RIYADH: Saudi Arabia is rapidly expanding its digital health ecosystem as part of its Vision 2030 agenda to transform healthcare delivery while supporting economic diversification.
Through national platforms, virtual care models, and artificial intelligence-driven technologies, the Kingdom is building a more connected, data-driven system that improves access, efficiency, and long-term sector growth.
Speaking at the Budget Forum in December, Health Minister Fahad Al-Jalajel said healthcare’s contribution to the Saudi gross domestic product has reached 5 percent, with service coverage in the Kingdom hitting 97.4 percent.
Digital health investment supporting Vision 2030 goals
Saudi Arabia’s investments in digital health are supporting Vision 2030’s healthcare transformation and economic diversification goals by expanding access and resilience without proportional growth in physical capacity.
According to Ali Alessandro Ayach, partner at Arthur D. Little, platforms such as the SEHA Virtual Hospital enable specialist expertise to be pooled nationally and delivered virtually across regions.
At the same time, national platforms such as NPHIES, Wasfaty, Sehhaty, and the Unified Health Record are standardizing high-volume transactions across providers and payers. This reduces administrative friction, improves reimbursement predictability, and creates a more investable environment for private sector participation, he explained.
“Independent market research places Saudi Arabia’s digital health market at roughly $2.4 billion in 2024, with projections indicating sustained double-digit growth of approximately 20 to 24 percent annually over the coming decade, reaching an estimated $11 to $17 billion by the early 2030s,” Ayach told Arab News.
He noted that beyond improving healthcare delivery, digital health is contributing to GDP growth, job creation, and economic diversification by expanding into areas such as software, analytics, and AI.
At the same time, initiatives like the Saudi Genome Program and regulated AI adoption are laying the groundwork for future growth in life sciences and health technology, tailored to local needs.
Matt Stubbs, principal for health and life sciences at Oliver Wyman in India, Middle East, and Africa and a former medical doctor, shed light on how Saudi Arabia’s investment in digital health is accelerating the transition from hospital-centric models of care to preventive, data-driven and patient-centered systems.
“By strengthening national digital infrastructure, the Kingdom is laying the foundations for an AI-enabled, bioinformatics-driven and precision medicine future”, he said, adding: “Linking traditional clinical datasets with broader health, demographic, and behavioral data holds significant long-term value, particularly as Saudi Arabia addresses rising rates of non-communicable disease and a gradually aging population.”
ADL’s Ayach underlined that the economic rationale behind these initiatives is strongest where they address Saudi-specific structural constraints related to scale, geography, and system design.

Independent market research places Saudi Arabia’s digital health market at roughly $2.4 billion in 2024, with projections indicating double-digit growth of approximately 20 to 24 percent annually over the coming decade.
Ali Alessandro Ayach, Partner at Arthur D. Little
“Virtual hospitals and remote specialty services reduce unnecessary patient transfers, stabilize quality across regions, and improve specialist utilization when embedded into formal care pathways. National digital platforms shift efficiency gains upstream, away from individual hospitals and toward system coordination, where duplication and administrative costs typically accumulate,” he said.
The partner further clarified that genomics and AI diagnostics are long-term investments that rely on large-scale, high-quality data and strong governance, conditions best achieved through coordinated national programs.
Ayach said that Saudi Arabia’s focus on expanding coverage and standardizing systems before scaling advanced AI reflects a practical approach to building a solid data foundation first.
Stubbs from Oliver Wyman explained that having worked as a medical doctor in a hospital that ran one of the first virtual care pilots in the UK, he has seen first-hand how digital models can transform both patient experience and system performance.
“Virtual hospitals and remote care platforms reduce unnecessary admissions, optimize bed capacity, and significantly lower the risk of hospital-acquired infections. AI-supported diagnostics improve speed and consistency in areas such as imaging and stroke detection, increasing clinician productivity while enabling earlier intervention,” he said.
Public-private partnerships, international technology providers, local startups
The Kingdom stands out by separating national digital health progress from individual hospital upgrade timelines, allowing system-wide capabilities to advance while providers modernize gradually.
Ayach said this model relies on public-private partnerships, where national platforms create standardization and demand, and private players compete to deliver solutions. For startups, the main challenge is scaling beyond pilot projects into full, outcome-driven adoption.
From Oliver Wyman’s lens, Stubbs underlined that initiatives such as the SEHA Virtual Hospital, now one of the largest virtual hospitals globally, demonstrate how government leadership combined with private-sector expertise in tele-ICU infrastructure, AI diagnostics, and remote monitoring can deliver system-wide impact.
The managing director noted that future growth will depend on stronger interoperability that securely connects public, private, and semi-government providers, enabling efficient data sharing across a fully integrated digital health system.
Mass General Brigham
In October, Mass General Brigham — a US-based not-for-profit integrated health system — entered an agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Health Holding Co. to advance the Kingdom’s healthcare model.
This collaboration involves sharing expertise in management, clinical operations, and strategic planning, aimed at transforming the Saudi health sector as part of Vision 2030
“Through its work with the HHC, MGB helps Saudi innovations move from proof to system-wide deployment. This collaboration in turn accelerates real-world validation, investor confidence, and pathways for IP development,” Sarper Tanli, managing director of Middle East and Africa at Global Advisory said.
“This public-private model signals that Saudi Arabia is building a health ecosystem designed for scale, quality, and long-term impact, aligned with Vision 2030. Once completed, the Saudi Model of Care would be KSA’s own unique IP which would be an example for many countries,” he added.
The Kingdom already has many of the foundations in place, from clear national priorities to strong institutional leadership.

Through its work with the HHC, MGB helps Saudi innovations move from proof to system-wide deployment. This collaboration in turn accelerates real-world validation, investor confidence, and pathways for IP development.
Sarper Tanli, managing director of Middle East and Africa at Global Advisory
“The real accelerator is continued system level coordination that allows innovation, policy, and delivery to move forward together at scale. That alignment is what enables pace without compromising quality. Implementation of the Saudi model of care and development of Saudi talent for the future is the core for the success,” the managing director said.
He added: “Our success relies on integration of all elements like regulatory, technology, market response and human capital.”
Tanli said that MGB is expanding its work in the Kingdom around models of care, workforce design, and system performance, in close partnership with national stakeholders.
The future of digital health
As digital health increasingly functions as infrastructure, trust becomes a prerequisite for economic value. Saudi Arabia’s evolving frameworks for data protection, AI-enabled medical devices, and platform governance reflect an understanding that scale without accountability undermines long term sustainability.
“The challenge ahead is not regulatory ambition, but consistency and clarity. Innovators, providers, and investors require predictable pathways to scale solutions while maintaining clinical responsibility, data protection, and public confidence,” Ayach said.
He added: “The main risks to long term growth are therefore systemic rather than technological, including fragmentation between platforms, uneven enforcement of standards, and the scaling of solutions without clear evidence of clinical or economic impact.”
Stubbs emphasized that regulation and data governance will be decisive in ensuring digital health solutions are clinically safe, ethically sound, and sustainable.
“Clear standards for privacy, cybersecurity, AI validation, and interoperability are essential to maintaining public trust. At the same time, regulatory frameworks must remain innovation-enabling rather than overly restrictive. Striking the right balance will determine whether Saudi Arabia becomes not only a technology adopter but also a developer of scalable digital health solutions,” he said.
The managing director concluded by saying that there are many potential risks to growth and sustainability; a key risk is uneven regional adoption and that while digital health can reduce disparities, insufficient infrastructure or workforce readiness in certain areas could inadvertently widen gaps.
