logo
New rules in Saudi Arabia aim to elevate fine dining experience

New rules in Saudi Arabia aim to elevate fine dining experience

Time of India23-07-2025
Saudi Arabia introduces fine dining regulations that prioritise elegance, service, and exclusivity under Vision 2030/Representative Image
TL;DR:
Saudi Arabia
launches new rules for fine dining restaurants under Vision 2030.
Regulations focus on service quality, dress codes, ambience, and hospitality standards.
Only one branch per restaurant chain is allowed per city under the fine dining category
Initiative aims to align local hospitality with international luxury standards.
In a bid to elevate its culinary and hospitality standards, Saudi Arabia has introduced a new set of guidelines for fine dining establishments. The Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and Housing (MOMRAH) unveiled the regulatory framework on Monday, with a clear focus on enhancing customer experience and aligning with global fine dining norms.
The initiative is part of the broader Vision 2030 objectives aimed at developing lifestyle sectors, supporting the tourism industry, and promoting private-sector excellence in service delivery.
What's Changing for Fine Dining?
Under the new classification system as mentioned in Saudi Gazette, fine dining restaurants must now adhere to a defined set of operational and visual standards. These include:
High-End Service Standards:
Trained staff must be available to provide tailored, attentive service to patrons.
Atmosphere and Design:
The interiors should reflect elegance, sophistication, and comfort — with curated lighting, well-planned layouts, and distinct branding.
Dress Code and Etiquette:
Both customers and staff are expected to maintain a refined appearance. Restaurants are allowed to enforce specific dress codes, provided they are clearly communicated.
Music and Entertainment Policy:
Any background music or entertainment should maintain a classy, low-volume ambience suited to the theme and atmosphere of fine dining.
Exclusive Licensing:
Only one branch per restaurant chain is permitted per city under the fine dining classification, preventing oversaturation and preserving exclusivity.
The ministry clarified that these measures are designed to ensure a consistent and premium dining experience while supporting Saudi Arabia's hospitality competitiveness on the global stage.
Purpose: Supporting Lifestyle and Tourism Goals
According to the Ministry, the regulation aims to develop the classification of food establishments and support the Kingdom's growing role as a hub for gastronomy and upscale leisure.
Saudi Arabia has seen a surge in high-end restaurant openings in cities like Riyadh, Jeddah, and AlUla in recent years. This regulatory step ensures that such venues maintain international-level standards while preserving cultural expectations and local identity.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around
Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List
Undo
The guidelines also support the tourism ecosystem by standardizing the quality of visitor experiences, a key objective under Vision 2030.
Impact on Business and Patrons
Fine dining operators will need to meet these criteria to either maintain or obtain their "fine dining" classification. The ministry may issue formal recognitions or classifications to establishments that fulfil the required conditions, potentially impacting licensing, marketing, and eligibility for future hospitality partnerships.
For diners, the guidelines will make expectations clearer, especially for international visitors used to a consistent luxury dining standard.
These rules are applicable only to establishments voluntarily classified or aspiring to be recognized as fine dining and not to casual eateries or cafes.
Ongoing Oversight and Compliance
The Ministry has not yet released penalties or enforcement mechanisms but stated that the classification will involve assessment visits and performance evaluations over time.
Restaurant owners are encouraged to review the published guidelines and adapt accordingly.
This is not the first step in raising hospitality benchmarks. Saudi Arabia has previously introduced regulations around hygiene, ingredient sourcing, and customer transparency across food-related sectors. The current update builds on those foundations to address the premium segment.
Saudi Arabia's new fine dining regulations mark another step in its push to become a global hospitality destination. By setting clear standards around design, etiquette, and service, the Kingdom is positioning itself to attract discerning customers and international culinary brands while supporting local entrepreneurship.
As Vision 2030 progresses, such policies are likely to become more common across other lifestyle sectors, shaping the cultural and commercial landscape for years to come.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's 25% tariff on Indian goods could make these everyday items shockingly expensive in the US
Trump's 25% tariff on Indian goods could make these everyday items shockingly expensive in the US

Economic Times

timea few seconds ago

  • Economic Times

Trump's 25% tariff on Indian goods could make these everyday items shockingly expensive in the US

