In an important labor market update, Saudi ArabiaThe Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development has launched a new digital service that fundamentally changes the way domestic worker contracts are processed when workers are no longer at work. The launch of the service through Musaned, the unified national recruitment platform, is part of wider workforce reforms aimed at streamlining employment processes across the Kingdom and improving contract clarity and compliance.
what is Saudi Arabia Arab “work interruption” service?
The Work Interruption Service, launched in February 2026, is an online mechanism that allows individual employers to legally terminate a domestic worker’s employment contract when they stop coming to work. This resolves the legal and administrative ambiguity that employers and workers have long faced under the previous framework.Earlier, employers had limited formal options if a domestic worker disappeared or failed to show up for work (“hurooob”). They often have to wait months or go through complex administrative procedures to terminate contracts, leaving workers in an unclear legal situation, sometimes without clear rights or protections.

Domestic workers absent? Saudi employers now have legal exit route
The new service aims to solve this problem by providing structured digital tools that:
- Transparent: Formalizing identity through Musaned avoids informal or ad hoc procedures.
- Efficient: Employers can initiate contract termination online instead of lengthy face-to-face paperwork.
- Fair: Workers have a clear time frame to resolve their status or seek new employment opportunities.
The Musaned platform, which already facilitates the recruitment, visas and documentation of domestic workers, now also offers this work interruption functionality – expanding its role as a central digital hub for household employment governance.
How work interruption services work in Saudi Arabia
When a domestic worker stops working, the employer can file a termination request through Musaned. This was legally recognized and a formal process was initiated to replace the old informal practice. After the request is submitted:
- If workers have been in Saudi Arabia for less than two years, their contracts can be terminated and they are required to leave the kingdom within 60 days. Failure to do so is a violation of residence and labor laws.
- If workers have been in Saudi Arabia for more than two years, they have two options within 60 days: transfer to a new employer or obtain a final exit visa and leave Saudi Arabia.
This 60-day grace period is an important and structured timetable for balancing employer needs and workers’ rights.
Worker mobility and protection in Saudi Arabia
Importantly, the interruption of work service also incorporates features of labor mobility, meaning that workers whose contracts have been terminated have the opportunity to change employers under specified conditions. It’s a significant shift from old norms, in which workers had little agency once their contract ended or left their employer, with conditions often tied to the kafala patronage system that Saudi Arabia has been reforming for years.

Saudi Arabia tightens rules on domestic worker absences with new digital service
This mobility component demonstrates that the new service is about more than just terminating contracts, but ensuring workers are not left in limbo without legal rights. It is consistent with other regulatory updates, providing workers with a clear “grace period” to regularize their status or transfer sponsorship.
Background: Labor Policy Reforms in Saudi Arabia
The rollout of work-disruption services should come within the context of Saudi Arabia’s broader efforts to modernize its workforce system. Over the past two years, the country has launched a variety of digital tools and regulatory updates to formalize employment relationships:
Digital platforms such as Musaned and Qiwa
- Traditionally used for the recruitment and recording of domestic workers, Musaned is now being expanded into comprehensive employment lifecycle services.
- Another national platform, Qiwa, has introduced reforms such as a 60-day grace period before workers are reported as absent from work, giving them time to re-contract, transfer or legally leave the kingdom.
These platforms are part of a wider digital governance strategy that aims to reduce manual bureaucracy, increase transparency and digitize labor market interactions.
Correct the situation of absent workers
Prior to the introduction of work interruption services, Saudi Arabia had taken initiatives such as providing a Musaned grace period for workers reported absent from work to adjust their status or transfer to a new employer, a measure that already reflected a shift towards more humane and structured labor policies. The new Musaned service consolidates these efforts into a more robust system that formalizes the termination process itself rather than just providing status correction options.
Why work disruption services in Saudi Arabia matter: For employers and workers
for employers
Employers of domestic workers (often domestic or private households) have historically faced contract enforcement challenges:
- Workers who are missing but legally in the country can create legal and logistical ambiguities.
- A lack of formal procedures may prevent an employer from hiring a replacement quickly.
- Unregulated reporting of withdrawals or absences can create controversy or misunderstandings.
With work interruption services, employers have clear legal avenues to terminate their contracts, reducing risk and confusion. This also benefits the home help sector as it provides a predictable standard for resolving conflicts, something that many informal arrangements lack.
for workers
For domestic workers, especially expatriates from abroad, the reform provides for:
- A clear time frame to regulate the state, rather than an indefinite state of uncertainty.
- In some cases, employment transfer routes are taken rather than immediate repatriation.
- According to Saudi labor regulations, the law clearly stipulates their rights and obligations.
Through a formalized process, the system aims to protect vulnerable workers from arbitrary or unfair treatment, while still balancing the needs of employers. Domestic work often falls into a gray area, with informal contracts or undocumented changes. By digitally codifying termination and mobility processes through Musaned, Saudi Arabia is pushing the industry toward formal labor governance, similar to private sector reforms that emphasize digital documentation and legal compliance.

Saudi job disruption services give employers new powers
Although Saudi Arabia does not fully operate within the international labor framework, these reforms bring its system closer to globally recognized best practices by ensuring:
- Contract transparency
- digital record keeping
- Limited time status analysis
- Worker mobility and employer rights
Work interruption services provide employers with a legal, digital way to terminate a domestic worker’s contract when they are no longer available. It includes a grace period (usually 60 days) that gives workers the option to transfer sponsorship or legally leave the country. The system is part of wider Saudi workforce reforms that focus on digital governance and contract clarity. Both workers and employers benefit from greater transparency and clear timelines. It complements other reforms such as Qiwa’s grace period and Musaned’s recruitment enhancements.Work interruption services in Saudi Arabia represent a significant shift in the way the country manages domestic employment relationships, moving from largely manual, informal arrangements to structured, transparent digital processes. It reflects ongoing efforts to modernize labor governance, protect the rights of both parties and integrate labor market activities into unified digital platforms such as Musaned and Qiwa.Whether you are an employer seeking clarity on contract enforcement, or a domestic worker seeking safe legal avenues to navigate employment changes, this reform marks an important milestone in the evolution of labor policy in Saudi Arabia.


