations — and it speaks Arabic natively because it was designed in Arabic from the first screen.
Owned, Arabic-first, in-region by default
- Arabic-first design — full right-to-left layout, correct Arabic typography, Hijri and Gregorian dates, and Arabic-correct sorting and search, with English available where your team needs it.
- Fit to your operation — built around your real process, roles, and approvals rather than a generic template you have to work around.
- Integrated, not isolated — wired into the systems you already run and the government platforms you must report to, so data flows instead of being re-keyed.
- In-region hosting — deployed inside the Kingdom (Riyadh or Jeddah) to align with data-residency expectations under national data rules.
- Owned outright — you receive the source code, the database schema, and the deploy pipeline. No per-seat lock-in, no vendor holding your data hostage.
Data residency and Arabic fluency are not extras
For Saudi businesses — and especially for regulated sectors and government suppliers — where the data lives is a board-level question. The Personal Data Protection Law and the national data-management framework set clear expectations about handling Saudi data inside the Kingdom. Software hosted abroad, with support in a foreign time zone and an interface that fights the Arabic language, is a standing liability. Building in-region with Arabic at the core removes that liability and removes the friction your team feels every day. It is the wedge most off-the-shelf and foreign vendors structurally cannot match.
Building in the Year of AI
Saudi Arabia has named 2026 the Year of Artificial Intelligence, and the direction set by Vision 2030 is unambiguous: digitise, localise, and build national capability rather than importing it wholesale. Custom software is how that ambition lands inside a single business. The systems we build are designed to absorb AI where it earns its place — automating the repetitive, surfacing the right information, and letting AI operators run defined work — without rewriting everything when the technology moves. You build once, on owned foundations, and grow into the AI roadmap on your own terms.
Why build custom software instead of buying an existing product?
Off-the-shelf products are built for the average of many businesses, usually in another market and language. Custom software is built for how your business actually runs, in Arabic, hosted in-region, and owned by you — so it fits, it complies, and it stays yours.
Is the software really Arabic-first, or just translated?
Arabic-first. We design the right-to-left layout, Arabic typography, Hijri and Gregorian dates, and Arabic-correct sorting and search from the first screen — not as a localisation pass bolted on at the end.
Where is the software and our data hosted?
Inside the Kingdom (Riyadh or Jeddah) by default, to align with Saudi data-residency expectations and the Personal Data Protection Law.
Do we own the software, or is it locked to AIMOCS?
You own it outright — source code, database schema, and deploy pipeline. There is no per-seat lock-in and no vendor holding your data.
Can custom software integrate with our existing systems and government platforms?
Yes. Integration is the point — the software is wired into the systems you already run and the government platforms you report to, so data flows automatically instead of being re-keyed.
We don't advise on AI. We run it for you.
Proven on your data before you commit.