Trump India tariff 25%: Millions of American households may soon feel a painful pinch at the checkout line from their medicine cabinets to their jewelry boxes and even their smartphones after US president Donald Trump announced a sweeping 25% tariff on Indian goods, as per a tariffs, which take effect August 1, were announced just two days prior on Trump's social media site Truth Social platform, following months of stalled trade negotiations with India, according to a USA Today report. He wrote, 'Remember, while India is our friend, we have, over the years, done relatively little business with them because their Tariffs are far too high, among the highest in the World, and they have the most strenuous and obnoxious non-monetary Trade Barriers of any Country,' as quoted by USA new import levies come amid an existing baseline tariff of 10%, and the US president has also warned this week that most trading partners that do not negotiate separate trade deals could soon face new baseline tariffs of 15% to 20%, as reported by USA the United States' top trading partner in 2024, exported $87 billion in goods to the US last year, including vital everyday products like pharmaceuticals, smartphones, and jewelry, according to the report. The US currently runs a $45.7 billion trade deficit with the South Asian nation, and many of its most imported Indian goods are essentials, not luxuries, as per data from the US International Trade Commission. ALSO READ: Who will inherit Ozzy Osbourne's $220 million fortune? Here's who gets whatThe country supplies nearly one-third of its pharmaceutical exports to the US, most notably in the form of affordable generic medications, as per the report. Americans rely on these drugs to treat cancer, manage pain, control fevers, and prevent transplant rejection, among other conditions. Products like antineoplastic and immunosuppressive medications, analgesics, antipyretics and nonhormonal anti-inflammatory agents, Bandages, gauze, and other hospital basics are also on the list, as per the USA Today report. Pharmaceutical imports from India grew by 16% last year, topping $9 billion, according to Reuters. ALSO READ: iOS 18.6 is live — change these 10 hidden settings now to supercharge your iPhone In a major shift, India recently overtook China as the US's top smartphone supplier, driven in part by Apple moving more manufacturing to New Delhi amid existing China tariffs, as per the USA Today report. That pivot may now backfire for US consumers, with the cost of new phones potentially climbing, according to the and precious stones, including unmounted diamonds and gold-plated pieces, could also carry heftier price tags, as per USA Today. The US imports more than $10 billion of these items from India annually, often as gifts or wedding jewelry, according to the linens such as bath towels, cotton sheets, and tablecloths, a $6 billion import market, may also see sharp increases, as per USA Today. India accounts for over a third of these products, often sold in big-box retailers and department stores, according to the from the Yale Budget Lab found earlier tariff hikes have already driven up US apparel and shoe prices by as much as 39% in some cases, according to the report. The new India-focused tariffs are expected to continue that may also see price hikes on frozen shrimp, baby clothes, suits, and even solar panel components, categories where India has carved out a significant share of the US market, as per the USA Today report. When does the 25% tariff on Indian goods start?August 1, 2025. The announcement was made on July 30 via Truth Social. Will my medications cost more? Yes, likely. India supplies a significant share of generic prescription drugs used in the US. A tariff may increase prices unless manufacturers or insurers absorb the cost.

France's top general says Russia could attack in five years
France's top general says Russia could attack in five years

Hindustan Times

timea few seconds ago

  • Hindustan Times

France's top general says Russia could attack in five years

RUSSIA IS REARMING fast enough to be a 'real threat' to Europe within five years, says General Thierry Burkhard. That is towards the low end of the estimates among his military and intelligence peers. By 2030, he tells The Economist, 'Russia will possess the means once again to pose a military threat to Western countries, and European countries in particular.' After four years heading France's armed forces, General Burkhard will leave his post on September 1st. In 2021, before Russia invaded Ukraine, he told this newspaper that Europe had to prepare for high-intensity war. Today he warns that Russia's combat experience, huge mass and capacity for endurance make it dangerous: in a conflict, the Russian people will last 'five minutes longer than us'. Yet there are reasons for optimism. General Burkhard thinks American armed forces will not leave Europe, though they might reduce their presence. And a growing web of bilateral ties, above all between Britain, France and Germany (whose leaders have met in recent weeks), points to a tangible vision of 'what the European pillar of NATO can be.' In the past few years NATO allies have begun to spell out regional-defence plans: what forces are needed, who will provide them and where they will fight. Almost no European allies meet the targets, and American retrenchment would widen the gap. Some, he warns, might use this as an excuse to argue that if 'we don't have all that [materiel], we're not able to do it'. Europe, General Burkhard says, cannot emulate America's 'industrial and mechanical' approach to war, which seeks to overmatch enemies 'to reduce the risk to almost nothing.' European armies will have to do more with less 'by taking more risks, by being more manoeuvrable.' Should American officers at NATO headquarters leave, they need not be replaced on a like-for-like basis. Europeans could 'figure out how to create a new command structure with the officers [they] have left.' European armed forces will also have to adapt to changes in warfare. Battlefields in Ukraine are unprecedentedly transparent: combatants can 'see behind each bush'. From this he draws two lessons. One is the changing economics of lethality. High-tech weapons remain crucial—in July France said it was resuming production of SCALP cruise missiles after a 15-year pause—but cheap munitions are needed to wear out the enemy. 'You need Ferraris from time to time,' says General Burkhard. 'We won't win the war with Ferraris.' The second is that tactics and organisation are as important as technology. In 1940 all European armies had tanks, artillery and planes, but it was Germany that integrated them. 'Today everyone has drones,' he says. Victory will go to armies that combine them on land, air and sea. Then there is nuclear deterrence. Emmanuel Macron, France's president, said earlier this year that he wants to discuss 'protection by our deterrent' with European allies. On July 10th France and Britain, Europe's two nuclear powers, agreed to deepen co-ordination, stating that any 'extreme threat to Europe' would prompt a joint response. The countries' nuclear forces will stay independent. There are already means to 'deconflict' their submarine patrols, General Burkhard says. The prospect of a joint nuclear strike would require a new level of planning. France's nuclear force, unlike Britain's, is not assigned to NATO. The two countries are setting up a joint nuclear steering group. No general would ever lay out explicitly how they will handle any scenario; the point, he says, is 'when a crisis see what the threats are and what you need to be ready to do.' Germany and other European allies are asking what all this means for them. On July 13th Mr Macron asked General Burkhard and Sébastien Lecornu, the defence minister, to start a strategic dialogue with European partners about the role of France's deterrent. 'France cannot fight alone against Russia,' says the general. If it is someday threatened by Russia, 'it is not a matter of conventional weapons, it is a matter of nuclear deterrence.' To stay on top of the biggest European stories, sign up to Café Europa, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter.

'A head of state so volatile': Ex-PM Deve Gowda's scathing attack on Trump; praises PM Modi's 'firm stand'
'A head of state so volatile': Ex-PM Deve Gowda's scathing attack on Trump; praises PM Modi's 'firm stand'

Time of India

time9 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'A head of state so volatile': Ex-PM Deve Gowda's scathing attack on Trump; praises PM Modi's 'firm stand'

Former PM HD Deve Gowda (PTI image) and US President Donald Trump (AP image) NEW DELHI: Former Prime Minister HD Deve Gowda has strongly criticized US President Donald Trump over his recent comments describing India's economy as 'dead.' In a sharp statement issued on Friday, Gowda said Trump's remarks were "baseless and ill-tempered" and praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi for standing firm in the face of US pressure and for not compromising the nation's interests. Calling Trump 'a head of state so volatile, uncivil and irresponsible,' Gowda said even a small trader or poor farmer in India, who works with dignity and integrity, could teach the US President a lesson in conduct. "There is something fundamentally wrong with him which reason, diplomacy or statecraft cannot diagnose and address", the senior leader said. He added that "It may not be correct to say anything more than this on his ill-tempered nature because it would mean lowering our own standards." The former PM hailed India's democratic and sovereign character, stating that the country has always acted in its national interest. He expressed confidence in India's ability to withstand international pressure and said he was proud of PM Modi for not being threatened by Trump's bullying. "I am very happy and proud that India, under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has not compromised our national interest. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Adam Lambert, 43, Takes off His Makeup and Leaves Us Without Words The Noodle Box Undo It has not blinked to Mr. Trump's bullying and has shown that it will never be dictated by threat," the statement read. Gowda also defended India's economic performance, noting that it remains one of the fastest growing economies in the world and currently ranks fifth globally. Responding to Trump's 'dead economy' jibe, he said the US President was either 'blind or ill-informed." He further warned some Indian opposition leaders who echoed Trump's statements, urging them not to act as 'deluded spokespersons' of the US President. Gowda's statement came after Trump imposed a 25% tariff on all Indian goods starting August 1, following a breakdown in interim trade negotiations between the two countries. In his Truth Social post, Trump also said that India and Russia could 'take their dead economies down together,' sparking strong reactions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store